Monthly Archives: September 2009

Articles on Liaison Efforts in Research Libraries

I haven’t had a chance to read the August 2009 issue of Research Library Issues, but the table of contents looks pretty interesting. Lots of stuff about liaison work.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Comments Off on Articles on Liaison Efforts in Research Libraries

University of California Administrator Rattles Our Cage

Do you agree that “the university library of the future will be sparsely staffed, highly decentralized, and have a physical plant consisting of little more than special collections and study areas?” According to this story in today’s Inside Higher Ed, that’s basically what Daniel Greenstein, the vice provost for academic planning and programs for the University of California System told attendees at the Sustainable Scholarship conference held here at Baruch this week. Read the comments on the article to see reactions from librarians and others.

Kolowich, Steve. “Libraries of the Future.” Inside Higher Ed, 24 September 2009. Web.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Comments Off on University of California Administrator Rattles Our Cage

Tech Sharecase, 18 September 2009

Attendees
Arthur Downing, Stephen Francoeur, Mikhail Gershovich, Tom Harbison, Gerry Jiao, Louise Klusek, Ryan Phillips, Linda Rath, Luke Waltzer

Mobile Web Development
A recent post by John Blossom on Robin Good’s blog (“Future of Mobile Web Applications: Applications Centered or Browser Centric?”) argues that the era we are in now of downloadable apps for phones may parallel the early days of the web when AOL and Compuserve offered the web via walled gardens; as the web developed, users left those walled gardens behind mostly and explored the open web. Blossom argues that the mobile apps are somewhat like AOL and Compuserve in that they enclose a small world of the web to make it manageable.

Google Voice
Stephen demonstrated Google Voice using his personal account, showing how it unifies phone numbers , allows web-based access to voice mail (including transcripts of those messages), and the abilit to send and receive SMS. Some libraries are using it for a text message reference service. The web-based interface for voice mail messages would be useful for a telephone reference service.

Blogging for Freshman Seminar
Luke talked about the blogging initiative for the Freshman Seminar this fall. In just two weeks, there are already 600 blog posts. You can search across all the blogs to see how students are talking about the library. As most students are new to blogging, the college offers guidelines for them. As a test of the possibility of making student blogs universal at Baruch, students in the Baruch Scholars sections of the freshman seminar will get to keep their blog accounts after the seminar is over and may continue to post.

We also discussed how the FRO blogging initiative and the Schwartz Institutes VOCAT tool might be incorporated into the library’s evolving plan for videos created by FRO students. (Note: VOCAT was discussed at the 25 June 2009 meeting of the Tech Sharecase.)

Online Video
As we discussed how student videos could be shared, it was noted that CUNY set up YouTube accounts for each college (Baruch’s is here). Our library had already set it up its own YouTube channel a few years ago. We discussed the functionality of our Digital Media Library and that there is an upgrade of it being planned now.

LibGuides
Stephen showed the LibGuides system briefly, including a draft of one of the guides that the committee working with testing the software has created. It was noted that LibGuides offers embed codes and a Facebook application that allows you to deploy widget versions of a guide.

Space for CUNY Faculty to Share Instructional Materials

Mikhail brought up Curriki as an interesting model for a project he’s part of that is looking for ways to make instructional materials created by CUNY faculty made available online. CUNY’s nascent institutional repository, a hosted DSpace instance, was mentioned as another possible tool that could be a part of the solution. MERLOT was also mentioned, although its collection is limited to multimedia instructional materials.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Tech Sharecase, 18 September 2009

Robert Darnton “Google, Libraries, and the Digital Future”

FYI.

Robert Darnton is Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor and director of the University Library at Harvard University. He will speak on “Google, Libraries, and the Digital Future”
Thursday, September 17, 2009, 6:15pm
Davis Auditorium, the Schapiro Center, Columbia University
http://www.heymancenter.org/events.php?id=138

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Ticker Article on Our New Textbook Initiative

An article in this week’s Ticker covered our expanded textbook program.

Bukauskas, Dovilas. “Simple Spin on Reserve Texts.” The Ticker, 14 Setptember 2009. Web.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Ticker Article on Our New Textbook Initiative

Video about Media Landscape

This video, which was created by a team including The Economist, focuses on how media is changing rapidly and may be something your students will respond to. More information is available at the website for the Third Annual Media Convergence Forum.

