Thursday, May 22, 2008

social networks and ofcourse a big thankyou

Social networks are a great marketing tool. My space could be used to promote niche interests within the library such as a manga club, tweens read club, mystery book lovers, books made into movies... The possibilities are endless.
I have to congratulate the team at the State Library for giving me the opportunity to do this course. It has been a huge learning curve but a very interesting one. I will definitely be applying what I learned and I look forward to becomming more web 2.0 savvy as I explore more.
Cheers

online applications and tools

Google Docs - what a convenient way to to work on a document when you want the input from many people. We do have catalogue training sessions for the public. Creating a training manual on Google Docs would enable all the trainers to have a say in what goes into the manual without being innudated with emails. Genre lists could also be done with great ease.

Mashups
















Mashups are good fun. It would be a raving succes in the childrens section with jigsaws and games. We could also feature librarian of the week funstuff. It would be great for local studies with a virtual tour of all the parks and historical buildings in the shire. For Library Lovers day our local studies librarian created a flyer with a list of all places romantic in the shire. A mashup for that would be great.

Podcasts and audio

Podcasting will be great for author talks. Recently we had a fully booked David Malouf author talk here at the library. There were a few who missed out. However with podcasting those who missed out would still have been able to listen to David Malouf. Podcasting can also be effectively used for library tours. Podcasts on how to use our online resources could also work well.

Answer boards and social searching

It is great to get feedback on the collection and slamming the answer boards may just achieve that. The collection is after all for our clients! Slamming the boards on activities like the @ your library campaign will not only give us immediate feedback but will also help us in planning future events. Topics that might work well for answer boards could be HSC topics and ofcourse one on childrens educational sites would be interesting.

Library Thing


Would be great for book clubs!

del.icio.us fantastic tool

This is indeed a fantastic toool for reference enquiries. This tool makes for time efficiency when it comes to doing a reference enquiry especially for school projects. If staff have already gone through the links to a particular topic, it becomes really easy for the next staff member with the same enquiry. del.icio.us is the way to go! Our library already has a del.icio.us account.


Flickr zeitgeist

The Daily Zeitgeist is built in Flash, and displays recent photos from Flickr.


Video's online - I love them!

This video was created for library staff in service day at the St. Joseph County Public Library in South Bend, Indiana. Set to Madonna's "Ray of Light," and inspired by the video of the song, this video details a day in the life of a thriving public library system, highlighting the faces and places that make the library the library.



Mr Bean at the Library. Always makes me laugh.



The Calgary Public Library's award-winning television commercial.



You tube and google videos are great ways to promote events at the library. Snippets from The Living Library would be great on you tube. Promoting subscrption databases through You Tube would definitely reach a wider audience, especially the high school students.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

WiKi's - cooking pot of ideas/information







The following three wiki's were interesting.

The St Joseph County Public Library SJCPL Subject Guides wiki
The Mint Museum, North Carolina wiki
Library Success A best practices wiki

I think that a subject guide Wiki would really raise the profile of the nonfiction collection. The St Joseph County Public library have links from their wiki to their catalogue and also to other web sites. For example under the topic of cooking they have links to the resources that the library holds as well as staff recipies and links to local cooking schools etc. What a savvy way to bring the community together.

Ideas come and go, but if it is jotted down in a wiki there is always the possibility that someone out there will act on those ideas. The library Success Wiki is a great place to contribute your bit to the greater Library world. It is also a place where you could dip your hand in for ideas. Afterall there is no point in reinventing the wheel!

The Mint Museum - what a great way to collaborate on a project!

The Library is definitely a community hub and Library Wiki's may just then be the ecommunity hub. A few Wiki's that I think would work well are subject guide wiki's, readers advisory, local studies, homework help for primary age children and ofcourse a reference wiki. The ability for staff to build ideas on the @ your library camapign through a wiki would be a fun and inclusive project!

RSS feeds - What's in it for us?




Tools like Bloglines make it possible to have a one stop news/update pick up point.



From a professional point of view the following are a few of the RSS feeds that I have subscribed to.
It is great to keep up to date with the latest in professional development and library trends. It is always good to have a vision of the bigger library world and subscribing to RSS feeds in a way gives me opportunities to think of the bigger picture.
Some of the feeds that I have subscribed to for leisure are the following.
Dilbert http://dilbert.com/blog/
Rocco Bloggo SMH http://blogs.smh.com.au/newsblog/archives/rocco_bloggo/index.html
Powerhouse Museum http://www.powerhousemuseum.com/imageservices/

RSS feeds would be great to let our clients know about events such as author talks, notification about new items, monthly @ your library campaign, holiday activities etc... It would be a good medium to promote the various library resources on a topic which might be the flavour of the week or month.

The Mosman Libray blog looks interesting. http://refdesk.mosmanlibraryblogs.com/