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News Archive for March 2010     Capital Area Library District Feed

Meet the Illustrator for One Book Every Young Child

Posted in Events - Special Events, Services - Youth Services on March 26, 2010 by Carrie
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Event Date: April 12, 2010

Meet the Illustrator: Will Hillenbrand
Monday, April 12 at 10 am at Cleve J. Fredricksen.

Join FRE for the PA One Book Every Young Child selection, What A Treasure! By Jane & Will Hillenbrand.
Illustrator Will Hillenbrand visits Fredricksen on his only library stop in Cumberland County.
Children will sample a “Dirt Dessert” and hear the story of a mole, his new shovel and forest friends.
For preschoolers, ages 3-6.
No registration required.



Library technology problems in the news

Posted in Press, Technology on March 26, 2010 by Carrie
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Check out the article in the Patriot News about some problems users and libraries experienced with internet connections this week.
Pa.net service outage affects some area libraries

All of this begs the questions:
-Have you reviewed the service contracts that your library has with its internet service providers?
-What minimum expectations have you communicated to the company?
-What reparations can you expect if service outages through a third party provider impact your business?

Here’s a national perspective: Study of how people use Internet at public libraries
Special thanks to DCLS IT staff for any help they are trying to provide by making a call to MDT.
Note: MDT does not have any active internet service to provide to the public at this time, but their ILS (which connects to HER) is okay. A note will be sent to the district mailing list when their connections are back.



PLA Handouts Online

Posted in General on March 25, 2010 by Carrie
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If you couldn’t attend the Public Library Association Conference in Portland, or couldn’t make it to the Virtual Conference hosted by the district in Carlisle, that’s ok!
You haven’t completely missed your chance to learn.
Here’s a link to all the handouts from presentations at the conference: Session Handouts

Download them fast and share them with those who will benefit.



PaLA MLS Scholarships Opportunity

Posted in Awards on March 25, 2010 by Nancy
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Thanks to the continued support of both individuals and corporate sponsors, scholarship opportunities for MLS courses are available again in 2010 to PaLA members. Three MLS Scholarships are available to Pennsylvania residents and PaLA personal members who are seeking a Master’s degree in the Library Science field that will earn them professional status.

Deadline for submission is May 15, 2010.

This $1,500 award requires that twelve credits must be completed toward the degree during the scholarship year. Verification of enrollment in an ALA accredited program is required.

For details on how to apply go to:displaycommon.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=57



Woman’s Day Magazine Contest

Posted in Awards on March 25, 2010 by Nancy
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Libraries have until May 9 to promote Woman’s Day magazine’s newest initiative, “why the library is important to my community.” The American Library Association (ALA) and Woman’s Day are looking for stories that showcase the importance and value of libraries within the communities they serve.

Women ages 18 and up are invited to send in their stories in 700 words or less to: womansday@ala.org. Up to four stories will be profiled in the March 2011 issue of the magazine or at womansday.com.

A downloadable Web button that can be linked to the official rules on the Woman’s Day Web site is also available-www.womansday.com

The initiative continues a nine-year partnership between the magazine and ALA’s Campaign for America’s Libraries that has generated millions of dollars worth of editorial coverage for libraries. Since 2002, Woman’s Day has asked its readers to write in about “how the library has changed my life,” “how the library helped improve my health” and “how the library helped me deal with the tough economy.”

Woman’s Day magazine is a Partner in the Campaign for America’s Librariesindex.cfm, ALA’s public awareness campaign that promotes the value of libraries and librarians. Thousands of libraries of all types – across the country and around the globe – use the Campaign’s @ your library® brand. The Campaign is made possible by ALA’s Library Champions, corporations and foundations that advocate the importance of the library in American society.



Assistant Director: Centre County

Posted in Employment - State on March 25, 2010 by Nancy
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Assistant Director / Branch Coordinator

The Centre County Library & Historical Museum headquartered in beautiful, Victorian Bellefonte, PA is seeking an enthusiastic, public service-oriented librarian to be part of the library’s management team. This position is responsible for supervising all aspects of branch services, including staff and basic operations. This position also works directly with the Executive Director and participates in the formulation of library policies and procedures. ALA accredited Master’s Degree in Library Science, and a minimum of five years of experience as a professional librarian in an increasingly responsible supervisory and/or administrative capacity is required.

