The vendor card dispenser is now working again and selling cards for one dollar (with 70 cents of value on them).
LJ article re accounting students helping public library
Library Journal today has a story, http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6675972.html, about some accounting students in a Business and Technology class who have served as “consultants’ to a public library in Prince George British Columbia.
Among their projects in the past several years was one called “terms of endearment” in which they provide an estimated performance measure of patrons’ enjoyment from the library’s materials–reading and videos for example.
I met the accounting professor involved with the project, John Shepherd, at the recent conference for the American Accounting Association here in NYC. He did a poster session about the projects. I mentioned it to a friend at LJ.
The final reports for their projects, that are publicly available, can be found on the following webpage:
http://www.lib.pg.bc.ca/cncbits.
One of the students was later hired by the library, according to Shepherd.
Rita
Credit Ratings On Bloomberg Professional
The Bloomberg Professional terminal, located in the Subotnick Financial Services Center, has credit ratings on companies including international banks. You will find ratings by Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s, and Fitch (if tracked) for each company.
After you type in the ticker for a bank, for example, you can next type the command, CRPR , to get a credit rating profile. The credit history on these companies seems to go back as far as 10 years.
You can use the command, RATC , to get an alphabetical list of companies with their recent credit rating revisions as well as historical ratings (over 4000 companies). You can then sort from this point on.
Tour of the New Reference Wiki
Over the summer, an assistant in the reference office, Moon-Seok King, helped us migrate all the wiki pages from the reference wiki from PBworks (a free, hosted wiki service we had been using for over four years) to Confluence (wiki software that the college has bought and installed on a server here on campus). As of now, you can begin using the reference wiki at this new location:
https://www.baruch.cuny.edu/confluence/display/lib/Reference+Wiki
You will want to bookmark this URL on your own computer so you can easily return to the wiki. Today, I’ll make sure that the link on the browser toolbars on the reference desk computers goes to this version of the wiki. This means that you should now rely on the new version of the wiki and not the old (I’ll delete the old wiki from PBworks very soon).
I’ve created a video tour of the new wiki that shows you how to:
- log in (same user name and password that you use to login to computers here on campus)
- search for content (there is a search box in the upper right corner)
- edit a page (look for the “Edit” button in the upper right corner of any page)
- log out
At the next ISD meeting, I hope to talk a bit more again about the new home of the wiki.
Video Intro to the New Reference Blog
Here is a short, narrated video tour of the newly re-launched Reference at Newman Library blog.
There are two buttons to get the video playing; the button on the left with the standard play icon (the little triangle) will play the video within the blog post page and the button on the right with the four arrows will open a full-screen version of the video that makes it easier to see all the detail.
Books 24×7 offers expanded access to business books
Recently Mike Waldman was able to have the “business books” collection added to the collections available through Books 24×7. I would like to thank him for gaining this access and I would like to encourage everyone to see what is available.
This additional collection will be very helpful to accounting students as among the books available online are the 2009 Wiley CPA exam review books, which have been available only in reference. There are a number of 2009 publications on the International Financial Reporting Standards and many books for the non-profit sector, both in financial areas and other aspects of their operations.
Students interviewing for accounting internships and positions need to know about IFRS and this resource adds greatly to what Baruch students can access. I haven’t explored the other areas yet. I am going to alert the accountancy faculty and also the SPA non-profit faculty of these available resources.
Again, I would encourage you to check out the collection for your subjects and also to know what is available.
Rita
Blogs Back Online
Due to server issues, all the blogs hosted by Blogs@Baruch, which includes this blog and the Newman Library Idea Lab, were down for parts of yesterday and all of this morning. The server is now back up and running and all blogs are again available.
Some confusion about the guest logins and a suggestion
I just spoke by telephone to a Baruch alumni who was confused about the guest logins. She had been told that they lasted only two days and wondered why. Perhaps our explanations should always include that they can receive another new guest logins after the two days.
Rita
Presentation and Discussion of Text Message Reference
Text messaging reference (a.k.a., SMS reference and text a librarian) is this year’s hot topic in reference services. Attend the next meeting of the Virtual Reference SIG on October 23 and find out what it is really like to handle queries from patrons when you are using text messages as your means of communication. Alexa Pearce from NYU Libraries will lead off our group’s informal discussion with a presentation about her library’s pilot program that uses texting for reference service. This event is free and open to all who share an interest in reference services in libraries.
When: October 23, 2009, 10 am – 12 noon
Where: Metropolitan Library Council of New York (57 East 11th Street, 4th floor, New York, NY) directions here
RSVP: Not required. Just show up and be ready to share ideas and opinions.
Video Tutorials at Ohio University Libraries
Ohio University Libraries have put together a nice collection of video tutorials on things like how to find a book, how to find an article, etc. Some of these are screencasts, while others are actual videos shot with a videocamera. The folks behind this project used WordPress to organize all the videos (each one is tagged).
If you’ve heard of Ohio University’s library before, it’s probably because of a couple of notable projects they’ve undertaken in the past:
Biz Wiki
Chad Boeninger created BizWiki, a subject guide on business resources, four years ago using wiki software and has done a really great job with it. Recently, on a post from his personal blog, he looked back over what he has learned as he’s developed this resource.
Video reference kiosk
A kiosk was set up on one of the upper floors of the library that featured a PC running Skype on it. From this PC kiosk, patrons can interact via video chat with librarians. Former Ohio University librarian, Char Booth, has done many presentations on this, including this one, and has written about it for Internet Reference Services Quarterly (I have a copy of the article if anyone wants to see it).