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Archive for » November 11th, 2005«

CAL2005: Blog On: What’s a blog and how to I create one?

Shelly Walchak, Colorado Library Consortium (CLiC)

  • What is a weblog
  • Components of a blog
    • Comments
    • regularly updated
    • reverse chronological
  • History of blogs
    • Origins
    • rise to influence
    • the first controversy
    • Trent Lott / Strom Thurmond comments
    • Documentation
    • blogging goes mainstream
  • Definitions
    • Blogger
    • Blogosphere
    • Blogstorm
    • Blogrolling
    • Splog
  • Types
    • Organizational
    • Political
    • Corporate
    • Personal
    • media blogs
  • Steps
    • blogger.com
    • create an account
    • name your blog
    • choose a template
  • Next steps
    • Settings
    • Posting
    • Publishing
    • Permissions
    • Members
    • template

CAL2005: Googleization: A Discussion

George Jaramillo & David Domenico, Colorado State University

I spoke to the presenters in advance of their session and they admitted that beyond showing the Googlezon short film as a discussion starter, they had no specific presentation planned. Hey, winging is what I do half the time so I’m never going to hold that against anyone…

  • “Google’s mission is to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible an useful.”
  • Shown: Googlezon by Robin Sloan
  • Audience reactions
    • Plausible
    • “Truth no more”
    • We choose who’s interpretation we listen to
    • Wikipedia
    • fact vs. opinion
    • You still need to evaluate
    • The power of the many over the power of the few
    • To have computers determine what you’re reading scares me
    • Privacy issues are a concern
    • Identity theft issues?
    • We’re reacting as if it’s the only source
    • People are selecting what they want today
    • Can people evaluate?
    • Kids today are forced to learn how to evaluate since there’s so much more, is this true? studies disagree
    • “Everything that’s bad for you is good” (book)
    • how much choice do we really have?
    • bad information also propagates quickly
    • risk of people being stuck in their own narrow view
    • people don’t want to dig deeper than the first 10 sites
    • you’ve always asked your friends first, not the official resources, now it’s just on a much larger scale
    • who controls the algorithms
    • CSU: “I found this on Google Scholar” but we’re spending $$$ on databases
    • Is Google a threat to libraries?
    • The library community are questioning our relevance
    • We talk about Google too much
    • We need to be their partner
    • Frustrated by the ease of Google vs. databases
    • Might the technology make evaluation easier?
    • More content creation & peer-review i.e. social software
    • Google is an additional resource
    • Is this not what we’ve been discs sing for years?
    • learning curve on the databases we buy, they’re more difficult to use
    • Googlezon will probably not be a monopoly
    • Privacy, privacy, privacy
    • Google is responding to the demands of the public
    • Maybe we as librarians need to create their own Google-like resource
    • The potential of the opposite is there… maybe there will be more players than there are right now.
    • “Reach them where they live” — start the kids with what they know (Google) then move on to the library resources
    • Small libraries can’t afford and therefore don’t have access to those subscription databases
    • Should we give up the evaluation to someone else
    • Maybe we (librarians) should be the ones writing the algorithms
    • Business is going to drive all this
    • Google is fast and easy, no struggle.
    • Social networks
    • make the library’s homepage come up when a patron connects to the library’s WiFi
    • we need to be thinking about teaching our patrons about these issues
    • we suck at marketing
    • why are we threatened?
    • let’s do what we do best
    • the reference interview is still important

CAL2005: Wake Up Call: What Our Customers Are Trying to Tell Us if We’d Only Listen

Gwendolyn Crenshaw, Cori Jackmore, Susan Kotarba, & Pilar Castro-Reino (Denver Public Library)