Medical benefits, vacation and sick leave, retirement plan, etc. Salary dependent on qualifications. If you have a good work ethic and believe that teamwork is essential, we want you! Centre County Library is an equal opportunity employer.

Send Cover Letter and Resume to:

Lisa Erickson, Executive Director
Centre County Library & Historical Museum
203 N. Allegheny St.
Bellefonte, PA 16823

or email attachments to: lerickson@centrecountylibrary.org



What happens when DLC and System Adms. across PA get together?: District Library Center Meeting Notes

Posted in Advocacy, Distributions, Funding, ILS, State Aid on March 25, 2010 by Carrie
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Below, find notes, updates, and handouts from the DLC meeting that took place on March 18 and 19th at the Holiday Inn in Grantville.

R. David Lankes, Director of the Information Institute of Syracuse, gave a live presentation on New Librarianship.

See more of what he has done online: Use Online Presentations
· In the field of content (music, books, journals, movies, etc), there is a shift from ownership to rental: You own nothing except the right to use it.
· Libraries have biases!
· What is your library’s mission? What is your mission? Does it answer why?
· “The mission of librarians is to improve society (through facilitating knowledge creation in our communities)”
· What is your favorite book and WHY? It is usually what you learned that helps you be a better you is usually the reason.
· Librarians are often obsessed with process…we rarely ask WHY. Ask why and why not?
· To question something is to determine its value and its strength. It is not to criticize.
· Why get more stuff if you have less staff to make it useful?
· Artifacts (like contracts) are not the result of the conversation. Stop worrying about archiving old conversations and start worrying about starting the new conversations.
· A roomful of books is not a library. An empty closet with a librarian could be called a librarian.
· Route of things/artifacts is not the way to always go.
· What should we change about our ILS? Should libraries be the host for everything else?
· How can you share your library shelves with your community?
· Who loves to “read”? Most people love to learn, imagine, escape, enjoy. It is not the act of reading that people love.
· Librarians have an obligation to tell the community: “[this] is what you need to know.”
· “Take away my people, but leave my factories, and soon grass will grow on the factory floors. Take away my factories, but leave my people, and soon we will have a new and better factory.” Carnegie
· Don’t rally on the steps with librarians because that looks like self-preservation. The people need to speak.
· Ask users: What problem are you trying to solve when they come to the library? That should answer the question of what resources are most valuable.

Libraries are not “natural”. There’s no theory. We, as people, built libraries—we are powerful.
Librarians should be radical change agents.
Policy should be rare, vague, and only what you need to apply.

David Lankes suggests that the best days of librarianship are ahead of us since libraries are positioned to lead in knowledge trends. Libraries are:
o Focused on knowledge and conversation
o Dedicated to social action, leadership, and innovation
o Dedicated to serving the people

Lankes shared two very unusual examples of lending. A library employee’s dog was “bark coded” and loaned! At another library, sections of a garden were bar coded and loaned to library users for seasonal use.

Lankes recommends that we consider the collection, the community, the library facility in our planning and “thought experiments”. He views public librarians as being intellectually honest and neutral, but not unbiased.

What is the mission of the library and libraries? He reminds us that people do things, not the library. The mission of librarians is to improve Society through facilitating knowledge creation in their communities. Those who recommend greater collection size but fewer staff fail to recognize that staff will be far less useful to them as a result of such change.

Lankes compared the customer’s experience at the traditional tall reference desk to the experience of meeting the Wizard of Oz.

Take away the materials, the facades, and we are still libraries, the blood of the community. A cut in libraries is a slash in the community. People need to show scars from budget cuts. The public needs to stand up and defend us, and we need to serve them well.

We need to be “of the community” instead of “for the community”, and we need to ask what problems people are trying to solve, not what they want. The next step is to map out successes.

Make two assessments:
* Where will you have the greatest impact?
* Where do you need to make an impact? How will you be part of that conversation?

