Most of my friends graduated this past weekend. I’m feeling at loose ends, because I’m finishing in August. I will be several months done with my MLS when I walk in December.
I’m excited about the summer class I’m taking, which is on research ethics and the problems thereof. It’s with a professor I’ve never taken a class with before. I’m also taking comps this summer and going to ALA. I also need to catch up on my YA reading for a class I’m TA-ing in the fall. My ALA backpack will be full of YA novels.
The summer will go by so fast it will be a blur!
Tonight on LISRadio, my co-advisors and a doc student are interviewing romance writer Eloisa James (who is also a professor at Fordham University!) The show starts at 8pm CST and call-in numbers are posted at the site if anyone wants to participate. As always, the archived show will be available tomorrow. (We now have RSS feeds for our shows, too!) I’m stupidly excited. I’m reading Kiss Me, Annabel (not a link) right now, whenever I can grab a free moment. I think the main topic of conversation will be how librarians view romances and romance readers.
The Central Library in Des Moines borrows some ideas for displays from Barnes & Noble.
The article mentions the coffee-book link. Which is interesting to me, because back in the 80s, when I was designing my ideal bookstore, it included a cafe. Books and coffee go together in my mind.
I’m still mulling over the idea of libraries taking ideas from retail. A lot of the question boils down to what is a library? What is the library’s goal? It seems obvious at first, but then when you start talking to people, you start to realize that everyone who’s interested in libraries has a deeply personal, individual idea of what a library actually is.
The article includes this quote: “Libraries are no different than bookstores,” said Des Moines City Councilwoman Christine Hensley. “It’ll have the coffee shop, meeting rooms, study rooms.” Libraries are very different from bookstores. Bookstores don’t have meeting rooms and study rooms. Browsing in bookstores is for paying customers only– or, at least, customers who look like they have the ability to pay. The information is for paying customers only.
Another major difference is the availability of old, out of print, obscure works. Tax laws and the realities of business force bookstores to keep only the newest, best-selling works. There’s little there for the “long tail,” the niche readers.
Sometimes I worry that we will lose sight of the idea that the library is for all. I think libraries can use a few marketing tips, but we need to carefully consider the impact of what we do. (And frankly, I would rather see us making design and marketing decisions from a solid knowledge of marketing, public relations, and the social effects of architectural/ interior design, rather than from the knowledge of “It works for Barnes & Noble.” I hope we understand WHY we are doing things.)
I’ve been trying to figure out how to keep track of posts where I comment, but that don’t quite fit in here (not that I have figured out what fits in here yet.) A few minutes ago, I realized this is a great use for my Furl archive! I have a new category called “Commenting.” Of course, now I find myself wondering how I can integrate my Furl archive with this blog, without trying the sidebar thing, which messed up my blog last time I tried to use it.
You can probably tell it’s spring break.
Edited to add: I have not started rating anything, so everything is currently rated at 3.
I’m still working on customizing the site. WP gets more and more frustrating to customize with each “improvement.” That’s why things are weird around here right now.
Tips for improving search techniques from Steven Cohen at Library Stuff:
- Make online searching MANDATORY in library school. Make it a core course. I agree 100% with this. I took Internet Reference (which is required in the school library program) and had some exposure to online searching in regular reference. Yes, I think both should be required.
- Keep up with search engine news and how to use these tools to their maximum capabilities. Yes, this should be considered part of every librarian/researcher’s professional duty.
- Library school professors: Put a glass jar on your desk. Every time you say, “Google it”, put a dime in the jar (the same should go for your students) and take out an ad in Yahoo or Ask with the money collected over the course of the semester. Better yet, donate it to LII (although I don’t think that they can take private donations - Karen?). I detest both meanings of the phrase “Google it” on principle. As a response to a question, it’s rude. A better response would be “Where do you think you could find the answer to that question?” (In the context of library school.) As a throwaway comment about finding out more about a subject, it’s lazy. Which is part of Cohen’s original point, if I am reading correctly.(However, when I compare Ask or Yahoo’s search capabilities with Google’s, they come up wanting every time. (I went back and read all of my evaluations from my Internet Reference course just to be sure.) In Internet Reference class, we were essentially forbidden to use Google, which I fully support. However, it was often frustrating to pick at the other search engines, especially Ask, for a long time, when the site I was searching for would come up first in Google with the exact same search terms. I also found that the other engines were more likely to return other search engine result pages and keyword spam pages, something that seems to be a waste of time. That kind of thing is the reason I stopped even trying to use Ask Jeeves. It’s one thing to forego Google when there are better tools for the question, but quite another to forego Google just to forego Google. )
- Reference desk managers: Do the jar thing too, but buy your staff a book on how to search with the money collected. Either that or hire Gary Price to come to your library and teach search. Or, donate it to LII (Again, Karen?). A book would become useless very quickly (perhaps he was being ironic here), but a seminar would be a great idea.
- Do not make Google the default page at your reference workstations. If you are going to do this, at least use the advanced page. Shouldn’t the library’s databases be the default page?
- Needs assessment time. What’s more important: Working on that library MySpace account, posting pictures of your book collection on Flickr, or brushing up on your searching skills? Prioritize. This point seemed unneccessary. I would venture a guess that the people who are savvy enough to use flickr and myspace are already fairly accomplished Internet searches. However, this is just a guess and I could be wrong.
- Understand the invisible web and how it exists. Know about subject-specific engines and directories. Know the best person, home, and e-mail look-up tools. Agree. In fact, take the time to write up evaluations of different search tools (perhaps for a library wiki on effective searching- which could then be the default home page mentioned in point 5– or just for your own reference.)
- Use your reference book collection. Not all answers are found in the glorified results of a word or phrase search on ANY engine. But doesn’t the internets have everything?
- Don’t enable. Not only should we teach better searching skills to our colleagues and users, we should practice what we preach. Don’t have a Google search box on your library web page or blog. Don’t have canned Google searches on your web page or blog that lead to atrocious results. Interesting. I don’t usually follow links to other people’s search engine results anyway. I do my own search if I’m that interested.
- Don’t forget the importance of using the fee-based databases that your library (check that, your patrons) pays for. Remember that “free is as free does.” Perhaps the most important point of all. (And don’t forget, you pay for those databases, too.)
At first, I thought was going to disagree with many of these, but on a more careful reading, I realized I agreed with everything except for minor points on 4 and 6.I wanted to read the comments to see if my points have been duplicated (as I’m sure they have), but was unable to access them. Speaking of comments, I have enabled unregistered commenting (I hope) and hope not to be spammed out of my mind as a result.