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New
Friday Notes: notes for
next week
The life so short,
the craft so long to learn.
ANNOUNCEMENTS:
Discussion group books available for the 2006 All Iowa Reads book
Gilead.
From Denise: All Iowa Reads - Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
To those who want to reserve this for their reading groups, please
call in and let Denice know when or contact Denice at luppen@neilsa.org.
18 copies of the paperback of Gilead - 9 each Set A & Set B.
2 copies of the large print
1 copy of the unabridged audio cassette
1 copy of the unabridged compact disc
Request for Reporting Your Challenges
Dear Colleagues,
In recent years, the ALA
Office for Intellectual Freedom has seen a steady
increase in reported book challenges in our libraries. That is, until this year. This year, for some unexplained
reason, there have been fewer challenges
reported to the office. Our sense, based upon news reports, is that challenges continue to occur at
a high level, yet they are not being
reported. Due to budget cutbacks, the OIF no longer subscribes to a clipping service that can provide this
valuable information. It is extremely
important to our defense of Intellectual
Freedom that the Association is able to track these challenges. It is especially important as we
approach Banned Books Week (September
23-30). The data we gain through reported challenges help us prepare this program and understand the issues facing
our members.
Please spread the word in
your state and region that the ALA Office for Intellectual Freedom would like to receive reports of all materials
challenged in our libraries. Reports--all
kept confidential--can be made to
ebyrne@ala.org or dstone@ala.org, or online at http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/challengesupport/reporting/challengedatabaseform.html
Further information concerning challenges
may be viewed on the OIF Web site at http://www.ala.org/oif/challengesupport
Thank you for your help! Kent Oliver Chair,
Intellectual Freedom Committee.
THE
LSA:
NEILSA Van to ILA: Space for 3 people, contack Ken - Cost split by riders.
ILA Conference Commercial: (Mostly stolen from the Eye Opener) In Council Bluffs! The 2006 Iowa Library Association Conference is
October 11-13 at the Mid-America Conference Center in Council Bluffs. The theme is “Libraries, Literacy, and Learning in the 21st
Century” Here’s a look at just some of the conference
sessions:
- A Quality School Library
- Bringing It All Back Home (lobbying and
advocacy)
- Library 2.0
- Leadership Literacy
- Weblogs in the Library
- Best of Iowa Libraries’ Public Relations
- Managing a Volunteer Program
- Transforming Reluctant Readers in to
Ravenous Readers
- All Libraries Serve Learners
- A Great City Deserves a Great Library
All
this and much more: 4 pre-conferences Wednesday daytime, “The Ghosts of Council
Bluffs” tour on Wednesday night, Thursday night’s banquet with Des Moines actor
Tom Milligan, and Friday’s luncheon with Marilynne Robison, author of the 2006
All Iowa Reads book Gilead.
You’ll
find conference details in the May/June and July/August issues of The CATALYST, as
well as on ILA’s website:
www.iowalibraryassociation.org
Conference registration is due by September 29th.
Discussion group books available for the 2006 All Iowa Reads book
Gilead.
Friday’s luncheon at ILA is with Marilynne Robison, author of the 2006 All Iowa Reads book
Gilead.
LIBRARY
ASSISTANT - Northeast
Iowa Library
Service Area, Full-Time salaried position, 40
hrs/wk. Salary: $17,000 to $21,000,
depending on experience. Benefits
include health & dental insurance. For job description/application
visit: http://www.neilsa.org/searchcomm/index.html
DOPA quote:
“The good news is that most technically savvy kids
are going to show this soon-to-be law exactly the respect that it deserves. . .
. The bad news, as Ars Technica points out, is that adults who would be capable
of and inclined to help kids make safe online choices are now cut out of the
loop, since kids are going to have to sneak around to use these sites. It’s
abstinence education for computers, and likely to work exactly as
well.”
Angela Gunn, in a posting
about the Deleting Online Predators Act on USA Today’s Tech_Space blog, July 28.
CE:
LIBRARY 101,
coming up September 13th
The time is 9:00AM—12:00 noon If you are interested let NEILSA
know so we can schedule a site near you. Current sites scheduled
West Union and Waterloo.
COMING: Web Junction class
co-sponsored by SLI & NEILSA, Thursday October 19, 9 - 12 overflow
session 1 - 4 in West Union. This is an advanced notice we are
NOT ready for registration yer, watch the New Friday Notes for registration
information. Class size limited for this class.
Grow
Your Own @ your library grants
PLA
is now accepting applications for its popular “Grow Your Own @ your
library” institutional scholarship. This year, PLA will award nine
public libraries with grants of $8,000 each to be distributed to staff
members who are working to obtain a master’s degree in library and
information science. One library from each of the nine Public Library
Data Service (PLDS) population categories will be selected....
Great CE delivered right to your
desktop! Registration for YALSA's
fall session of e-courses opened Aug. 21st. The session
will run from Oct. 2-30. The courses are meant to be the
equivalent of a full day workshop. The cost is $135 for YALSA
members, $175 for ALA members, and $195 for non members. To
register go to www.ala.org/yalsa.