Three panelists participated in Lankes’ presentation: Trish Calvani, Mary Frances Cooper, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, and Dan Parker, Oil City DLC,
-Trish emphasized the importance of getting out, seeing what’s important in the community, and looking ahead.
-Mary Frances shared that a library board thought elected officials would be seen as the enemy when cuts were made to the library. Eventually that board received funds needed to keep the library open for one year.
-Dan commented that poor communications are part of poorly performing libraries, and that we need to respond to pressure from staff and our community for innovation.

Lankes commented that virtually every component of a public library is a service. We give power to our communities through what we do. Question something to make sure it is good. He recommends that “policies be rare, vague, and employed only where needed.”

If you seek to serve everyone you end up serving no one.

Lankes gave an example of a central library frequented by the homeless who were destroying the bathrooms. The librarians hired the homeless to work as bathroom attendants and in this way resolved much of the problem that existed.

His final recommendation: You must prioritize services with communities. Librarians can be the mediators.

A Regionalized Approach to Library Services, presented by M Clare Zales, Commissioner for Libraries.
Here’s the handout: Regions PowerPoint

Basics: Commonwealth Libraries is redrawing the Pennsylvania Library Map based on the need to partner in library development across the state. We need to start thinking about how to use district funds differently.

Please contact me with any input, questions or comments after you have reviewed Clare’s handout related to this new regionalization. Feedback on regional planning will be included at the September 2010 DLC/System meeting.

Important note: Anne Kruger will no longer be our district’s advisor. We now have a team of advisors with Bonnie Young, Connie Cardillo, and BJ Urling as the primary contacts to work with our region, which includes the district centers of York (York and Adams), Lancaster, Lebanon, Chambersburg (Franklin, Fulton), and Capital Area (Cumberland, Dauphin, and Perry.)

LSTA focus groups took place as a part of the LSTA funding process for the state and IMLS to understand what makes grants most effective.

A discussion of a possible statewide CMS (content management system) for library websites took place. Drupal, Joomla, and WordPress were discussed as options for a platform to make website creation easier and possibly more to a standard. Stay tuned for where ideas on this project go. The discussions were exciting for libraries who aren’t yet on an advanced CMS.

At the District Consultant’s Session:
Anne Kruger, Youth Services Advisor, announced that 9/1/10 is the deadline for statistics for the One Book, Every Young Child Trunk usage. The trunks were received on Friday, March 19, at the DLC meeting and will be available to libraries soon.
Two trunks are provided for our district. CCLS gets one. DCLS processes the other and will soon release instructions for its reservation through June Weaver at ESA-ill.

Diana Megdad, Bureau of Library Development, recommends that you join WebJunction if you have not already done so!
Sign up at webjunction.org
Pennsylvania has its own site:
* Continuing education and sharing of information in a community is the primary benefit.
* Many courses cost only $5.00. Some are free.
* Fund raising resources are listed.
* ACCESS PA training is offered at no charge.
* Library news is welcome. Consider Web Junction the “communications place.”
* Library Spotlight for special recognition

Mary Maguire, Montgomery County, Norristown Public Library, shared POWER Library news. Unfortunately some libraries purchased databases before realizing they would be part of the “new” POWER Library. She advises that libraries be patient and wait to see what is funded in the next state budget. One consideration is to get EBSCOhost on a regional basis.

Eileen Kocher, State Aid and Statistics, is working on an “accounting for dummies” manual that’s based on the kinds of questions arriving from libraries. She suggested that contracting on a regional basis for audits could save money. For cost savings, libraries also might go to a public accountant (PA) for audits instead of a CPA.

Eileen stated that a library can withhold providing special requests (holds and ILLs) for library materials from people outside the library’s service area. A vigorous discussion on this topic took place.

For cost savings it’s recommended that any system or district collaborate with others and plan to purchase OverDrive as a larger group and not as an individual system/district. OverDrive is open to this. Their customer service and tech support are superior to that of NetLibrary (which was just bought by EBSCO from OCLC.) There is discussion that a statewide OverDrive group could help us to reduce costs and increase service.

State-wide Integrated Library System (ILS) Task Force presented by Susan Pannebaker, Director, Bureau of Library Development, and Lisa Rives Collens, Schlow Centre Region Library.

