Category Archives: Special

Weekly Review: 1/14/2016

CMLE Updates: State & Regional News
•Happy New Year from the CMLE Director More
•FREE Upcoming Genealogy Research event More
•Books and Breakfast event is back! More
•Question from the field about combining media centers More
•Update from your State Librarian More
•Cambridge bookstore: Top 10 national finalist More

Upcoming Events and Registration Information
•Notable Dates for your Noggin (January) More
•Statewide library events calendar More

Resources You Can Use
•Five TED Talks about libraries More
•YA must-reads for 2016 by Book Riot More
•I Love my Librarian Award winners More

Tech Bits and Ideas
•Google’s Best of the Best List for 2015 More

Food for Thought
•My unfortunate “mother of all booklists” experiment More

Just for Fun
•Unbelievable things found in library books More

My unfortunate "mother of all booklists" experiment

photo-1431608660976-4fe5bcc2112cHave you noticed the abundance of “best books” lists? It is starting to feel a bit daunting, I must say! Here at CMLE, we seek to manage the noise for our readers, keep the clutter from your inbox, and find tools or solutions to make the tsunami of information more manageable. So, I was on a mission!

I valiantly decided to get my arms around the many entities that are creating these book lists. And, a real plum in the process would be to find a mega site that was the ultimate list of book lists; the mother of all book list sites! It started out as all fun and games with a Google search on “best books” 2015.  I was happily copying the sites and lists into a Word doc in hopes of later creating a possible LibGuide, maybe nicely categorized to further “containerize” the content. Suddenly, I sat back, looked over my list, and became very sad. It became really apparent, very quick, that my list contained almost all commercial sites, and that libraries were nowhere in the first four pages of search results.  Yes, I know the average user will not last this far into the search results! Amazon, Time, New York Times, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, etc…. filled my screen. How sad is that and why is it true? Where are libraries? Librarians are the ultimate content curators, aren’t they? What started out fun, became depressing.

A recent post I did about the absence of libraries in typical book search results online, A Great Big Cloud Catalog for the Greater Good of All? came to mind. In it, I questioned why it is that if libraries are the biggest book “containers” online, they don’t they show up in search results? Is it any wonder libraries often feel marginalized, and are often scrambling to find opportunities to “tell their stories” or even change what it is that they do altogether? If we could get library holdings front and center in online end-user search results, is it possible there would be less scrambling?

How did my experiment come out?

  • I further wondered what criteria is used to create all of these individual lists. Are they  based on sales or actual quality of writing? Doubt prevailed. What if we harnessed all of the creative power of librarians nationally, and built a “go to” site with all possible book lists? Now that would be phenomenal!
  • Inevitably, I abandoned my Word doc when doubt overtook me, and Pima County Public Library in Arizona and the Los Angeles Public Library (scroll down) showed up, among others. While I am impressed with their lists, I am still not sure they are the best, the most comprehensive. More of everyone “doing their own thing?” Click on their links here to see what you think.  If you know of a better, more comprehensive “list of lists” please share! Send email to admin@cmle.org or use the comments field to further enlighten me!

Patricia-

Image credit: https://unsplash.com/(Glen Noble),licensed under CC0 1.0

 

Save the Date – FREE Genealogy Research Workshop

Genealogy Research Workshop
Tuesday, February 2, 2016
Bremer Room, St. Cloud Public Library
4 – 6 pm

Sherlock_holmes_pipe_hatCMLE is pleased to partner with GRRL and genealogy expert, Wendy Sykes, to host this free workshop in early February. Come and learn the basics of genealogy research both for your own personal enrichment, but to better help others too. Come right after school or work; there will be food and drink at this fun and interactive event. Wendy will be highlighting how to use library and free internet resources to search for genealogy records. She will also demonstrate tips and techniques that make the searching easier. Participants are encouraged to bring their own laptops or tablets to amp up personal learning. No device? GRRL has got you covered. We will have use of ten GRRL laptops during this event! Genealogy is a perfect topic to make all types of librarians shine! Amaze your friends and family with your newfound knowledge and skills. We hope you will join us.

To register, click here. Problems registering? Send email to admin@cmle.org

See our earlier post about Wendy Sykes

Image credit: http://tinyurl.com/zethamn, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0

Unbelievable things found in library books

BookmarkThere are some unbelievable things found in library books!  Here is a second list of very unusual items found in library books. We’ve included the first list if you missed it.  Part 2 includes comments from fellow library staff.  It’s quite humorous and some pretty gross like “the smear of something brown and vile. We think it was something from an animal.” Umm… glad I never found something like that!  The most unusual thing that I ever found in a book was a bookworm!  Yes, a real live bookworm was burrowing through a book.  How about you?  What is the most unusual thing you have found in a library book?

Surprises found in library books – Part 1

Surprises found in library books – Part 2

Image credit: http://tinyurl.com/hfxepjb, licensed under CC BY 3.0

Five TED Talks about future libraries & librarians

THINKLooking for some new year inspiration?  Here are five TED Talks highlighted by A Media Specialist’s Guide to the Internet that will get you thinking about the future library world.

  • Libraries bridging the digital world
  • Librarians of the future
  • Libraries of the future
  • Libraries: Present & future
  • What to expect from libraries in the 21st century

Click here for the TED Talk links

Image credit: http://tinyurl.com/p2ljsbc, licensed under CC BY 2.0