The document discusses three Chinese values that should guide library services:
1) Constantly improving and innovating daily (苟日新 , 日日新 , 又日新).
2) Teaching should be accessible to all, regardless of social class (有教無類).
3) Prioritizing people above all else (民為貴 , 社稷次之).
It notes the impact of digital technologies on libraries and emphasizes librarians' role in promoting democratic values like freedom of expression and intellectual freedom. Librarians must teach users to effectively search for information and defend cases involving freedom and equality. Overall, the document argues that embracing these Chinese
"New librarians worldwide: mapping out the future"
LOIDA GARCIA-FEBO (Queens Library, Queens, NY, USA) and ROBIN KEAR (University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA)
Session 95: "Strategies for library associations: include new professionals now!"
Management of Library Associations with the New Professionals Special Interest Group
13 August 2012, 09:30 - 12:45, Room: 6
http://conference.ifla.org/ifla78/session-95
WLIC2012
"Libraries Now! - Inspiring, Surprising, Empowering"
IFLA World Library and Information Congress
78th IFLA General Conference and Assembly
11-17 August 2012, Helsinki, Finland
http://conference.ifla.org/ifla78/
Calhoun future of metadata japanese librarians4Karen S Calhoun
Reports on the future of metadata in academic libraries and national research information infrastructures. A shorter version of this presentation was given at a September 8 post-conference of the OCLC Asia Pacific Regional Conference, Sept. 6-6, 2010, at Waseda University.
"New librarians worldwide: mapping out the future"
LOIDA GARCIA-FEBO (Queens Library, Queens, NY, USA) and ROBIN KEAR (University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA)
Session 95: "Strategies for library associations: include new professionals now!"
Management of Library Associations with the New Professionals Special Interest Group
13 August 2012, 09:30 - 12:45, Room: 6
http://conference.ifla.org/ifla78/session-95
WLIC2012
"Libraries Now! - Inspiring, Surprising, Empowering"
IFLA World Library and Information Congress
78th IFLA General Conference and Assembly
11-17 August 2012, Helsinki, Finland
http://conference.ifla.org/ifla78/
Calhoun future of metadata japanese librarians4Karen S Calhoun
Reports on the future of metadata in academic libraries and national research information infrastructures. A shorter version of this presentation was given at a September 8 post-conference of the OCLC Asia Pacific Regional Conference, Sept. 6-6, 2010, at Waseda University.
This presentation was provided by Brian M. Watson of The University of British Columbia School of Information, during the NISO workshop "Metadata for DEIA," which was held on October 4, 2021.
Career Opportunities in Library & Information Science in IndiaSambalpur University
Career opportunities in Library & Information Science in India has been described. Since, Library & Information Science courses have been introduced at Postgraduate level only, the undergraduate students are unaware about the course. Hence, they can not take up an informed decision regarding their choice of courses at PG level.
This presentation was provided by Treshani Perera of The University of Kentucky, during the NISO workshop "Metadata for DEIA," which was held on October 4, 2021.
Presented for Peer Council 2018 by Kalani Adolpho, Diversity Resident Librarian, UW-Madison College Library
Libraries and archives are colonial impositions in many parts of the world, including lands that are now part of the United States Empire. As colonial impositions, libraries are complicit in the perpetuation of colonialism and Western hegemony through classification systems and controlled vocabularies. Through Library of Congress Subject Headings, Indigenous, queer, and gender non-conforming people are historicized, homogenized, and misnamed, and violence perpetuated against us is erased and/or referenced euphemistically.
This session will define, name impact, and provide examples of colonialism in cataloguing and classification, as well as share information on alternative headings and organization systems developed by Indigenous peoples and nations. Additionally, there will be ample time for questions and discussion after the presentation.
Museum as Platform; Curator as ChampionNancy Proctor
"Museum as Platform; Curator as Champion: Learning to sing in the age of social media," a presentation by Nancy Proctor at the conference, "Event Culture: The Museum and Its Staging of Contemporary Art" organized by the Copenhagen Doctoral School of Cultural Studies, Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 7 November 2009.
