Monday, August 30, 2010
Simple and Easy Shared Library Ideas
http://blog.8bitlibrary.com/2010/08/18/nj/
Thursday, August 26, 2010
TD Summer Reading Club Library Awards
- celebrating the creativity of library staff who administer successful TD Summer Reading Club programs;
- promoting community partnerships that strengthen children's reading skills; and
- encouraging the sharing of information among public libraries across Canada so that they can further develop exemplary summer reading programs.
395 Wellington Street, Room 196
Ottawa, ON K1A 0N4
Thursday, August 19, 2010
Dangers on the Web
http://gizmodo.com/5614047/the-top-ten-most-dangerous-things-you-can-do-online
Surf safe!
Friday, August 13, 2010
Why do Young Adults Matter?
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
What would you do ...
If your library has a Facebook page, slap together a gift app. It takes about an hour. Create fake book covers in Picnik or wherever, covers that say things like "Pulse-Pounding Thriller" or "Savvy Historical Romp." Patrons can send them to people, and each should come w/the attached message: "For 10 Great Pulse-Pounding Thriller recommendations, call _____ Library at XXX-XXXX" [or insert ask-a-librarian's email, etc]". Boom. Facebook gifts. Reader's Advisory promotion. An hour or two of work. (Facebook quizzes are also a piece of cake. Have *something* fun & light to offer aside from your library's info, at least. Local history quiz? How Well Do You Know Your Library? quiz?) ....
National Poetry Month promotion for kids (or adults, really): run weekly drawings for personalized poems. You've got a poet on staff, or on your teen advisory board, or in your local literary community. You make up forms, or have a web form--kids write in 5 things they want included in the poem (give them suggestions: a sport, Harry Potter, a favorite color, toad guts, etc), and check whether they want the poem to be silly or serious. Draw one name a week, or 5 names a week, or 10 names a week during National Poetry Month--whatever your poet/s can handle. ...
What else? Some kind of free reading-type content to download to e-readers/iPhones/etc. A free ebook, courtesy of the library. That's right; your staff puts it together. A selection of our librarians' favorite short stories in the public domain, if no one on staff wants to write original stuff. A compendium of library-related humor. An anthology of literary mash-ups (Pride and Prejudice and Librarians) by staff. Our Library's Got Talent. Anecdotes. Whatever. People LOVE free ebooks. I slapped up an e-chapbook of previously published poems--poems! who reads them ... in May, and it's seen almost 1500 downloads. ... People are downloading it because they want free ebooks. But you, you promote your library's free ebook via your library's social network presences, your library's web page, etc. Boom. You've given people something different, for free, and folks, it really wasn't much work at all."
You can read Emily's full post (and the comments which offer more ideas) at: http://shelfcheck.blogspot.com/2010/07/what-would-you-do-if-you-didnt-need.html