Tag Archives: CMLE

LSTA 2013 Competitive Grant Awards Announced

Image by Tax Credits Money. Retrieved from Flickr. Used under Creative Commons' licensing.
Image by Tax Credits Money. Retrieved from Flickr. Used under Creative Commons’ licensing.

FROM: State Library Services
DATE: December 4, 2013
SUBJECT: 12 Libraries Awarded LSTA Competitive Grants in 2013

2013 LSTA Competitive Grants Awarded

State Library Services is pleased to announce the 2013 LSTA Competitive Grant projects. A total of 15 grant proposals were submitted; 12 received complete or partial funding The projects demonstrate the wonderful variety of ways in which public and school libraries across the state are working to ensure that access to state-of-the-art resources and technology, responsive services that address community needs, and opportunities for lifelong learning are available to Minnesotans.

2013 Grantees and Projects

Austin Public Library – $9,600
“Creative Aging in the Mower County Libraries”
Creative Aging in the Mower County Libraries will provide increased local access to lifelong-learning experiential resources for older adults. The Austin Public Library, in partnership with the Austin Area Commission for the Arts, will offer free professionally-taught creative aging classes to active older adults using techniques developed and taught by the National Center for Creative Aging and ArtSage Minnesota. Participants will engage in a powerful creative and healing process of self-expression as a means to pursuing lifelong learning goals, feeling mentally better, increasing community engagement, and remaining more independent and living more meaningful lives.

Brooklyn Center Schools – $54,786.95
“Brooklyn Center Reading for the 21st Century”
Brooklyn Center Reading for the 21st Century will support Brooklyn Center Secondary in procuring its first library of digital texts (up-to-date fiction, non-fiction, audio-books, and textbooks) and an integrated digital library management system to allow students to check out digital texts from the media center. Staff will implement a school-wide “close reading” strategy to promote critical reading in all subject areas that will make use of the digital texts. The digital collection will consist of high-interest and curriculum-relevant materials designed to increase readership in Brooklyn Center Secondary’s urban learners and improve the ability for staff to differentiate instruction.  Access to digital materials will also improve the reading experience for students with disabilities, as the digital format is innately more accessible. This project will help Brooklyn Center Secondary students to graduate with the strengths to read critically and adapt in a global, digital community.

The Friends of the St. Paul Public Library – $11,000
“Minnesota Book Awards Support to Librarians Statewide”
Minnesota Book Awards Support to Librarians Statewide will build capacity of the  librarians in the state and awareness of Minnesota’s rich writing environs in their respective communities. This project will provide opportunities for librarians to serve as judges and facilitators for the competitive category judging sessions, book artist programming and exhibits, as well as funds for libraries around the state to hold programming with Minnesota Book Awards finalists and winners.

Hennepin County Library – $12,000
“iPads and Pre-Readers, a Together Project”
IPads and Pre-Readers, a Together Project will offer families and caregivers access to literacy-rich opportunities to interact with their young children using technology. Through this project, patrons will build increased awareness of early literacy skills and the ways in which carefully-selected apps, explored together, can help build those skills. With increased access to tablet technology, patrons will identify the library as a resource for selecting developmentally-appropriate mobile applications. Hennepin County Library (HCL) staff will become more comfortable and confident when working with patrons using tablet technology, when talking about use of technology with children and be more capable when relating the use of technology to early literacy skill building.

Oak View Elementary School, District 279 – $76,313
“Digital Learning at Oak View”
Digital Learning for Oak View’s  goal is to provide increased access to digital literacy resources at school for all students and at home for low-income families to increase students’ reading proficiency and understanding of 21st century digital literacy skills. We seek to do this by providing access to quality digital resources that provide for reinforcement, practice and increased engagement with the Common Core English Language Arts standards. Adding mobile devices will give Oak View approximately a 1 to 5 student to device ratio and dramatically increase student’s access to digital literacy resources.

Perpich Center for the Arts – $17,900
“Literacy Equity: Engaging Resourceful Community Knowledge”
Literacy Equity: Engaging Resourceful Community Knowledge will build and reinforce partnerships between school media centers and local community libraries so that both are better able to engage partnerships and resources in response to the emerging needs of their communities and provide targeted outreach to under-served populations. In this professional development project, participants will develop literacies related to improving water quality and building a cross-cultural school community around a particular community need. Participants will learn strategies for identifying and partnering with organizations, individuals and families to build collective literacy about the changing quality of our shared watersheds, and to better understand and share the cultural assets of the school and local communities.