  • Handout: Sources Consulted
  • Handout: Denver Public Library: Focus Group Findings – Executive Summary from Corona Research)
  • Top five findings (paraphrased)
    • focus group participants understood the need to change library service models in response to demographic changes
    • differentiated service models would have a greater appeal to infrequent non-users
    • preference of branch models matched the predictions of DPL staff
    • current users reported that they already drive to their preferred library and indicated they would continue to do so if the neighborhood library changed
    • increased usage would occur if DPL addresses physical and customer service barriers
  • Maternalistic attitude – librarians know what’s best for their patrons – no good any more
  • New directions why?
    • changing population
    • changes in customer demands and usage
    • emerging styles of customer use
    • opportunity to more effectively target resources to emerging needs
  • Key points for the library
  • Denver’s two largest groups are Hispanic families and Anglos without children
    • Anglos are less than 50%
    • Hispanic 35%
    • Blacks 10%
    • 50% are single or unmarried groups
    • 80% of white households have no children
    • 50% of Hispanic households have children
  • Hispanics are the fastest growing population in Denver and the most children in Denver are Hispanic
  • Foreign born population tripled form 1990 to 2000
  • 50% of children born in Denver are Hispanic
  • highest concentration of children are in the poorest neighborhoods
  • many people in Denver are experiencing financial challenges
  • New directions (DPL trends)
    • Traditional
      • book & text centered collections
      • children’s collections and programs
      • adult reference
      • English language collections and services
    • new demand…
      • popular materials and a/v
      • children’s/family services
      • adult learning classes
      • specialized reference and hard-to-find items
      • combinations of English and Spanish language collections
      • Web services
      • Computing (zero to 468 public computers in ten years)
  • Basic/traditional/core services (at all branches)
    • customer service and care
    • children’s services, storytime, and summer reading
    • collections for all ages
    • circulation and delivery of requested materials
    • computer access
    • referrals to all the services DPL offers
  • Six Service Designs
    • central library
      • western history
      • book collection
      • business and non-profit resources
      • experts
      • children’s library
      • computing center
      • cultural programs
    • contemporary library
      • stacks of new books & a/v
      • comfortable seating
      • WiFi
      • express check-out
      • coffee
    • learning and language library
      • intergenerational environment
      • bilingual staff
      • Spanish and English collections
      • English and Spanish classes
      • GED computer instruction
      • after hour computer labs (option being considered)
    • family library
      • children’s books
      • popular adult titles
      • family video & DVDs
      • homework help
      • fun family programs
      • books for babies and toddlers
      • storytime
    • children’s library
      • children’s materials
      • self-directed children’s activities
      • arts and crafts
      • after school programs
      • community outreach
    • DPL online
      • Access from home, school or work
      • 24/7 availability
      • research and homework resources
      • downloadable books and music
  • Process
    • Since Jan 2004
    • One size fits all no longer working
    • It’s been “an adventure”
    • Started with city demographics
    • There were a lot of surprises in those numbers
    • Looked long and hard at usage patterns
    • “targeted audience” branches
    • Which branches were which was decided by the managers (yet they still get along)
    • Some branches were already perfect examples
    • “orphans” didn’t fit exactly one category or another
    • took geography into consideration
    • one of each type in each quadrant of the city (worked out pretty well)
    • reach each type within a three mile drive
    • Managers self-selected their own clusters
    • Senior librarians (on-site supervisors) were asked to self-select
      • first and second choices
      • most got first choices
      • Most stayed where they were
    • Once everyone in place then the hard part began
    • what would each cluster look like
    • template used to design the ideal
    • “interesting experience”
    • brought them together as a design team
    • “collaborative”
    • “What does the cluster want to offer?”
    • took the ideal and then faced reality – how well are we doing to match that?
    • Gap analysis
    • Some clusters have further to go than others
    • implementation plans
    • it’s an evolution, not a revolution
    • There were concerns but overall the idea was liked
    • Corona research (see above)
      • Final report still needs to go before the library commission
  • Experiments
    • IMPORTANT: Children’s services are still, and will always be, offered at all libraries
    • Outreach to preschools
      • felt very important
      • had read-a-loud program
        • volunteers to preschools to read
        • book giveaways
      • parent workshops
      • what would happen if they went into every classroom in the city
      • have added 20 sites in the past year
      • goal to add another ten in 2006
      • now do less to upper grades
      • realigned staff to implement this experiment
    • Additional after-school programs
      • reinvigorated existing programs
      • formal programs
      • build environment where children just walk in and find activities to do intuitively
      • minimal staff guidance and involvement
    • Additional family programming
      • private money from Mervyn’s
      • that company is leaving the area
      • avg attendance = 40 people on a Saturday
      • families love it
    • more bilingual staff & staff with language skills
    • concurrent programming
    • adult/children programming (at the same time)
    • Bookstore displays
      • VERY successful and popular
      • failed at the newest branch – dual purpose library (public & black history)
  • Lessons Learned
  • Should not have put the central branch development after developing the branches
  • Communication is key (include staff more)
  • Talked about the new stuff, but forgot to talk about the core services
  • Didn’t clarify the use of demographics and geography (not everyone understood the placement at first glance)
  • This is a long and intense process (The Time Lesson) – should have spread it out to a longer time period at first