Creative Commons License Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States
This presentation was provided by Stacy Allison-Cassin of the University of Toronto, and Melissa Stoner of the University of California - Berkeley, during the NISO DEIA workshop "Metadata to Support Indigenous Knowledge and Non Traditional Outputs," which was held on December 6, 2021.
5th draft tracy english 102 in process powerpointVirginia Tech
Spring 2010 and Fall 2010
needs revision but wanted to keep track of first presentation format that matched English 102 ILI learning objectives. More to follow.
8/26/10
This presentation was provided by Brian M. Watson of The University of British Columbia School of Information, during the NISO workshop "Metadata for DEIA," which was held on October 4, 2021.
Career Opportunities in Library & Information Science in IndiaSambalpur University
Career opportunities in Library & Information Science in India has been described. Since, Library & Information Science courses have been introduced at Postgraduate level only, the undergraduate students are unaware about the course. Hence, they can not take up an informed decision regarding their choice of courses at PG level.
This presentation was provided by Treshani Perera of The University of Kentucky, during the NISO workshop "Metadata for DEIA," which was held on October 4, 2021.
Presented for Peer Council 2018 by Kalani Adolpho, Diversity Resident Librarian, UW-Madison College Library
Libraries and archives are colonial impositions in many parts of the world, including lands that are now part of the United States Empire. As colonial impositions, libraries are complicit in the perpetuation of colonialism and Western hegemony through classification systems and controlled vocabularies. Through Library of Congress Subject Headings, Indigenous, queer, and gender non-conforming people are historicized, homogenized, and misnamed, and violence perpetuated against us is erased and/or referenced euphemistically.
This session will define, name impact, and provide examples of colonialism in cataloguing and classification, as well as share information on alternative headings and organization systems developed by Indigenous peoples and nations. Additionally, there will be ample time for questions and discussion after the presentation.
Museum as Platform; Curator as ChampionNancy Proctor
"Museum as Platform; Curator as Champion: Learning to sing in the age of social media," a presentation by Nancy Proctor at the conference, "Event Culture: The Museum and Its Staging of Contemporary Art" organized by the Copenhagen Doctoral School of Cultural Studies, Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 7 November 2009.
Creative Commons License Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States
This presentation was provided by Stacy Allison-Cassin of the University of Toronto, and Melissa Stoner of the University of California - Berkeley, during the NISO DEIA workshop "Metadata to Support Indigenous Knowledge and Non Traditional Outputs," which was held on December 6, 2021.
5th draft tracy english 102 in process powerpointVirginia Tech
Spring 2010 and Fall 2010
needs revision but wanted to keep track of first presentation format that matched English 102 ILI learning objectives. More to follow.
8/26/10
Study: The Future of VR, AR and Self-Driving CarsLinkedIn
We asked LinkedIn members worldwide about their levels of interest in the latest wave of technology: whether they’re using wearables, and whether they intend to buy self-driving cars and VR headsets as they become available. We asked them too about their attitudes to technology and to the growing role of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in the devices that they use. The answers were fascinating – and in many cases, surprising.
This SlideShare explores the full results of this study, including detailed market-by-market breakdowns of intention levels for each technology – and how attitudes change with age, location and seniority level. If you’re marketing a tech brand – or planning to use VR and wearables to reach a professional audience – then these are insights you won’t want to miss.
Libraries and Librarians: Nexus of Trends in Librarianship and Social MediaIdowu Adegbilero-Iwari
Outline:
Libraries and Librarians
Traditional libraries vs Modern libraries
Library trends
Nexus of trends in librarianship and social media
Social media and libraries
Why social media in libraries?
Social media Strategy for Libraries
Uses of social media in libraries
Who does social media in library?
Library social media policy
Web tools for managing platforms
Social media in American libraries
So what must we do?
What if?
Library futures: converging and diverging directions for public and academic ...lisld
The major influence on library futures is the changing character of their user communities. As patterns of research, learning and personal development change in a network environment so library services need to change. At the same time, libraries are focused on engaging with their communities more strongly - getting into their work and learning flows. This means that libraries are becoming more unlike each other, they are diverging as they meet the specific needs of their communities. Research libraries diverge from academic libraries, and each is different from urban public libraries, and so on.