Here are the handouts from that presentation:
StatewideILSGoalsandTaskForce

StatewideILSHandouts

Briefly, the ILS Task Force launched its work 5 months ago. The goals include statewide resource sharing and delivery. This is about the customer. Please see the handout for important details.

John Houser shared information on Evergreen, the open source software that will be at the heart of the state-wide ILS we are striving for. Almost the entire state of Georgia uses Evergreen for its ILS. Currently Houser and associates are working with a pilot for the new system. A statewide ILS should allow for:
* Greater functionality
* Ability to customize the interface

We will share customers and bibliographic records statewide when this ILS is in place. Libraries will not be able to see data from other libraries unless needed. Evergreen will allow:
* Emailing a citation
* Creating private or public lists and tagging materials
* Adding comments to an individual’s record
* Including reviews

Holds will be managed by Evergreen. Reports are created centrally and made available to libraries. We don’t yet have a cost model that can help recognize potential cost savings for state-wide Evergreen usage. Acquisitions are currently not part of the Evergreen model under consideration.

Clare Zales reported that a good portion of PA will be involved with Evergreen in 4 years. Houser predicts that current Millenium Libraries will be offered to make the switch this fall.

PaLA Next Generation Progress Report,
presented by Jonelle Darr, Director of the Cumberland County Library System.

Here’s the handout: LiteraciesfromPALA

The vision document has been approved and the task force is developing funding options. Meetings were held with 4 gubernatorial candidates.

State Budget Advocacy
Glenn Miller provided a state budget update. Pennsylvania’s 8.9% unemployment rate for February 2010 was the highest since the 1980’s. Glenn’s message: “Libraries are seeing the very people who need us the most. Don’t close us out. Help us restore more access to libraries for our constituents.”
PALAAdvocacyHandout2010

Glen highly recommends person-to-person communication in sharing these messages.

If you have further questions about the DLC meeting happenings, or input to share, please comment or start a conversation.



Magic in the Mile High City Conference: Denver

Posted in Events - Conferences on March 23, 2010 by Nancy
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Conference Date: October 14, 2010

The Association for Rural & Small Libraries and The Association of Bookmobile & Outreach Services are pleased to announce that registrations are now open for their 2010 Joint Conference Magic in the Mile High City!
to be held in Denver, Colorado at the Crowne Plaza Hotel October 14-16, 2010.

The Keynote Speaker for Thursday’s Opening Session will be Dr Loriene Roy, past President of ALA. For the Closing Session on Saturday morning, Pat Wagner from Pattern Research will address the group. Both individuals are well known and respected speakers in the library world.

In addition, local author and radio personality Dom Testa will speak at an Friday Author’s Lunch. A Wednesday night Welcome Mixer is planned to allow you to meet old friends and make some new ones. There will be dine-arounds on Thursday evening and a Magic Show on Friday night. A time to visit bookmobiles, stop by the vendor tables as well as to reconnect with friends and associates from across the county will be included in this year’s schedule. Workshop selection is being finalized and workshop titles will be announced in a few weeks. Some of the topics for this year’s workshops include gaming in the library, using outreach programs for children and teens, ethics, library advocacy, and managing change.

Early Bird member’s rate for conference registration index.html is $200 (good through 8/29/2010).

Three exciting pre-conferences are planned as well. All are scheduled for Wednesday, October 13, 2010.

Dealing with a Runaway Board will offer real world solutions for those who are having difficulty managing boards, directors or other library personnel who are out of control. A panel of experts will work with attendees to develop solutions for your situation.

10 Things You Should Know Before Disaster Strikes will take you step by step through disaster preparedness; what you need, who you should call and how to organize now, before a disaster hits your library. This workshop includes a hands-on salvage workshop for restoring damaged library materials.

Think Outside the Box is a 1/2 day tour of the two newest libraries in the Anything Library System. LEED Certified and completely Deweyless, these two new libraries offer an opportunity for you to see a different kind of library. Meet with the architect, talk to the directors and tour the facilities. Transpiration to and from the libraries is included.