CAL2005: Saturday Keynote

Introduced by Gene Hainer, Colorado State Librarian

  • Where are Colorado Libraries today?
  • A lot of good things going on operationally despite the budget problems
  • State library lost 79% of funding in 2002
    • Talking book library
    • lost all the regional systems
    • replaced by CLiC
    • State aid to school libraries
  • loss of $11 million in local funding
  • homework help line now gone (grant funded)
  • Request for courier support for CLiC was approved (review and consideration in governor’s office)
  • State Aid restoration has been requested
  • Database funding has also been requested

Colorado Speaker of the House Andrew Romanoff

  • [M: First democrat to hold the office since 1972]
  • [M: His district is East Denver and Glendale]
  • [M: Teaches PoliSci at Community College of Aurora]
  • Thanks for helping pass Referendum C
  • What does it mean and where do we go from here?
  • Librarians help enlighten Colorado
  • Unfortunately enlightenment is optional in the budget
  • This is not an end to our fiscal crisis
  • We still need to economize
  • This is a state where people do agree with each other
  • Ref C was totally bipartisan
    • Both the Boulder and CO Springs city councils supported it
  • CO fell further and faster in job growth than any other state in the nation
    • We lost a lot of high tech industries
    • Drought
    • forest fires
    • tourism due to terrorist attacks
  • We couldn’t wait for the national economy to turn around
  • This state can deliver on what the employers want
    • low taxes
    • high quality of life
    • skilled workforce
    • good education system
  • We’re 49th in higher education support
  • second highest rate of college grads
  • also high rate of high school dropouts
  • The businesses go where the good education is
  • Governors of other states are happy we’re cutting since the result is that jobs go to their states
  • We’ve also got to compete with the educational systems in other countries
  • Ref C allows us to restore services that have been cut over the last few years but we can’t restore all of them
  • “once you’ve fallen into as hole you should stop digging”
  • Ref C is not a blank check or an authorized spending spree
  • It was passed by a very narrow margin (52-48%)
  • that should humble us
  • general population growing, prison pop growing, medicaide pop growing
  • Most folks don’t know who their rep is, that’s not good
  • Bills not killed, just postponed indefinitely
  • Tell the legislator what you thing we’re going wrong
  • We’re better representatives if we stay in touch with those who we represent
  • Denver Broncos are better known that the legislators and that’s not the way it should be
  • Current debate: What role, if any, government ought to play
  • There are things we can do better together than separately. We’re stronger ogether than separately
  • Q&A [mostly about specific legislative items and asking for advice on better getting “our agenda” passed]

[M: This guy is funny!]

CAL2005: Tools to Help Train Trustees – Colorado State Library’s Board and Trustees Handbook and Douglas County Libraries’ Trustee Training Manual

Patricia Froehlich (Colorado State Library)

  • Handout: Colorado Public Libraries by Size of Population
  • Handout: Addresses of Colorado Public Libraries, 2005, including director name and contact information
  • New Colorado Public Library Standards released in 2005
    • also completely available on the Web
  • Last time training handbook was updated: 1997
  • State library has been revising it
  • It’s being put up on the Web as the information is updated
  • Print version won’t be complete and out until next spring
  • Handout: Colorado Public Library Board & Trustees Pocket Handbook
    • This on is just a prototype
    • Has been reviewed by directors, advisory boards and trustees
    • All done via e-mail and phone, no live meetings
    • Looks to cover a variety of situations and types of library boards
    • suggestion: “develop the mission of the library” be added to the section on duties of trustees
    • Developed based on an example from the North Carolina State Library

James LaRue (Douglas County)