XPLANE, The Economist, Karl Fisch, Scott McLeod and Laura Bestler. “Did You Know 4.0.” YouTube, 14 September 2009. Web.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | Comments Off on Video about Media Landscape

What Is A Document

Ed Summers, a programmer at the Library of Congress, wrote a nice post yesterday about the question of “what is a document” that is worth a read.

Summers, Ed. “Documents.” inkdroid, 10 September 2009. Web.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , | Comments Off on What Is A Document

Having Fun with Librarian Profile Pages

A friend of mine at the library at Carleton College shared on FriendFeed the new “trading cards” that she and her colleagues created as a fun way to promote themselves to the students. The new batch of trading cards mimics the look of 1950s/1960s era jazz records. The library has also created archives of previous iterations of trading cards they’ve done (including one year’s edition that mimicked the look of comic books).

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Tech Sharecase, 4 September 2009

Attendees
Ryan Phillips, Louise Klusek, Stephen Francoeur, Jin Ma, Arthur Downing, Randy Hensley.

We started this Friday’s Tech Sharecase with a discussion of the recent news that Amazon, Microsoft & Yahoo will join the alliance opposing the Google Book Settlement. The Guardian interviewed Peter Brantley, director of the Internet Archive, who heads The Open Book Alliance’s opposition.
See the Searchengineland post about these developments with links to the Wall Street Journal & New York Times articles.

Blog Posts: Reading & Written Language
Next we discussed a couple posts at the Newman Library blogs from the past week. First, we discussed Stephen’s post on Groups/Tribes with no Written Language at Reference at Newman Library and David Broderson’s response. The impetus for the post was a class assignment that was driving several students to the reference desk. I brought up an example I’ve seen illustrating the difference between the interpretation of an illiterate vs a literate seeing the FedEx logo. A literate person fails to see the arrow in the FedEx logo between the ‘E’ &’ x’ while this is the first thing an illterate person sees.
We then discussed the Newman Library Idea Lab post about Maryanne Wolf and the current state of reading. Louise mentioned the Sunday New York Times article on the future of reading. The article discusses giving students the ability to choose the titles in their reading curriculum. Instead of adhering to the standard, required classics like “To Kill a Mockingbird” or “The Great Gatsby” the article highlights one teacher’s effort to engage students interest in reading by allowing them to choose what they read.

Feed Readers

We revisited Feed Readers as a topic given a few of us have changed or are considering a change in our preferred reader. Stephen offered Feedly, a Firefox extension, as an alternative to the Google Reader format.

New EtherPad Feature

EtherPad recently introduced a
new Time Slider feature that displays the complete history of a document’s alterations. To demonstrate, the following link allows you to view Stephen and I taking notes for this week’s Tech Sharecase.
Google Books Metadata Trainwreck article
Stephen discussed the Language Log post concerning the multitude of metatdata errors found the the book records in Google Books. The Language Log post discussed the origin of the errors and also, featured in the comment section, has a response from an individual at Google Books.
The blog post was filed by Geoffrey Nunberg who also authored an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education on the topic.
Screenjelly
Stephen gave a quick tour and tutorial for Screenjelly which he’s used to build tutorials for “How to Look up Books on Reserve” and to display an online tours of the New Reference Wiki and New Reference Blog
View Stephen’s hands-on example from this Friday’s Sharecase.
Text Messaging Reference Service
The last topic of the day was SMS text messaging as a reference service. We discussed getting a smart phone for the library equipped with a QWERTY keyboard. The idea is similar to NY’s service where a phone is shared among the librarians with each scheduled a time to cover the service. We discussed the benefits of adding this service. If this extended service was still within the regular operating hours of reference service, might this be best wedded to the deskstop?

Stephen mentioned MyInfoQuest, cooperative service designed to meet the need for text message reference. To demonstrate the need, a survey of library services desired by patrons via cell phone/mobile device was conducted at Ryerson College. The results are below.
Meanwhile, Questionpoint is integrating SMS text service through twitter feeds into their system in order to accept and push out answers to patrons via text.
Another service mentioned at the Sharecase was Text a Librarian, powered by Mosio.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments