This Week In History, Library Style! Dec. 30: Galaxies

green and purple galaxy illustration
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Libraries are places where we connect people to information that may be useful or interesting to them. Looking at some history, and connecting it to the materials we may have in our libraries, can be a good way to convince patrons to use and enjoy all the things we provide!

This week we are looking at December 30. Of course a lot of things have happened on this date – news and the big stories are the unusual things that are going on around us. One interesting thing that has happened today in 1924:Astronomer Edwin Hubble announces that the spiral nebula Andromeda is actually a galaxy and that the Milky Way is just one of many galaxies in the universe.”

From Wired magazine: “Before Copernicus and Galileo, humans thought our world was the center of creation. Then (except for a few notable stragglers) we learned that the sun and planets did not revolve around the Earth, and we discovered that our sun — though the center of our solar system and vitally important to us — was not the center of the universe or even a major star in our galaxy. But we still grandiosely thought our own dear Milky Way contained all or most of the stars in existence. We were about to be knocked off our egotistical little pedestal once again.”

Bring this historical fact to your library! You can do this with a variety of program and display ideas. We will help you to get started with a few ideas: set up a display of biographies on scientists, examine star maps to find distances between galaxies, cut out stars/planets/shapes and paint them with glow in the dark paint before fixing them to walls or ceilings in the library or the ceiling, take pictures of stars or other things in nature around you, write a story about exploring galaxies and what can be found, write an essay about censorship of ideas and scientific theories, read a series of scifi books about space exploration, draw pictures of the stars or other beings they might find out in a galaxy.

Here are a few books you might add to your collection or share with your patrons – or just enjoy yourself!

Episode 902: Communication and Teamwork

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This season we are going to focus on topics that are important to library support staff. We will be discussing each of the ten competency sets in the American Library Association’s Library Support STaff Certification program. Some of these may overlap with our Library Basics series from Season Seven, but this season we will be looking specifically at the material the ALA has identified as important n. We will link to the ALA’s program, if you want more information or want to sign up for one of their classes.

You can check out our full show notes page here!

This week we are talking about another one of the competencies that is required in the LSSC program: Communication and Teamwork. “Library Support Staff need to communicate effectively with library users, library staff, and others in a variety of situations to offer high-quality customer service.” Being able to communicate and to work together as part of a team is critical for good library service. Even when you are the only person working in your library, there are people across your parent organization you need to work in harmony with every day. Communication and teamwork will help you to get there effectively.

Let’s take a look at each of the nine different components the ALA has identified as important here, and talk about a little information on each one.

A Year End Review!

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2021 was an exciting year for everyone. Sure, some of it was not great – nobody will be sorry to see the global pandemic ending. But some of it was pretty good and had some positive parts.

While we did not get a chance to get to everything we wanted to do this year, we and our libraries have accomplished a lot of good things.

Check out some of our most-read articles over the past year:

We have enjoyed putting out our training podcast Linking Our Libraries. You can listen in your favorite podcast app, or stream on our website. Over the last year, these are our most downloaded episodes:

  • Episode 501: Cataloging
  • Episode 806 Reference Interview
  • Episode 808: Library Board Members
  • Episode 801: Library Gardens
  • Episode 803: Makerspaces
  • Episode 804 Cultural Competencies
  • Episode 809: The Future! Strategic Planning and Needs Assessment
  • Episode 807: Teen Services
  • Episode 802: Hosting Virtual Events
  • Episode 805: Podcasting
  • Browsing Books: Kilen Woods State Park
  • Browsing Books: Nerstrand Big Woods State Park
  • Bonus Episode Media Landscapes and 23 Things
  • Browsing Books: Savanna Portage State Park
  • Browsing Books: Freeborn County
  • Browsing Books: Judge Magney State Park
  • Browsing Books: McCarthy Beach State Park
  • Browsing Books: Cascade State Park
  • Book Bites: Under the Banner of Heaven
  • Browsing Books: Hayes Lake State Park
  • Browsing Books: Fort Snelling State Park
  • Browsing Books: Mahnomen County
  • Episode 810: Episode 100 of Linking Our Libraries!
  • Browsing Books: Aitkin County
  • Browsing Books: Anoka County

And we always enjoy our reader’s advisory podcast book group: Reading With Libraries. Here are our most downloaded episodes for 2021:

  • Episode 413 True Crime
  • Episode 513: Running
  • Episode 608: Psychological Thrillers
  • Episode 610: Pandemics II
  • Episode 609: Winter Mysteries
  • Episode 611: Minnesota
  • Podcast Episode Bonus 61: Bridgerton!
  • Podcast Episode Bonus 62: Soul!
  • BONUS Episode: Fanfiction
  • Browsing Books: MN Valley State Recreation Area
  • Browsing Books: Crow Wing State Park
  • Browsing Books: Hill Annex Mine State Park
  • Browsing Books: Wild River State Park
  • Browsing Books: Mille Lacs Kathio park
  • Podcast Bonus Episode 64: Nomadland
  • Browsing Books: Judge Magney State Park
  • Browsing Books: Sakatah Lake State Park
  • Bonus Episode 63: The Mandalorian
  • Bonus Pop Culture: In The Heights
  • Bonus Episode: Pop Culture: Black Widow
  • Episode 414 Narrative Non-Fiction
  • Browsing Books: Temperance River State Park
  • Browsing Books: Tettegouche State Park
  • Browsing Books: Fort Snelling State Park
  • Browsing Books: Hayes Lake State Park

Citizen Science: Jungle Rhythms

landscape photography of waterfalls surrounded by green leafed plants
Photo by Oliver Sjöström on Pexels.com

We are big fans of citizen science! Of course, science is always cool, and STEM/STEAM projects are an increasing part of everyone’s work and school experiences. So understanding how science works is not just fun, but a good way to understand what is going on in the world around us all.