Three courses will be offered, full discriptions in New Friday Notes 08/25/2006:
OutReaching Teens
Pain in the Brain:
New Technologies and New Literacies for Teens
PLA announces new start dates for
e-learning courses
“E-Learning @ PLA,” the online education program of the Public Library
Association, will offer five new start dates for two of its popular
courses. “New Planning for Results” and “Creating Policies for Results”
will each be offered five times between September 2006 and April
2007....
The State Library is now
taking registrations for Public
Library Management 1 and 2 classes in the CE Catalog. PLM 1 will begin on Tuesday, September 12 and PLM 2 will begin on
Wednesday, September 6. The registration deadline for both
classes is Monday, August 14.
OPAL: Online Programming for All Libraries--And All Library
Users
OPAL is an international collaborative effort by libraries of all types
to provide web-based programs and training for library users and
library staff members.
These live events are held in online rooms where participants can
interact via voice-over-IP, text chatting, and synchronized browsing.
Everyone is welcome to participate in OPAL programs. Usually there is
no need to register. Nearly all OPAL programs are offered free of
charge to participants.
Examples of OPAL public online programs include book discussion
programs, interviews, special events, library training, memoir writing
workshops, and virtual tours of special digital library collections.
FROM: http://www.opal-online.org/
We are planning a DEMCO Book Repair Workshop for sometime
this fall, Ken will still do a workshop at county association
meetings if requested and scheduled anead of time.
Stuff:
What if you've accidentally deleted important files...
Razing
The Tower Of e-Babel
Welcome to the Tower of e-Babel. The Tower is the bane of publishers,
online retailers, librarians and book-lovers. In the past few decades,
at least 20 clashing e-book formats have popped up...
Public access computing grows, but libraries need more funding to serve
as the first refuge and last resort for e-government support, public
computing, and Internet access
“GROW YOUR OWN @ YOUR
LIBRARY” INSTITUTIONAL SCHOLORSHIP APPLICATION AVAILABLE ONLINE
Apply by
December 1
PLA is now accepting applications for its popular “Grow Your
Own @ Your Library” institutional scholarship through the online application
form, available at www.pla.org.
This year, PLA will award nine public libraries with grants of
$8,000 each to be distributed to staff members who are working to obtain a
master’s degree in library and information science. One library from each of the
nine Public Library Data Service (PLDS) population categories will be selected.
Please see the award application for more information on the nine service
population categories.
The scholarship terms require that $6,500 be used
directly for payment of tuition at the undergraduate level, or for coursework at
an ALA-accredited library school at the graduate level, for as many staff as the
recipient library chooses. The remaining $1,500 is to be used to support
attendance for one or more of the selected scholarship recipients to attend
PLA-sponsored continuing education.
Google Book Search now offers
PDF files of scanned books that can be downloaded and printed for free, Google
announced on Wednesday. http://news.com.com/2100-1032_3-6110950.htmlGoogle:
These books are free [CNET News.com]
Old-time youth adventure books in vogue
again Those of a certain age may
remember with fondness the books of their youththose sweet, innocent boys’ and
girls’ adventure books from the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s. Pure as the driven
snow, they weretheir characters didn’t use drugs, have sex, or cuss. Demand for
these relics appears to be on the increase, elevating them almost to collectors’
status. And that is forcing libraries to rethink how they will protect books
they didn’t realize had that much value.... Fort Wayne (Ind.) News-Sentinel, Aug. 25
The
joy of reading Barbara Rowley offers
tips on how to make learning to read a pleasure for babies, toddlers,
preschoolers, and kindergartnersand what to look for when choosing books for
them.... Parenting magazine,
Sept.
Google now offers public domain books in PDF
format Starting August 30, readers
can find new, free, downloadable PDF versions of some of the world’s greatest
books on Google
Book Search. The search engine company has expanded access to books that are
out of copyright and have become public domain material. To easily find books to
download, readers can select the “Full view” button when searching on Google
Book Search, and then click on the “Download” button shown on public domain
books.... Google, Aug.
30
Public
domain books, ready for your iPod Kara Shallenberg and her 10-year-old son, Henry, exhausted the audiobook
collection at their library in Oceanside, Calif., five years ago. With Henry’s
appetite for listening still strong, Ms. Shallenberg began to record herself
reading his favorite books. Eventually she upgraded from a using a tape deck to
burning CDs on her laptop computer. Last fall, she took her hobby to a wider
audience.... New York Times, Aug.
