Monday, October 5, 2009
Thanks Everyone!
Friday, October 2, 2009
Website Usability for Everybody
- Can people do what they need to do quickly and without frustration on your website?
- Few different methods:
- Heuristic evaluation (evaluation checklist)
- Can do a google calendar plug in to feed the library hours to the front page
- it's important to stay focused and think about why and how each decision you make will get patrons what they need
- Cognitive walkthrough: reviewers complete tasks and ask themselves questions about how easy it is to meet their needs (counting clicks, etc.)
- top tier information should be reachable w/in three clicks
- think aloud protocol (aka traditional usability testing) observing people while they're doing things on your website and asking them to talk about why they're doing what they're doing
- just b/c people say they like one form of a website better doesn't actually mean they'll find it more useful; it's important to always test and observe to avoid this
- according to nielsen, you likely won't get any new information after you test three people
- try printing screenshots to give testees to ask them about how they'll complete tasks or where they will click- paper based testing saves time and can be done in groups or at many different places; it makes repeat testing much easier
Using Mobile Devices in the Classroom
- repurpose cell phones, twitter and other social networking tools intended for other uses for educational purposes
- tools with modifications are part of educational evolution
- mobile devices allow students to create their own meanings and methods of leveraging resources
- send a text to your cell email; each cell number has a unique email address
- students can be engaged in scavenger or information hunts with text messaging/twitter/email and voice to email messaging; cell phone quests
- extend the classroom experience to the rest of their lives; reinforce principles we teach in the classroom with mobile devices
- show and tell information resource activities might be good for our library
- k7.net is a great voicemail to email method for asking questions or distributing messages.
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Librarians as Community Leaders
- building and empowering staff and communities
- Jamie La Rue's marketing/library pyramid; community involvement is the highest level of marketing and library work that will allow you to reach the greatest amount of library users; it can help you can touch an extra 15% of your communities
- staff is the face of the library inside and outside of the library
- empower staff and creating a learning organization is central to creating a library that can effectively reach out to large portions of the community
- communication between departments and different teams is key to empowering staff
- improvement occurs slowly over time
- connection to community doesn't happen automatically
- management and staff must both provide support for cultural shifts and community involvement
- tap staff interests and connections both within and outside of the library
- allow staff to have the power to decide how to spend certain funds; especially with programming
- stay tuned in to the community with media, public documents, meetings, community groups, and generally actively participating in things going on
- work to integrate into existing community organization activities
- remember that continuous improvement is important; over time getting involved gets easier and easier and more effective;
- all staff must be able to articulate the library's value (to the community) and their own value as library employees
ProQuest/E-Library Update
2:45-3:45pm
- Review extensive changes in elibrary resource we have access through with lili
- Does not recognize and or or not in the basic search; hove to use advanced search to get Boolean operators
- Boolean calculator is back
- Includes a popular search word cloud and auto complete in the search box
- Also includes a gallery at top of results screen and shows a gallery, multimedia materials, and related links/similar searches area
- Can sort results by websites
- Shows thumbnail images of pictures included in articles alongside search results
- Can sort and manipulate results created by topic searches; this feature wasn’t available to this prior to the update
- Can do a search in just publications about particular subjects eg: astronomy
- You can now translate text in articles in elibrary
Free Web Tools
Memo Cordova, Ellie Dworak, Kim Leeder 1:30pm-2:30pm
· (memo) Rss/readers/aggregrators: way of staying aware and updated for new content
· Delicious: with ellie
o Create delicious for style blogs
o Use delicious to create links on a particular topic for reading lists and subject guides
o Can create links to books in the catalog to organize and categorize in delicious then share with students and faculty
· Zotero; kim leeder
o Use to save subject specific articles for faculty and staff
o Gather articles together to share and/or use for curriculum development
o Totally searchable
o Must use with firefox
o Holds copies of articles (eg- pdf of proquest articles, etc) so fewer worries about broken links, etc.
· Bibme: kim leeder
o Pared down version of zotero
o Better for citations (books are probably best)
o Really helpful, though probably best to double check accuracy
o Citeulike works well for this too, but with more robust group functionality
· Jing
o Free online screencaputre tool
o Screen toaster and fireshot are both web-based tools that are similar
· Gliffy- flowcharts, diagrams, architectural tools, etc.
Evaluating Databases
Jenny Sememza and Cheryl Sebold from ISU, 10:00-11:00am
· Your collection development policy can help with decision making process for purchasing databases
· To get more information about databases to help with decision making, you can do a Google search for “subject term site:edu”
· Ac database assessment tool is a good resource for evaluating databases and also evaluating and comparing ebook platforms
· You can create lots of changes in database contracts and negotiate to add or subtract pieces and parts of clauses to work best for you library; don’t be afraid to ask publishers for changes
· Discounts are sometimes possible; don’t be afraid to ask about negotiating price
Keynote Speaker, Jamie La Rue
Jamie La Rue, director Douglas County Library District in Colorado 8:30-9:30
· Addressing issues regarding challenging library materials
· The way to respond to religious bigotry is with exposure and shining light on prejudices
· The most common challengers of materials (98%)are not necessarily with political or religious slants, but from parents with children ages 3-5 and 14-16
· Don’t shut down conversations by demonizing challengers; invite them in and actively listen to get to the real hart ore reason of their challenges
· Tips to deal with folks who come to you with challenges:
o Apologize
o Keep an open body posture
o Use active listening skills; don’t be defensive
o Repeat their arguments back to them
o Help them find the material they were really looking for when their material they didn’t want or was offensive to them
o Have a process available for them if they still want to continue with their challenge
· Intellectual freedom is the right to complain bitterly about the things you don’t like