So we are sharing some neat science you can do, contributing toward large projects, and learning new things. Maybe you can use this today; maybe you will save it for later. As long as you enjoy some exploration and learning new things – citizen science is for you! And it is definitely something you can use to bring some good programming to your library.

This week we are looking at a cool project involving trees!

Jungle Rhythms strives to transcribe old observations of tree life cycle events (flowering, leaf shedding, fruit dispersion), which are key to understanding a tree’s functioning. The African rainforest, the second largest on Earth, covers ~630 million ha and stores up to 66 Pg of carbon. It is presently a persistent carbon sink, offsetting large amounts of human CO2 emissions. Drought events in tropical rainforests have the potential to alter forest structure. However, due to data scarcity, little is known on how droughts affect the structure and function of African rainforests. In this project we will try to link long term observations of tree life cycle events with weather data. This will allow us to track the trees’ responses to variation in rainfall and temperature. This data may provide us with key information on how sensitive tree species are to drought, and how this sensitivity might alter the structure and function of the forest as drought regimes change.”

Historical observations

From 1937-1958 scientists stationed at the Yangambi research station in the Democratic Republic of the Congo made an effort to observe more than 2,000 trees on a weekly basis, writing down key life cycle events, e.g. fruit development, flowering and leaf shedding. All of these weekly observations were jotted down in little notebooks and finally summarized in large hand-drawn tables. In an effort to recover the key parts of this knowledge, which currently only exists on paper, and preserve the original copy, Jungle Rhythms will transcribe the summary tables. In addition, these unique data will tell us how tropical forests respond to changing patterns in temperature and rain. As such, the data will allow us to predict the future state of the forest using historical data.

Why appeal to citizen scientists?

The nature of the notation used, mainly using fine hand-drawn pencil lines overlaying another fine gray line, make it really hard to process these images automatically. The human eye and brain is finely tuned to finding patterns and picking up these slight nuances in shading. Participants also have background knowledge of the project, and this contextual information further helps in understanding the notes. Participants are presented with yearly sections and are be asked to annotated features within the section. At the end of the project annotations will be combined into a timeline of each trees’ life cycle events and matched with weather data.

Who made the observations? And why?

All we currently know is that these observations were made by research scientists at the Yangambi agricultural research station between 1937 – 1958. During our efforts to digitize the data, we did not come across any mention of names associated with project. The age of the data set would also make it very unlikely that observers are still alive today. We do know that some of the observations were made along the roads in and around Yangambi, as we found evidence of maps referencing the number associated with each specimen. We assume that a fair amount of the observations were made in a research forest nearby. It also remains a mystery why the observations were made. As the research station was focused on agriculture and forestry, we assume that the researchers at the time might have wanted to understand the life cycle events of a trees better in order to optimize forestry practices.

As participants work on Jungle Rhythms, we will try to trace some of the data’s historic context. Looking through archives might not only provide context, but also additional data. We already posses the climate data as measured at the research station, which is key to understanding the life cycle events. We know that a similar dataset was collected at the botanical research forest in Luki on the Atlantic side of DR Congo. The two forests differ significantly in weather patterns. The existence of coordinated observations confirms that this was a deliberate experimental design, so we believe a motivation and clear description of the methods used should have been documented.”

So, how can you bring this tree-related project into your library? We have a few suggestions to help you get started:

  • Make a display of books about trees and botany
  • Set out all kinds of crafting supplies – construction paper, glue, pipe cleaners, etc – and let everyone make trees. Set them all up to make a forest in your library
  • What is a jungle? What is a forest? Write an essay about the basics of jungles.
  • Use a map to find the closest jungle to your house. Where is it? What kind of trees are growing there?
  • What are original historical resources? Discuss why resources created by someone in an environment would be more valuable than someone who is farther away from it?
  • Get a resources about using good handwriting. Practice your own handwriting to make it very clear and easy to read.
  • Can you create a document using speech to text tools? How accurate is it? How easy or difficult is it to write papers for school using these tools?

Browsing Books: Becker County

Browsing Books Counties logo

This season we are moving through the state of Minnesota, looking at an interesting fact about each county and giving you a book prompt from that fact. We will share six book suggestions to meet that prompt, to get you started on reading new books. You can also take that prompt and find any other book to meet the challenge!

Today our prompt is inspired by Becker County! There is a time capsule in a park here, ready to be opened in 2065; read a book with a time capsule or historical monument

We give you links to each of these books on our show notes page, taking you to Amazon.com. If you click on any of them, and buy anything at all – including a nice book – Amazon will send us a small percent of the profits they made on these sales. Thank you for supporting CMLE!