The Crown Plaza Hotel – Denver Airport – is situated just outside lovely Denver, Colorado at the foot of the Rocky Mountains. Minutes from the Denver International Airport, the hotel offers a lovely lobby area, a restaurant with a wide variety of meals, an exercise room, business center and swimming pool. All the rooms for the conference will have free internet access and the conference room rate is only $99 per night (single or double occupancy). This rate is good for 3 days before and after the conference, so plan an extra day and do some sightseeing. The hotel also will provide a free shuttle service to and from the Denver Airport. Be sure to ask about it when you register (303-371-9494).

Conference registration information and an online conference brochure can be found at the following link:denver-conference-2010

To register, please stop by the Conference Registration and Exhibitor website:
index.html If you have any questions regarding the upcoming conference – please send email to: arslannualconference@gmail.com



Recognizing and Reporting Child Abuse Workshop

Posted in Events - Training on March 23, 2010 by Nancy
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Training Date: April 27, 2010

The workshop, presented by Pennsylvania Family Support Alliance, will review the elements of child abuse, including the legal definitions of a child, perpetrator, and categories and indicators of abuse. The training will provide an overview of mandated reporting obligations, including how to make a report, protections for those who report, and the liability for failing to report. The workshop will also outline physical and behavioral indicators of abuse, the proper procedures for reporting, guidelines to working more effectively with local children and youth services agencies, and the key points of the Child Protective Services Law, including the most recent changes.

The workshop is on April 27, 2010 from 9:00 am-4:00pm at CAECTI, 2001 N. Front Street, Building 1, Third Floor, Harrisburg, PA 17102. Registration is limited on a first-come, first-served basis with a deadline of April 20, 2010. Registration form is found at: SCAN0792_000

Training is free to professionals who work with children and is funded through the Department of Public Welfare. Course is approved for social work CEUs, DPW, and Keystone Stars. All training and resource materials are included. To register or for more information, please contact:

Karin Hardy at Pennsylvania Family Support Alliance www.pa-fsa.org
khardy@pa-fsa.org
1-800-448-4906



Public Libraries in PA Work on a Statewide ILS

Posted in General, ILS, PA Projects, Technology on March 22, 2010 by Carrie
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At the March District Library Center meeting, the work of library leaders on the statewide ILS was revealed. Meeting attendees enjoyed a preview of the system.

The basics:
-The staff end of the system is based on Georgia’s PINES.
-It currently does not have an acquisitions module, but one is being developed.
-The end user/catalog part of the product is browser based, with ease of use features for customers and staff. It is created in Vufind.
-Current Millenium Libraries will be offered to transition to the new system in fall 2010. Other libraries will be invited to join after that.
-Interlibrary Loan features are built in, but a delivery system must be fully developed in order to establish the ability for users to request items directly for delivery to their home library.
-There is no cost model at this time. However, the more libraries that participate, the lower the costs will be for everyone.
-It supports SIP 2 for authentication to outside resources like OverDrive.

For more info, check out the handouts:
ILS Objectives and Goals

ILSOverViewPage1

ILSOverviewPage2

ILSOverViewPage3

ILSOverviewPage4

Share Your Opinions:
The Task Force wants your opinions. If you have thoughts or ideas, share them.
Here’s a listing of the task force participants: ILSTaskForceMembers
The task force wants to know what you think. Share your ideas, questions, comments and thanks.



PaLA’s State Budget Advocacy for 2010

Posted in Advocacy, Funding, State Aid on March 22, 2010 by Carrie
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Check out the recently released recommended talking points from PaLA for the organization’s position on state budget advocacy for 2010.

PALA is encouraging library advocates to ask for a $3 million dollar increase in the Library Access Appropriation, primarily to restore the POWERLibrary electronic resources, and a 5% increase in all other library appropriation funds.

Read all about it at their website: palibraries.org.

Also see a handout provided at the DLC Meeting in Grantville and at the Trustee & Friends Institute.
Share the information with your Trustees, Friends, and library users. PaLA Handout



PaLA Workshop: Williamsport

Posted in General on March 19, 2010 by Nancy
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Event Date: April 30, 2010

Plan to attend the “Going Green to Save Green” West Branch Chapter, PaLA workshop to be held Friday, April 30, at Pennsylvania College of Technology in Williamsport.

