Friday, October 10, 2008

My Distance Learning Journey @ Laguna

September 13, 2008 was a great day for me; I wake up at 3:00am (so early) being a “Manilenyo” I am excited every time I have out of town trip. Finally “natuloy din kami”.

The trip is enjoying, as well as we learn. The UPOU lecturers discuss how distance learning evolve, the course management component of Moodle allow an array of course activities like forums journals, quizzes, choices, surveys, assignments, chats, and discussion boards. For me the distance learning is a big help for everyone because you can earn a degree without attending classes at Universities and you can share your experiences and learn from each other. Although at UP in final examination you have to go to the designated area for you to take your exam so in this case you have to review all that you’ve learn. After the discussion, I developed interest on distance learning but honestly I have to think twice because it’s not just an easy task for me one of the disadvantages is that if you don’t have PC at home and make sure you have a connection on the internet.

After Open U we headed to the Kamayan sa palaisdaan at Bae, Laguna we have lunch and it’s really a great food grabe nakapag extra rice pa ako. I have so much fun in this activity I mean it, I would like to thank all of you especially Ms. Sharon you’ve done a good job. Lahat ng pressure sa work, studies, family nawala lahat for the meantime. This class 260 batch 08-09 I’ am so proud that I belong to this class that we are all 24.

Thursday, October 2, 2008

SQL - Raymond Created


first
last
age
office
contact
email
blog


insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Mai Ryza', 'Amante', 24, 'Ramon Magsaysay Award foundation', 09178807517, 'amante.mai at gmail.com', 'mairyza.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Nonet', 'Angeles', 31, 'Marikina City Library', 09205226113, 'nhete_angeles at yahoo.com', 'nicenhet.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Kareen', 'Banal', 21, 'Rizal Library-Ateneo de Manila', 09192401359, 'blue_hyacinth at yahoo.com', 'kareenjb.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Joan', 'Beliran', 24, 'PHIVOLCS', 09205882656, 'dizaph at yahoo.com', 'jellyace28.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Jen', 'Bolina', 26, 'UP ITTC', 09175099336, 'jbbolina at ittc.up.edu.ph', 'jenbolina at blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Jertrude', 'Capito', 26, 'House of Representatives', 09167834217, 'coffeegirl at gmail.com', 'coffeegirl2004.blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Melvin', 'Chua', 25, 'UP Engineering Library I', 09179671803, 'melvinchua2006 at yahoo.com', 'manilahistoryblog.blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Joan', 'Dadang', 22, 'PLDT', 09282225651, 'dadang_anchs at yahoo.com', 'jitteryjoan.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Mylene', 'De Leon', 41, 'BPI-Head Office (Makati)', 09053530204, 'deleonmylene at yahoo.com', 'mellowmylene.blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Judy Ann', 'Emano', 24, 'C and E Publishing, Inc.', 09179612223, 'janno5 at yahoo.com', 'judyann05.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Jeremy', 'Flores', 25, 'San Beda College', 09054149105, 'aco314 at yahoo.com', 'jollyjem.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Maribel', 'Maligsa', 26, 'Castillo Laman Law Library', 09178039963, 'muhbelle_0711 at yahoo.com', 'mabel.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Erlinda', 'Malinis', 58, 'National Kidney and Transplant Institute', 09275177770, 'lynda_m05 at yahoo.com', 'lyndamalinis.blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Leona Rica', 'Manalo', 22, 'Manresa School', 09159874451, 'leonaricam at yahoo.com', 'lerima.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Raymond', 'Mijares', 32, 'DLS-College of Saint Benilde', 09266817134, 'jrsm1426 at yahoo.com', 'raymondmijares.blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Ronnaveth', 'Padagdag', 27, 'Grace Christian College', 09178167829, 'bbchoi_2309 at yahoo.com', 'respectfulronn.blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Maria Cristina', 'Nabaunag', 24, 'Rizal Library-Ateneo de Manila', 09277174571, 'mctnabaunag at yahoo.com', 'territorialtina.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Freya Faye', 'Perez', 24, 'Colegio de San Juan de Letran-Calamba', 09153411434, 'freyafaye_14 at yahoo.com', 'freyafaye0514.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Marie Grace', 'Perez', 24, 'MTV Philippines', 09063744052, 'mariegrace_perez at yahoo.com', 'majesticmarie.blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Grace', 'Perez', 24, 'C and E Publishing, Inc.', 09266246874, 'marielougrace_perez at yahoo.com', 'louperez.worpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Katrina', 'Perocho', 24, 'Meralco Library and Museum', 09176402266, 'trinaperocho at yahoo.com', 'trinaperocho.worpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Fairlyn', 'Sarga', 26, 'Colegio de San Lorenzo', 09164813985, 'fhaducasarga at gmail.com', 'fhaducasarga.blogspot.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Adonna', 'Sotto', 23, 'NAMEI Polytechnic Institute', 09105470318, 'adonelle2 at yahoo.com', 'nameipeslrc.wordpress.com');
insert into Raymond (first, last, age, office, contact, email, blog) values ('Michael', 'Villanueva', 28, 'ESA Library', 09179187884,'bruno98a at yahoo.com', 'jutero420.wordpress.com');