25
Library emerges as information hub in shattered Mississippi
town Library cards may have been
washed away by Hurricane Katrina, but it doesn’t really matter. Patrons in Pass
Christian, Mississippi, are making do with a makeshift library that was set up
in a 28-by-72-foot trailer in November. Although small, the temporary library
has 17,000 volumes, wireless internet access, computers and laptops, group
meeting space, and three full-time staff to help people find whatever they
need.... Oakland (Calif.) Tribune,
Aug. 26
Schools
rediscover libraries School
libraries in Tulsa (Okla.) Public Schools are undergoing a renaissance, thanks
to a wave of voter-approved bond issues that began a decade ago. So far, a total
of $34.43 million from 1996, 1999, 2001, and 2005 bond issues has been dedicated
to library resources and the renovation and new construction of
facilities.... Tulsa (Okla.) World,
Aug. 29
Life
in prison for library kidnapper James Effler, 33, was sentenced to life in prison without parole on
Friday, less than an hour after 12 Polk County jurors found him guilty of
first-degree kidnapping for luring a 29-month-old toddler into a restroom and
locking the door at the downtown Des Moines library last October
9.... Des Moines (Iowa) Register,
Aug. 26
September is National Preparedness Month The ALA Washington Office urges librariesas community
leadersto take charge in making sure their communities are prepared in the
event of an emergency or disaster. The latest surveys show that 83% of Americans
are unprepared to help themselves in a disaster, while the National Heritage
Health Index discovered that 70% of libraries did not have a disaster
plan.... ALA Washington Office, Aug.
25
Links:
Learning Activity Written Summary: http://www.silo.lib.ia.us/for-ia-libraries/continuing-ed/online-learningactivitywrittensummary.htm
LSA web site: http://www.ilsa.lib.ia.us/siteindex.htm
NEILSA continuing education http://www.neilsa.org/classes/current.html
NEILSA e-rate Consortia Blog http://www.neilsa.org/cblog/index.cfm
NEILSA monthly calendar - http://www.neilsa.org/ncalendar/ncalendarmonth.cfm
NEILSA web site: http://neilsa.org
NEILSA yearly calendar - http://www.neilsa.org/ncalendar/ncalendar_results.cfm
NEILSA Friday Notes archives at: http://www.neilsa.org/fridays/friday.html
NWILSA Blog: http://nwilsblog.blogspot.com
State Calendar - http://www.silo.lib.ia.us/news/calendars/2005calendar.pdf
State Library CE web site at: http://www.silo.lib.ia.us/for-ia-libraries/continuing-ed/index.html
USAC (e-rate): http://www.sl.universalservice.org/
Due Date:
NEILSA closed dates: 9/4, 11/10, 11/23 & 24,
12/25 &
26, 1/1/2007
- September - Library Card sign up month
- September 13 Library 101 [Booked West Union & Waterloo]
- September 21 5:30 Fayette County Meeting Waucoma KD
- September 23 - 30 - Banned Book Week
- September 27 - State Library/LSA Town Meeting (Waterloo Art
and Rec Center) ER & KD
- September 30 - Cataloging Supplement report due at SLI
- October 3 - Allamakee County Library Association - 7:30 KD
- October 3 - Butler County Library Association at
Parkersburg - 7:00 ER
- October 3 - Howard County Library Association at
Cresco - 7:00 DL
- October 11 - 13 - ILA Annual Conference in Council
Bluffs ER & KD
- October 15 - 21 Teen Read Week
- October 17 - Readlyn, Bremer Co. meeting - 7:30 DL
- October 17 - Clayton County Meeting 7:00 Gutenberg KD
- October 17 - Buchanan County Meeting Independence 7:00 ER
- October 23 - Grundy Co. meeting, 9 a.m. in Grundy
Center
- October 27 -- Arlington 09:30 Fayette County Meeting KD
- October 30 - Annual Survey due at SLI
- Nov. 2 at 7:00 p.m. at the Spillville Public Library -
Winneshiek County Meeting - KD
- Nov. 3 - ILA Planning Meeting KD
- November 13 - 19 - Children's Book Week
- November 23 & 24 NEILSA Closed for Thanksgiving
- December 25 & 26 NEILSA Closed for Christmas
The State Library's 2006 calendar http://www.silo.lib.ia.us
Traffic Counter
available on loan from
the NEILSA
Experts agree that accurately counting patron traffic with a
people counter is the way you can make sound strategic
decisions.
With help from a Sensource counter, your library can easily evaluate
staffing needs,
hours and more. With hard data you can be confident that your decisions
are
based on facts not guesswork.
If you are
interested in using the
counter, contact Ken at NEILSA to
reserve a time slot. If you would like
to learn more about how you can use the readings from the counter to
better
manage the library and to explain to Boards/City Councils your
staffing/use
decisions we can arrange that at the same time.
The fine print stuff
blog - Friday Notes 2 AT - http://radio.weblogs.com/0108327/
EDITORS NOTES:
"x" & "xx" are catalogers shorthand for: x = See & xx = See
also
Edited by:
Ken Davenport - NEILSA Consultant davenport@neilsa.org
COPYLEFT NOTICE 2002:
THE INFORMATION IN THIS PUBLICATION IS FREE.
It may be copied, distributed and/or modified under the conditions set
down in the Design Science License published by Michael A at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt
COPYRIGHT
Please note: material found on the web should be assumed to be under
copyright and is presented here for purposes of education and research
only.
NOTE: If credited [via ???] or [from so & so] it is their material
and not covered by my "Copyleft" notice. Ken
LIBRARY SERVICE AREA
BOARD Meeting
The public is encourged and welcome to attend.
NEXT NEILSA
Board meeting: Sept.
11, 2006 2:00 p.m.,
Oelwein Public Library
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