Plum Creek Library System – $86,768
“Murray County School Libraries Addition to the PCLS Catalog”
This project will enable the Murray County Schools in Slayton and Fulda to join the regional library catalog operated by Plum Creek Library System (PCLS).  Joining the PCLS catalog will allow  four school library collections in the two school districts to be shared within the schools,  by the general community with the local public libraries on the same catalog, throughout the region with 25 public and 8 school libraries, and through the MN MnLINK network. The PCLS catalog connection and delivery service will also open up the world of local, regional, and statewide resources to the library users at the school buildings.

Southeastern Libraries Cooperating (SELCO) – $49,200
“Collective Learning Online Training Hub (CLOTH)”
The Collective Learning Online Training Hub (CLOTH) project will allow SELCO to consolidate a variety of training methods, documents, and tools in an online environment.  An online learning environment will ensure that quality training sessions on the various products and services offered by SELCO to its member libraries are readily accessible.  This is expected to increase the quality of services provided by librarians to patrons, particularly those in small, rural libraries or school media centers.

Southeast Library System (SELS) – $49,850
“eBooks for Southeastern Minnesota Schools”
eBooks in Southeastern Minnesota Schools will bring together a group of school librarians, administrators, curriculum specialists, and SELCO staff to undertake a comprehensive study to determine the need for eBooks in schools from the 11 counties that make up SELCO and SELS.  The data from this study will be used as the basis for developing a shared eBook offering for the region.

St. Paul Public Library – $26,237
“Advancing At Risk Youth Toward Working Professionals”
Saint Paul Public Library (SPPL), working with Saint Paul Parks and Recreation (Parks), will create a system of badges to certify work readiness for Youth Job Corps (YJC) Workers hired by the two city departments. The “gamification” of skills acquisition will enhance the experience for the young people while providing them with credentials they will need in the broader work environment.  Parks and SPPL will pilot badging with YJC workers in their two departments with the intention of providing replicable curriculum for other YJC employers throughout the state.  Badges granted will include but not be limited to:  writing a resume; job applications and interviews; showing up ready to work; time management; financial management; and digital literacy. Together, they will culminate in a Work Readiness Mastery Badge which will be recognized by SPPL and Parks as a strong recommendation for jobs and advanced training in the two departments.

St. Paul Public Library – $12,500
“Community Connectors: Services for Underserved English Speaking Urban Populations”
The project will improve digital literacy for adults experiencing barriers of homelessness, poverty, unemployment and/or underemployment and basic literacy for children who experience racism and racial barriers as Black Americans. The Mobile WorkPlace in the Saint Paul Public Library will partner with organizations to offer computer classes that will teach basic computer skills in order to transition adults in becoming productive member of society. World Language Storytimes, which ensure limited English proficiency children to develop literacy skills, will expand to include Black American story times.  Activities will include engaging an individual of Black American heritage to present story times who will help to develop early literacy skills in the targeted culture.

Yinghua Academy – $48,925
“Skills for Success: Digital and Information Literacy for Middle School Learners”
Skills for Success will improve information and literacy skills for middle school (5th-8th grade) students by enhancing the Yinghua Academy school library collection and expanding services for learning and access to information and educational resources. Students will interact with information and communication technology, developing information and digital literacy skills while also improving 21st century skills in learning and working. Improvements to the school media center, in conjunction with program activities and collaboration with subject area teachers and middle school curricula, will develop student facility with digital literacy skills and encourage ongoing information literacy well beyond middle school.

For more information, contact Jackie Blagsvedt at 651-582-8850 or jacqueline.blagsvedt@state.mn.us

Seasonal Bookish Crafts

Image by erichhh. Retrieved from Flickr. Used under Creative Commons' licensing.
Image by erichhh. Retrieved from Flickr. Used under Creative Commons’ licensing.

Tis the season of cooking, crafting and all things creative. Therefore, this week CMLE’s highlights a post by BookRiot (November 2013) on book inspired craft projects.

Just for fun, use these mini projects to decorate your office or enhance a seasonal library display. Consider setting-up an impromptu crafting station for patrons/users at your library. Click here to let the gluing commence.

Special Note: Feel free to send us a photo of your latest and greatest bookish craft creation.

Massachusetts eBook Pilot Project

Image by AngryJulieMonday. Retrieved from Flickr. Used under Creative Commons' licensing.
Image by AngryJulieMonday. Retrieved from Flickr. Used under Creative Commons’ licensing.

