Friday, November 30, 2007
Pet Peeve - part deux
another position wanting a librarian to run a library, staff supervision, cataloguing, budget, project, develop the library, database management, subject knowledge, current awareness.
Requirements ---- get this -- Grade 12!!!!!
Librarian
One Permanent Position
Location: Edmonton, AB (Rossdale Watermark Building)
Reporting to the Manager of Knowledge Systems, the Librarian administers EPCOR’s Water Services Library and is responsible for ensuring that the Company’s records, including operating data, project information, and externally produced reference material is accurately classified and securely stored. All material is to be accurately catalogued and available for timely retrieval for on-site referencing or loan-out to library clients.
Responsibilities will be diverse, including following:
Collecting and researching information such as industrial standards, codes, policies, and technical information for Engineers, Technologists and Management to ensure that they get the right information for project decision-making;
Developing and managing other library services for Water employees, including a daily current awareness service, consultation services for information-management related actions and ordering information resources such as conference proceedings, journals, standards, and reference books;
Analyzing trends in industrial information management and matching them to the needs of Water staff;
Cataloguing and classification of all print and electronic standards and codes to ensure that both active and inactive records stored in DBText databases are properly and accurately identified and classified according to Library of Congress method;
Administering the Library budget;
Providing guidance and overseeing the work of Library and Records staff; and
Undertaking Library development projects as required.
The successful candidate will have completed Grade 12 and have a minimum of five years of directly related experience and must be eligible for certification with the American Library Association NOTE: see my note below. Proficiency in the principles of knowledge organization, library management and database management related to Library Science is required as well as knowledge of professional industry and engineering standards, codes, regulations, and practices. General knowledge of water treatment, water distribution and water utilities would be an asset. Previous experience with the database DBTextWorks would be an asset. You must have excellent customer responsiveness and communication and organizational skills. You are a team player and also have an ability to work independently with initiative to pursue priorities in a fast paced work environment for multiple individuals. You have demonstrated a high level of attention to detail and accuracy in your work.
NOTE:
http://ala-apa.org/about/certif_alaqa.html -- states "ALA itself cannot be an instrument for certification of librarians at either the entry point or a subsequent stage in professional development because it is a Section 501(c)(3) - educational - organization. The IRS considers certification to be a proper activity for a Section 501(c)(6) - professional - organization."
Thursday, November 15, 2007
Reading leve level of this blog
Ok, what kind of algorithm are they using. This blog rates high school, while my vacation blog is Post Grad level.
Get a Cash Advance
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Businesses on Facebook
I heard on the radio on the way into work this morning that Facebook will allow businesses to have profiles and allow them access to advertising to members.
In the past they have deleted library accounts, but if this news is true, then Libraries should be allowed to have profiles now.
Anyone know any more?
Monday, November 5, 2007
My local public library - Oakville Public Library
Here is what my local library is doing. They don't get near enough credit.
Grand Opening: New Clearview Neighbourhood Branch!
Please join us!
Saturday, November 10, 2007
11:00am to 1:00pm
1148 Winston Churchill Blvd., Unit E, Oakville (entrance off Sheridan Garden Drive)
Free refreshments and prize draws. Please RSVP by November 5, 2007 to 905-815-2042 ext. 5024. The branch will be open from 1:00 - 5:00pm after the grand opening.
WATT NOT, WASTE NOT: Residents Encouraged to Conserve Energy
A new program launched by the Town of Oakville and Oakville Public Library allows residents to borrow energy meters to test their home appliances for energy usage. Residents can borrow a meter from any of the Town's five libraries and return the meter to any branch free of charge. Meters can be picked up at any Oakville Public Library Branch. Click here to read the full press release.
Adult Book Club Blogs
Want to know what the Oakville Public Library's Book Clubs are reading? Want to keep updated on their discussions? Check out the library's two new Book Club blogs: the Central Branch blog and the White Oaks branch blog. Only subscribers to the blogs will be able to post messages. Click here to visit the Book Club page.
Download Free Audio Books!