Public, school, and academic library staff will explore the library “green” movement and receive practical advice on how to implement programs and services that save money and help the environment.

Program details are attached. The workshop is worth 4 continuing education credits or 4 Act 48 credits. Cost is $25 for PaLA members and $35 for non-members.

RSVP required by April 23. Contact Stephanie Farr for more information at sfarr@jvbrown.edu

Registration is also available online at www.palibraries.orgUnder Events and Deadlines, choose the link to Register for a Spring Workshop. Information can be found on brochure: Spring 2010 Workshop Brochure

Questions regarding online registration should be directed to Ellen Wharton at PaLA, ellen@palibraries.org

PaLA will not issue refunds for cancellations or no-shows to the workshop.
Replacement attendees will be permitted with proper notice to the organizer. Any unused fee will be designated as support for the West Branch Chapter.



Use online presentations to start discussions in your library

Posted in General, Learn Something, Resources, Technology, Trendspotting on March 18, 2010 by Carrie
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Check these out. Share them with staff.
What do you agree or disagree with from R. David Lankes presentations?
Link to R. David Lankes presentations online

Start a conversation. This space is available.



PLA Virtual Conference Registration: Day 2

Posted in Events - Conferences, Events - Training on March 18, 2010 by Carrie
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Training Date: March 26, 2010

The Capital Area Library District is purchasing 9 seats at the PLA Virtual Conference as an opportunity for continuing education for all district staff.

We will host all of the sessions at CADM, in the training lab.
You will receive 1 CE credit for each session you attend.
There is a limit of 9 people in the room at any time, so signups are on a first come, first serve basis. Sign up FAST.
Please review the session details at this website: www.placonference.org/virtual_conference.cfm

Links to register and complete information about Day 2 of the PLA Virtual Conference on Friday, March 26 are now available below:

Friday, March 26: 10:45-Noon: Cracking the Code: Beyond Dewey: words vs. numbers
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/W927NMG

Friday, March 26: 12:15-1:15: Adrift or Right on Target: Perspectives on Floating Collections
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/WDDRXYM

Friday, March 26: 1:30-2:30: Advanced Black Belt Librarians: The Top 10 Security Issues in Public Libraries
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/W2P7QRF

Friday, March 26: 2:45-3:45: Inside the Author’s Studio: Debra Gwartney
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/WCSPHP2

Friday, March 26: 4-5: Books: The Top 5 of the Top 5
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/WJHLZ8H

Friday, March 26: 5:15-6:15 (and beyond): Shortcuts to Greatness or Ten Things that Great Libraries Know that Maybe You Don’t
http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/WWNFRB3

Register TODAY to take advantage of this great opportunity. Participant’s libraries will be billed $5 for each session they attend after the event. Get permission from your supervisor to register.
This event is ONLY for staff in the Capital Area Library District.



Professional Development Conference: Clarion University

Posted in Events - Conferences on March 16, 2010 by Nancy
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Conference Date: April 23, 2010

Clarion University of Pennsylvania Department of Library Science invites you to its Spring 2010 Professional Development Conference. The conference will be held on Friday April 23 on the Clarion University campus. The topic is History Next Door: Improving Access to Local History Resources. The keynote speaker will be Dwayne K. Buttler, J.D., Professor, University Libraries and Evelyn J. Schneider Endowed Chair for Scholarly Communication at the University of Louisville. He will be speaking on issues of copyright for both print and digital local history collections. Also discussed at the conference will be issues of collection organization, preservation, reference for local history and genealogy, and digitization of local history items. There is no fee for the conference. Librarians, archivists, local history volunteers, historians, members of historical societies, etc. are encouraged to attend.



Lehigh Valley PaLA Chaper Workshop: Allentown

Posted in Events - Training on March 16, 2010 by Nancy
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Training Date: May 20, 2010

Registration is now open for A Library Slice of Life, this year’s theme for the annual spring conference for the Lehigh Valley Chapter of PaLA. This year’s conference features Marilyn Johnson, author of This Book is Overdue, as the keynote speaker. One new feature of the conference is a poster session with the conference theme: A Library Slice of Life. This will be an excellent opportunity to learn from your colleagues about the programs that are working well in their libraries. Another new, interactive feature of this year’s conference is the opportunity to submit questions in advance for the presentations given by Kenneth Crews and Margaret Bruch. Simply e-mail your questions prior to the conference to lvpala@gmail.com.