Yet another state recently launched a pilot project to provide statewide, equitable  access to eBook content. Fifty-one multitype libraries in Massachusetts will begin a six month pilot to offer eBooks to their communities. This project is an effort to further explore: different eBook lending models,  different platforms, and user experiences too. This project is managed by the Massachusetts Library System (MLS), in cooperation with its vendor partners—Baker & Taylor and BiblioLabs. Funding came from matching funds from MLS and through federal funds provided by the Institute for Museums and Library Services (IMLS). In Minnesota, a task force is meeting to discuss an eBook summit in 2014  to advance of the conversation of equitable, statewide access to eBooks in Minnesota. Read more about the Massachusetts initiative at MA eBook Project.

Later articles on this project are at

Additional article about MA ebook project….

Yet another article about the MA project

 

New Monthly Research Center Workshops: Stearns History Museum

Information provided by the Stearns History Museum

Research Center Workshops

Have you ever wondered what resources are available in the Research Center and Archives of the Stearns History Museum? Come and find out! The Stearns History Museum is offering workshops, on the third Wednesday of every month, to highlight the many resources available and show you how easy they are to access.

This month, on December 18th, at 9:30 a.m., our archivists will teach an Introduction to the Research Center and Archives.  Whether you are a seasoned research veteran interested in genealogy, or you are researching town histories or the history of a local business, or just a beginner, this class is for you!

Please RSVP to (320) 253-8424 or email swarmka@stearns-museum.org.

Image retrieved online from the Stearns History Museum 12/10/13.
Image retrieved online from the Stearns History Museum 12/10/13.

Founded in 1936, the Stearns History Museum has focused on preserving and interpreting the history of the region for 77 years. The mission of the museum is to engage people in the exploration of the County’s diverse heritage by providing connections to the past, perspectives on the present, and inspiration for the future. The Stearns History Museum is nationally accredited by the American Alliance of Museums.

BookBub: My New Favorite Thing

Image by Wiertz Sebastien. Retrieved in Flickr. Used under Creative Commons' licensing.
Image by Wiertz Sebastien. Retrieved in Flickr. Used under Creative Commons’ licensing.

Have you heard of BookBub? It is a daily email service that alerts you to limited-time free and discounted eBooks that match your interests. What is really a game changer for me is the fact BookBub works with all major devices and eBook stores. Not so very long ago, I felt a need to declare which “eBook camp” I was in, which drove the type of device, but not anymore. This is competition at its best! And, when you download the book, it is in the book collection you have already created with your favorite eBook store. And, you don’t need an eBook reader to read your free book either.  You will be told which mobile app will allow you to read the book. For my purposes,  the Nook and Kindle Cloud Reader apps on my iPad suit my needs, then when I log in to either my Amazon account (Kindle) or my Barnes & Noble (Nook) account, the book is there, depending on who I “bought” it from. Do I own a Nook or Kindle? Yes, but I don’t even use my Nook anymore. I wanted the e-ink technology, which means I have to sideload content, which is a pain. I will use it in the summer when I am reading outside and can’t see a screen with glare. And, I find that if I turn the brightness down on my iPad, I don’t mind reading a book on it one little bit!

So, why is this a game changer for me when I have not been too keen about buying eBooks in the past?

  • I do not typically invest in  new books, as I can’t justify the cost when I seldom read a book twice.
  • In my way of thinking, buying a used book is a very disposable transaction. That is, if I pay $2.99 for a used book, I often read it, then send it right back to Savers or Goodwill where I got it for someone elses enjoyment unless I believe it is outstanding and worthy of my bookshelf!
  • In the past, I borrowed my “worthy” books to lots of people, but now, as more people are buying eBooks, my home bookshelf is not serving the same purpose.
  • Now with BookBub, getting the books free or for under $2, gets me the content, but removes the clutter from the house too. Downsizing feels good.
  • I can more easily read electronic books in bed too; not as much weight, no page turning forcing different positions in bed either, and I can read in the dark too!

Check it out, BookBub only features books that are bestsellers or written by a bestselling author, were published by a top-tier publisher, or have received strong reviews from critics and readers. However, it is quick turnaround, you almost always have to buy the same day you receive the notice. Please don’t write me off just yet as “going to the dark side”, I still put myself on waiting lists at the public library for very specific items I need. But, the long lines can feel even more discouraging when so much content is so readily available through services like BookBub!  What impact lies ahead for libraries as the user experience is so immediate and painless?