All posts by Mary Jordan

Browsing Books: Harkin Store

logo for browsing books: historical sites of Minnesota

This season, we continue to travel around Minnesota, but this time we’re learning about all the fascinating historical sites our state has to offer and giving you a book prompt inspired by each site.  

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!

Step into the Harkin Store, once the social center of the community where townsfolk and farmers gathered to buy groceries, barter for supplies, and exchange news. Many of the store’s original goods remain on the shelves. Get in touch with this history and read a book about a store or selling things.

In our show notes for this episode, we link each book to a couple of our state’s great independent bookstores: Zenith Bookstore in Duluth and Drury Lane Bookstore in Grand Marais. It gives you a description, so you can get more information about the book to help you make a decision about your reading or recommendations.

Happiness in the Library: Don’t Overthink

logo for happiness in the library series

It’s a tough time for libraries, and people in customer service. And while we don’t want to veer into any toxic positivity, it is good to spend a little time focused on building your happiness level. We are not going to solve people’s serious mental issues here. But bringing some happiness skills to your week can be helpful to everyone!

Mondays can be a little hard, even when things are going fine. Use this small injection of a happiness skill to your week. We are here to support you, and to help you to be a little happier in the library.

Brains are interesting things. The source of your happiness, the source of your unhappiness – a lot of it comes from your brain. And maybe working on some strategies to help turn your brain a little bit more toward the happiness side of life.

Check out this article for ideas: 18 Ways Your Thinking Is Destroying Your Happiness

  • You distress about what’s ahead of you and forget about how far you’ve already come.
  • You think you need others to support you because you are afraid to be on your own.You think you’ll be happy later, when you have reached that goal
  • You see happiness as something exterior rather than as something interior
  • You don’t take care of yourself
  • You look for what is bad rather than what is good
  • You think people won’t like you
  • You are a (past-focused) realist
  • You want to fix everything right NOW
  • You’re afraid to let go of good enough in order to get to great

You can read the entire article, with all the tips and the information on the tips here.

CMLE can be part of your support network; we are here for you, and support you in your library work. Take a nice deep breath in, and whoosh it out; it’s going to be okay today.

GPT-4 Is Here. But Most Faculty Lack AI Policies.

code projected over woman
Photo by ThisIsEngineering on Pexels.com

AI has rapidly become part of our daily lives, without a lot of time for everyone to catch up or to make some guidelines. Check out this article excerpt about introducing AI into the classroom. (Read the whole thing here.)

“Faculty members and administrators are struggling to stay ahead of disruptive AI progress, a new report suggests.

A few short months after OpenAI released ChatGPT—a large language model with an unusual ability to mimic human language and thought—the company released an upgrade known as GPT-4. Unlike the earlier product, which relied on an older generation of the tech, the latest product relies on cutting-edge research and “exhibits human-level performance,” according to the company.

GPT-4 is a large multimodal model, which means that it produces natural language in response not only to words but to visuals such as charts and images. This latest version largely outperforms the earlier model. For example, GPT-4 scored in the top decile on a simulated bar exam, while ChatGPT scored in the bottom decile. There are noteworthy exceptions. Both earned grades of 2 (out of 5) on a simulated Advanced Placement English Language and Composition exam, for example.

As the pace of artificial intelligence accelerates, administrators and faculty members continue to grapple with the disruption to teaching and learning. Though many are at work updating their understanding of AI tools like ChatGPT, few have developed guidelines for its use. But by OpenAI’s own admission, humans are susceptible to overrelying on the tools, which could have unintended outcomes.

“When ChatGPT appeared to be the most sophisticated AI writing tool in the college-writing landscape—only a couple of weeks ago—faculty were abuzz with conversation about how to design assignments that could evade the software, how to distinguish machine writing from human writing and how to protect students from AI’s sometimes disturbing replies.

Then came GPT-4.

“The old version from a few months ago could be a solid B student,” said Salman Khan, founder of Khan Academy, an American nonprofit focused on creating online educational content for students. “This one can be an A student in a pretty rigorous program.” Khan’s nonprofit is working on an AI assistant that seeks to ensure students do most of the work. (The tool’s name, Khanmigo, is a pun on con amigo, or “with friend” in Spanish, which echoes the company’s name.)

Primary Research Group’s survey considered the views of 954 instructors from colleges that grant associate, bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral and specialized degrees. The poll took place between Jan. 28 and March 8, with most (87 percent) responding in February.

Few college administrations (14 percent) have developed institutional guidelines for the use of ChatGPT or similar programs in classrooms, according to the faculty respondents. Smaller colleges and public colleges were less likely to have developed guidelines than larger or private colleges.

Further, few instructors (18 percent) have developed guidelines for their own use or that of their students, according to the report. Community college instructors were the most likely to have developed guidelines. The likeliness to have developed policies was inversely related to age. That is, younger instructors were more likely to have developed policies than were older instructors.

Faculty respondents were split about whether they should integrate ChatGPT into educational strategy or encourage students to use it. Approximately one-quarter (24 percent) felt that they should. A slightly larger group (30 percent) felt that they should not do either. Close to half (44 percent) had no opinion.

Many professors are in a wait-and-see mode concerning AI writing tools in the classroom, though some are waiting for guidance, according to the survey. Most (63 percent) have no opinion on their colleges’ efforts to deal effectively with the educational consequences of AI writing tools’ availability. But some (22 percent) are dissatisfied or very dissatisfied. Those who are satisfied or very satisfied (6 percent) are the smallest population.”

Read the whole article here.

Episode 10-08: A book about a forbidden romance 

Reading With Libraries season ten logo

Thank you for joining us again on our book group and Reader’s advisory podcast! 

We are here to talk about books and share library ideas!

This season we are exploring all new ideas for books and book suggestions, so you can expand your reading horizons, and share more information with your library community. We are looking at prompts from the 2023 PopSugar reading challenge this season. You can read along with their challenge, linked in our show notes, or just enjoy some different books. 

This week will be filled with drama, intrigue, hijinks, and of course romance! So basically yes: it will be the best week for finding all kinds of good books to read! You know that Ariel is our romance expert, and we can all count on her to share some great book ideas and insights.

Check out our show notes page for links to our beverages, our resources, and the books we share today.

Prairielands Teen Summit 2023 Teen Well-being

photo of woman in gray shirt
Photo by Min An on Pexels.com

Join in this program from our colleagues at Prairielands Library System!

2023 Teen Well-being

Date: 04/24/23
Location: Willmar – Public Library
Time: 12:30 – 4:30

OR

Date: 04/26/23
Location: Slayton – SWRDC Building
Time: 12:30 – 4:30

12:30

Welcome and treats

​12:45

Amy Lamatina

Live Virtually from Mackin

Exploring Mental Health Resources for Teens

  • Young adult fiction, non-fiction and graphic texts
  • Young adult ebooks and audiobooks
  • Professional resources for working with teens

1:45

​Next Steps

  • Discussion of materials introduced in first session
  • Brainstorm programming ideas

2:30

Worthington Public School’s Counselors

Live Virtually from Worthington

Teen Mental Health

  • Understanding depression, anxiety and ADHD
  • Childhood trauma and the brain
  • Engaging with teens through the lenses of trauma and mental health

3:30

Using Crafting to Connnect – Bethany Kauffman

  • Creativebug platform
  • Access
  • Overview
  • Choosing programming for teens to destress, relax and connect
  • Try a Creativebug project

​REGISTRATION

Learn More about
Teen Mental Health