Libraries on the Go is a web site brought to you by your library that lets you download free audio books to your computer, PDA and many MP3 players! To learn more and start downloading, visit http://librariesonthego.library.on.ca/
Let's Get Every Child Ready To Read in Oakville!
Learning starts at birth! Research shows that children learn the skills they need to read years before they start school. To ensure every child in Oakville is given the best possible chance to succeed, the Oakville Public Library has adopted the Every Child Ready To Read program developed by the Public Library Association. For more information click here.
Join the Teen Advisory Group!
Are you a secondary school student who needs to fulfill community service hours for high school credit? The Oakville Public Library is looking for several students interested in serving on its Teen Advisory Group (TAG) for the 2007-2008 school year. We meet once monthly at the Central Branch. Help develop the library's teen web site, teen programs and services, and build your resume at the same time!
Sunday, November 4, 2007
IL2007 - Session B205 — Developing a Taxonomy
Session B205 — Developing a Taxonomy
4:15 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Kathryn Breininger & Mary Whittaker, Librarians, The Boeing Company
I'll start of with – this session just blew my mind. All the Work. All the effort. All the people involved. All the cost. All the buy in from all levels. All the time.
There must have been an incredible problem for them to have invested so so very much.
Setting the stage – from Outsell survey – 13 hr / week searching and analyzing information; 2 hr more than 2 years ago
Information overload
People don't know what words to search for
No two people organize the same way
Taxonomy – controlled vocabulary – hierarchical – broader and narrower terms – equivalent terms as well
Word list – synonym ring – taxonomy – thesaurus – ontology
Z39.9 standard for controlled vocabulary
Considerations
- Avoid reinvention an existing taxonomy
- Construction methods
- Dimensions
- Size of taxonomy
- Facets
- Intended use
Process
- Determine requirements
- Identify concepts
- Develop draft taxonomy
- Review with users and audience
- Refine taxonomy
- Apply to content
- Manage and maintain taxonomy
Manual tagging of existing content
- Time and effort – is it worth it
- Time for maintenance
- Version control
Constant analysis of results and search errors
Terms used excessively or rarely need to be examined
When testing – do you get good results – does it match user expectations – user evaluation – expert evaluation – various methods of testing – qualitative testing – measurable or subjective
Engaging People
- strong sponsor
- obtain user buy in
- IT handles software
- subject experts, librarians, owners handle taxonomy
- keep team smallish, manageable
Process for term suggestions
Process for handling comments
Process for communication
Process for appeals
Release schedules
Team charters available at IL2007 site later
Taxonomy implementation drivers
- Search inefficiencies
- Bottom line impacted by inabiligy to find info
- IT pressured to find solution
- Content management systems
- Knowledge management initiatives
Tag content at creation
- Integrate all taxonomies into one
- Owned by those who classify
- Incorporate with search functions
Productivity benefits
- More time for analysis since search was faster
- Less duplication of effort
- Fewer poor decisions due to lack of information
- More focus on info as strategic asset
- More internal knowledge sharing
- Better understanding of terminology
- Structure brings context to terms
- Facilitates browsing
- Standardized access
- Brings fragmented content together
- Reflects scope of business
- Assists in learning the domain
- Supports business goals
Considerations
- It is a cost
- Tagged content must be used
- Technology cost
- Time cost
- Integrate for maximum ROI
- Phased rollout
- Need strong political buy in
- Subject matter experts are important
- Automated tools can get it wrong – human review
Avoid
- Corporate lingo
- Department names
- Undefined acronyms
- Over thinking
- Over engineering
- Unneeded sections
- Proprietary system for taxonomy management
IL2007 - Session C106 — Web Design on a Dime: Quick Web Tips for Small Libraries
Session C106 — Web Design on a Dime: Quick Web Tips for Small Libraries
4:15 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Sarah Houghton-Jan, Web Services Manager, San Mateo County Library