At the same time, at a broader level libraries are experiencing similar pressures. The need to engage more strongly with their communities. The need to assess what they do. The need to configure space around experiences rather than around collections. Libraries are converging around some of these issues.
This presentation will consider the future of libraries from the point of view of convergence and divergence between types of libraries.
COMM 102 Mass Media & Society Term Paper Guidelines MargaritoWhitt221
COMM 102: Mass Media & Society
Term Paper Guidelines
• Length: 7-10 pages, 12-point Times New Roman, double spaced. (2,500-3,000
words)
• Style: APA
• Topic: Anything to do with Media & Society.
• Important: You may choose a topic that has been covered in class, but you must
take what we have covered as your starting point and research the topic well
beyond that.
• Sources: There are stacks and stacks of things called “books” in our library and
the VPL. I am going to want to see some of these in the List of References or
Works Cited section at the end of your paper. Wikipedia is not a valid source for
academic research. It can provide a very useful place to start because it often lists
good sources for further research, but it should not be used as a source itself. Our
library websites also includes access to many e-books and databases, the most
useful of which might be Communication and Mass Media Complete.
• Tip: You might want to query me on your proposed topic, as I can probably tell
you if you will be able to find many good sources on it and I can probably point
you to some of them.
• Due date: Sunday, midnight of week 10 for online sections.
Possible term paper topics
• How does mass media influence society?
• What are the contributions of mass communications to modern society?
• Marshall McLuhan from the Gutenberg Galaxy to the Global Village
• How Web 2.0 advances the Internet from Web 1.0
• How social media have changed politics
• How U.S. hedge funds came to control Canada’s press Citizen journalism
• Native advertising: Sell-out or saviour of journalism?
• Does Technology save or suck time?
• What are the effects of TV and Movies on young minds?
• Who controls content on the www?
• Is the data being mined about customers on the www a breach of privacy?
• Explain the importance of racial and gender diversity in mass media
• How has history repeated itself in mass media?
COMM 102: Mass Media & Society
Term Paper Guidelines
• Length: 7-10 pages, 12-point Times New Roman, double spaced. (2,500-3,000
words)
• Style: APA
• Topic: Anything to do with Media & Society.
• Important: You may choose a topic that has been covered in class, but you must
take what we have covered as your starting point and research the topic well
beyond that.
• Sources: There are stacks and stacks of things called “books” in our library and
the VPL. I am going to want to see some of these in the List of References or
Works Cited section at the end of your paper. Wikipedia is not a valid source for
academic research. It can provide a very useful place to start because it often lists
good sources for further research, but it should not be used as a source itself. Our
library websites also includes access to many e-books and databases, the most
useful of which might be Communication and Mass Media Complete.
• Tip: You might want to query me on your proposed topic, as I can p ...
Sustaining our common values: the pressures at play and to comeCILIP
David McMenemy's (Lecturer and Course Director, University of Strathclyde) presentation to the CILIP 2017 Conference in Manchester #CILIPConf17
The presentation provides an overview of some of the key challenges the profession is facing and will continue to face in the modern era that confront our ethical values. With myriad challenges including protecting privacy and freedom of access to information, and the growing use of volunteers and philanthropy in service delivery, the profession will increasingly face calls to clearly address what it stands for in some key policy areas. The presentation will consider the nature of these challenges, and consider some of the potential solutions.
Using a longitudinal focus group methodology to measure the value and impact ...Leo Appleton
Methodological paper delivered as part of the student forum at the 12th International Conference on Performance Measurement in Libraries, Oxford, UK, 31st July - 2nd August 2017
Using a multi-location, longitudinal focus group method to conduct qualitativ...Hazel Hall
Paper presented at 13th Qualitative and Quantitative Methods in Libraries International Conference (QQML2021) (virtual conference), 25-28 May 2021. Full text available at https://www.napier.ac.uk/~/media/worktribe/output-2755729/using-a-multi-location-longitudinal-focus-group-method-to-conduct-qualitative-research.pdf
Presents the structure and strategy for a research project focused on information literacy instruction in public libraries. Important topics include data collection methods and tools, data analysis procedures, and the scope and significance of the proposed research.