  • Handout: Douglas County Libraries Trustee Orientation Manual
  • Suggests this be used as a template for your library
  • Structures, non-jargon, straight-forward
  • Based on Massachusetts version
  • Mainly developed by the board president and Jamie’s assistant who was new to the organization. (She saw it as a learning experience for herself too)
  • Library By-laws were developed in 1990 and hadn’t changed in 15 years
    • They were out of date
    • went from 30-something to 360 employees in that period
  • Mission Statement first
  • contest for staff to see who could memorize it
  • made it short, made staff learn it
  • put onto pocket cards for the board
  • Vision statement, time line, long range plan
  • Sticky stuff in the main manual, fast changing stuff in appendices so they can be easily updated
  • Org chart, board info, director, district information, stats, budget, Web site, OPAC
  • Physical layout, branches
  • Personnel
    • The board only has one employee, the director
    • everyone else works for the director, they’re his/her responsibility
  • Expect board members have reviews this in advance of the first meeting
  • Expect members to view meeting info in advance and for the meetings to start on time
  • Library environment
    • ALA, PLA, State Library, CAL, ACLIN, Friends
  • Library Law
    • Sunshine & open meeting, investment, Tabor, Internet issues
  • The purpose of policy is to make you look good
  • To give you time to research
  • to give you time to de-escalate the situation
  • not to be publicly humiliated
  • PR issues
    • Douglas County has had 27 book challenges this year
  • Confidentially issues
    • especially with children
    • Calls for being allowed access to child’s records
    • “Have you considered talking with your child?”
  • Don’t ignore young people trying for the board as their first opportunity
  • strongly recommends becoming a district
  • Know your legislators
  • Board job descriptions
  • Term limits
    • Wrong question
    • “Who effective are the board members”
    • rotate people out before they can come back in
  • Boards over seven start to get unwieldy, smaller than five can’t do enough
  • Vice President: “Somebody’s got to be in charge of vice”
  • The president is only one member & does not have the power to follow their own agenda
  • Committees
    • Douglas uses committees because “it works for us”
    • Like the smaller groups to discuss and make recommendations
    • Each board member expected to be on two committees
    • appointed by the new board president each January
    • Typically three people per committee
    • Have invited people from outside the board to participate in committee meetings
    • Arapahoe LD has not committees, they use “study sessions”
  • Decorum
    • If people coming into the library are treated well and smiling, you’ve already failed
  • Services: Have you moved from VHS to DVD yet? Why are you still buying VHS if you still are?
  • Is the board fulfilling the mission?
  • Board evaluation and accountability
    • very important!
    • Rare
    • Is the board only accountable to themselves?
    • need to be above suspicion
    • We have a good record
    • Set goals for the board and follow through
  • Ethics
    • Don’t do anything you want on the front page of the paper
    • listen to your “inner mother”
  • Make sure the library is well managed, not manage the library well
  • Annual contracts with directors still rare in Colorado
  • New patron packet also given to board
  • No longer mailing board packets
    • [M: Aurora has folders that can be picked up]
    • They use a Web site
  • Jargon & acronym glossary
  • “If you’re doing it in secret you shouldn’t be doing it at all”

CAL2005: Friday Keynote


Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper

  • He was raised by a single mother who grew up during the Depression and was a life-long reader.
  • They went to the local public library every week as a child.
  • “My mother read trash. Mystery after mystery after mystery”
  • She’d look at the card in the back of the book to see if she’d checked it out before
  • Never owned a book due to her frugality from the depression
  • Joyce Meskis, owner of the Tattered Cover, let him in on the first day of her new employee training course
  • “The more books in people’s hands, the better the world is” – Joyce Meskis
  • Libraries help fulfill that vision
  • Libraries are a foundation that keep us from sinking down
  • Never expected to run for mayor
  • Was “goaded into it”
  • Decided never to do a negative ad
  • People thought he was crazy
  • The quirky adds got attention
  • Did a lot of “library-like” research
  • Poll: jumped from 4% to 33%
  • Wife: “You never told me you were going to win”
  • Never imagined himself in the mayor’s office
  • Hired many people who knew how to run the large bureaucracies
  • Did an ad for “Referendum C” jumping out of an airplane
    • Said no when it was first suggested
    • Wanted to dramatize an economy in “free fall” if it didn’t pass
    • Finally said yes
    • Will never do it again
    • Shared the story of the filming
    • Shadows across his face on the first take
    • Didn’t want to do it again
    • Ok, finally agreed to do it again
    • They’d already paid for two jumps without telling him in advance
  • Ref C will benefit every library in the state and on educating our kids
  • People around the country can’t believe what we’ve accomplished in Denver when it comes to agreeing on important issues.
  • “Collaboration”
  • “Libraries were something that I grew up with”
  • He and his wife were co-chairs of the Booklovers Ball
    • Hosted at the library
    • On every floor
  • Kudos to Rich Ashton, retiring Denver PL librarian
  • First DPL librarian: the library is “the center of public happiness”
  • You never really know who will use the library at any moment and what will become of that
  • When he had decided to open his brewpub many years ago he used the library to find a book on how to write a business plan
  • If he hadn’t had that book they would have been able to convince themselves or others to take him seriously and get to where he is today.
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