Tell management what users want
Ask users what they want
Want services same online and onsite
E-branch – most public face; open 24/7; cheaper services; many free add-ons
Treat an e-branch as a branch
1. Talk with users – IM – Meebo
Put meebo in catalogue – sidebar navigation
Text to email to text
2. Provide classes and events
ODIOGO – text to audio files
Database and catalogue search tutorials
AVIDAMUX – video software
3. Dynamic lists (recommendations)
book recommendations
movie recommendations
allow comments
4. offer tools and mashups
libraryelf
library lookup
libx toolbar
5. pretty up your catalogue
6. increase database visibility
focus on what
separate periodicals from others
links on homepage
do not use the word dataset
free free free
subject guides, path finders
outreach visits
market market market
7. increase book visibility
downloadable is wanted
get everything into your catalogue
free ebook collections
market to specific audiences
8. exploit the blog as a format
don’t call it a blog
allow comments
9. Make RSS your friend
new books
news
McMaster RSS praised
RSS calendar
feed submitter
10. try a wiki
11. flickr – give a face to your library
moo
photoshow
Qoop
Zazzle
12. Use project management tools
gliffy draws good flowcharts
13. firefox addons
link checker
linkif
widefox
14. don’t pay for images
15. pay attention to accessibility
"terms that users understand"
16. Use design tools to save time
copy design
free layouts
css templates
inknoise
17. User other tools
web monkey
survey monkey
18. hosting – stats
19. image generators
20. keep everything current
IL2007 - Session C105 — Cool Tools for Library Webmasters
Session C105 — Cool Tools for Library Webmasters
3:15 p.m. – 4:00 p.m.
Darlene Fichter, University of Saskatchewan Library
Frank Cervone, Assistant University Librarian for Information Technology, Northwestern University
Mostly a list – I did not write down all the features J
- Jing Project
- Picnik – IE and firefox plugin; has capture full page
- Kerpoff – for fun
- Thumbalizer
- Visual page rank
- IBM unstructured information modeler – reference logs – comments – data mining tool
- DiffDaff – compare two directories; compare laptop and network
- Logview – www.tucows.com/preview/504173
- SDAP Sonar – www.crosschecknet.com
- Evolved – www.home.no/evolved; text editor for programming; colours based on language you are coding
- Perl express – Perl editor; good features; www.perl-express.com; server commands; database commands; OS
Fun with images
- Photoslideshow – flash.dvd-photo-slideshow.com; creates flash slideshow
- Flash gallery generator – www.flashgallerygenerator.com/main.aspx
Search Index
- Sitemap – www.sitemapbuilder.net; for google indexing
- Opensource federated searching – 3 open source
- IBM Omnifind Yahoo Ediiton – easy to install; installer to search in minutes: download so will work behind firewall
- Google CoopCSE (customized search engine)
- Open URl Referrer Toolbar – openly.oclc.org/openurlref ; if you have a resolver it will try to resolve other info; links to your own referrer
- Flogblog – apps.facebook.com/flogblog ; integrate blog content in to Facebook page
Freedom
- Portable firefox
- Asterisk logger – reveal passwords
- Undelete
- Unstoppable copier
- Simple file shredder
- KeePass – all passwords saved with master key
IL2007 - Session - session C104 — Inspiration for Your Library Redesign
Session C104 — Inspiration for Your Library Redesign
2:15 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Bennett Ponsford, Digital Services Librarian, & Christina Hoffman Gola, Undergraduate Specialist Librarian, Texas A&M University LibrariesErica Reynolds, Web Content Manager, Johnson County Library
They asked their users:
- What are you searching for
- What they last looked for
- How do they discover new resources
- Use for subject guides
- What 2.0 features do they want
- Survey, forum, discussion groups, focus groups, interviews
What they found:
- Very limited interest in tagging
- Limited interest in user generated content
- Traditional preferences for communication: email and in person
- Limited interst in IM
- What do you start with when starting a new project?
Google for undergrads
Google scholar for facultywant all systems integrated - single onetime login
- subject guides hav interdisciplinary issues
- personalization of their site
- photos of librarians – Facebook like
- Facebook, blog, forums not really used