Similar to Chinese Values Guiding Principles for Today’s Library Service - Dr. Li Tze-chung. (20)
Chinese Values Guiding Principles for Today’s Library Service - Dr. Li Tze-chung.
1. Chinese Values Guiding
Principles for To-day’s Library
Services
Tze-chung Li 李志鍾
Professor and Dean Emeritus
Dominican University Graduate School of Library and
Information Science
3. Major academic libraries budget cut
• Cornell 940,000 for collection
• Emory 200,000 for collection
• MIT 400,000 for collection
• Tennessee 1,300,000 total
• Washington 2,400,000 total
• UCLA 400,000 for collectio
• Yale 900,000 for collection
7. Three Chinese Values
• 苟日新 , 日日新 , 又日新 guo ri xin, ri ri
xin, you ri xin (Do new thing every day,
new from day to day, and newer next day).
• 有教無類 you jiao wu lei (Teaching
should be for all, irrespective of their social
classes).
• 民為貴 , 社稷次之 min wei gui, she ji ci
zhi (People first, society second)
8. • First, 苟日新 , 日日新 , 又日新 guo ri xin,
ri ri xin, you ri xin (Do new thing every day,
new from day to day, and newer next day).
10. Imposing array of digital information
achievements
• online databases
• CD-ROMs
• multimedia and the Internet
11.
12. • The Monkey King 孫悟空 in a fiction,
Journal to the West 西遊記 , can travel
over 10,000 miles by one somersault.
13. • Google Book Search (GBS)
• University of Tennessee Libraries
• Harvard Digital Repository Service (DRS)
• Amazon Kindle
14. Digital library impacts on its use
• status of research library is irrelevant
• privilege of browsing books in library
stacks is gone
• use of several books on the table is not
attainable
15. Free Text Search
In any search device, the free text is a basic
technique You can enter any word or
words and words in any order to search.
But the free text search results in large
recall, less relevancy.
17. Dialog Search
• qualify or combine your search by title,
author, corporate source, document type,
journal name, language, publication year,
and others, depending upon the data
format.
• sort the result by author, title, and date in
some databases.
18. Librarians must catch up every day new
developments and innovations. Librarians
have duties involve licensing, buying
digital materials, producing, preserving
digital, assigning identification markers
called meta-tags for easy access,
researching copyright matters and
effectively using them
19. Second, 有教無類 you jiao wu lei
(Teaching should be for all, irrespective of
their social classes).
20. Search Engines
All search engines, such as Altavista, Ask
, Exalead , Go, Google, HotBot, Yahoo,
and the latest Bing provide tree-text
searching
21. A librarian must teach readers to use
qualified search. For instance, Google’s
simple qualifiers are symbols such as
+
-
*
“”
~
23. Russell A. Hall
• a library school should offer a course
“Teaching how to Teach”
• Or, “library schools are doing their
students and the future employers of
these students a disservice by failing to
recognize user education as a core
competency of today’s information
professional
24. The third Chinese value is 民為貴 , 社稷
次之 min wei gui, she ji ci zhi (People
first, society second).
25. ALA’s Core Competences of
Librarians
The role of library and information
professions is in the promotion of
democratic principles and intellectual
freedom (including freedom of expression,
thought, and conscience).
27. Some defending freedom cases
• United States et al v. American Library
Association et al (2003)
• American Library Association v. Pataki
(1997)
28. Politics in Librarianship course
The course studies politics, policies, and
legislation in librarianship. One of the
topics for study is to study the value and
conscience of democracy, freedom,
equality, and the rule of law.
29. • As librarians, you have huge
responsibilities in promoting, advancing
knowledge and in defending democracy,
freedom of speech, and the rule of law.
• Librarians must abide by Chinese values
in actively and passionately carrying out
the tasks mentioned above for excellence
in library services.