Theme: A Library Slice of Life
Date: Thursday, May 20, 2010
Time: 8:30 AM to 3:30 PM
Location: Moyer Hall, Muhlenberg College, Allentown, PA

Session information can be found at:A Library Slice of Life Workshop

Cost: $32 for PaLA members; $47 for non-members and late registration (after May 1st is considered late registration)
Online registration through PaLA’s Web site, www.palibraries.org is available for your convenience.



ALA Library Advocacy Day: Washington, DC

Posted in Events - Conferences on March 16, 2010 by Nancy
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Conference Date: June 29, 2010

Plan to attend ALA Library Advocacy Day in Washington DC on June 29, 2010. This will mark the end of the ALA Annual Conference in DC which is June 25-29.

The day will begin with an active rally at 11:00am at the Upper Senate Park on the capitol grounds. From there we will go to our scheduled visits with Pennsylvania legislators.

Make plans to join other concerned advocates. There are no fees for the event, but prior registration is necessary. Go to the PaLA web site at www.palibraries.org and look for the PA registration form. We need to know who your legislator is to make appropriate appointments. Check out the FAQ that is on the site as well. You’ll also need to register with ALA so a nametag will be ready for you. To do that, go to http://www.ala.org/ala/issuesadvocacy/advocacy/libraryadvocacyday/index.cfm to find lots of interesting information about the day.

Informative webinars hosted by ALA in May will contain current issues before congress.

If there are any questions, please email the PA coordinator Debbie Malone at debbie.malone@desales.edu

If you are interested in a local district carpool or van trip, make notes or comments below. Let’s rally around libraries!



YAP Grant Opportunities

Posted in Grant Opportunities on March 16, 2010 by Nancy
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The Youth Allocation Panal applications are due by 4:00 pm on Tuesday, March 16th. Instructions can be found at:
Grant app instructions 10
Print and complete the application attached to apply:
Grant application 10



NE Chapter PaLA Spring Meeting

Posted in Events - Special Events on March 10, 2010 by Nancy
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Special Event Date: May 20, 2010

The planning committee and the chapter board are pleased to welcome Leslie Burger, Princeton Public Library’s Director and past president of ALA, who will be speaking on creative ways to meet the economic challenges libraries of all types are facing, and Erin Logsdon, of LYRASIS, speaking on the influences that have shaped the generations that find themselves working together in libraries today. In addition, there will be concurrent sessions to choose from.

The theme this year is Meeting Challenges. The meeting is on Thursday, May 20, 2010 beginning at 8:30 with registration until 3:30 wrap-up.

Morning Session: Erin Logsdon, from LYRASIS, : “Generation 4.0 How the characteristics of Traditionalists, Baby Boomers,and Generations X and Y Influence Our Daily Work Experiences”.

Concurrent Sessions:
1. PaLA’s Academy of Leadership Studies (PALS) graduates from the NE Chapter describe their experiences.
2. Community Services for Children, Allentown, Speaker and Topic TBA. 3. ACRL Excellence in Academic Libraries Award Winner, Bucks County Community College Library Speaker (TBA) on what the library did to win this prestigious honor.

Lunch/Business Meeting/Election of Officers

Afternoon Session: Leslie Burger, past president, ALA and Executive Director, Princeton (NJ) Public Library: “Creative Practices in a New Economy”.



Librarian Position: HACC

Posted in Employment - District on March 10, 2010 by Nancy
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Harrisburg Area Community College, York Campus has a part-time (10-20 hrs/week) librarian position available.

This Adjunct Librarian provides reference service, conducts orientation and instruction sessions for patrons, and assists in the general operation of the HACC York Campus Library at 2010 Pennsylvania Avenue, York, PA 17404. The work schedule includes days, evenings and Saturday coverage. Requires a Master’s degree in Library Science from an ALA accredited institution. Two years of public service experience a plus. Hourly rate is $25.04.

Apply online at: Welcome_css.jsp
EOE-M/F/D/V.