hasEML = false;



Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Distance learning for today’s librarian

The Authors

John W. Ellison, John W. Ellison is Associate Professor, Department of Library and Information Studies University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York (Ellison@acsu.buffalo.edu)

Abstract

Describes the nature of distance learning and its increasing use in the present and for the future. Approaches for libraries to support distance learning are indicated and the importance of libraries of all kinds becoming involved with support for distance learners stressed. The application of distance learning to education and training for librarians is discussed.

"Distance learning" and "distance education" has been applied interchangeably by nearly everyone in a variety of institutions, academic units, government agencies and the media. It is defined differently depending on who delivers the content, creates or develops the technology and systems used to transmit learning to learners. In the simplest terms, distance learning is any method of organizing and delivering instruction that does not require the learner to be with or near the instructor. Therefore, delivery may be by paper and pencil via the mail, listservs, radio, interactive video, television, WebBulletinBoards, or other delivery systems on the drawing boards.

Learners, and they can be students in schools, college students, employees in businesses, librarians on the job, and so on, receive distance learning instruction in realtime, such as television, radio, interactive video or live on-line Internet instruction and are in synchronous educational learning environments. Those learners receiving instruction according to their own schedules are in asynchronous educational learning or self-paced environments. The learner in asynchronous environments does not have to be any place at a particular time to receive instruction. This being said, some distance learning courses follow a combination of both synchronous and asynchronous methods. How instruction is delivered depends on what the instructor feels is best for the content and learners, and the available technology for both the institution and learner.
Here is an example of delivering distance learning using a mix of methods: A course can be delivered in a television studio live before a group of learners and simultaneously broadcast over ISDN lines to learners in several designated distant locations. Still another group of learners in the same course can receive their total course content over a WebBulletinBoard via a series of class notes and interaction with the professor and their classmates. All of the learners can also have access to the professor during online office hours (chat room) for a designated period of time once or twice each week. This is just one combination of methods available to those delivering distance learning in today’s teaching environments.
In addition to the above delivery systems, instructors can create RealAudio clips. Learners can access these clips on WebBulletinBoards over the Internet. CD-ROMs can be made and mailed to learners. online course evaluations (weekly and by semester) can be developed to measure the success of learning for short periods of time like a week or for an entire course. Live delivery of instruction over the Internet is now possible where the learner can listen to the instructor over his or her own computer and immediately ask questions on a WebBulletinBoard that the instructor can read and respond during a live presentation. Specially designed class resources (digital libraries) can be created so learners can access library resources directly from their computer. In addition the testing of learners over the distance learning delivery systems makes it possible for the learner to take 100 percent of a course by distance learning.
Distance learning is so new that most instructors are still experimenting with the various delivery methods to determine one or a combination of techniques that work best for their course content and type and level of learners. There is no question that learner response in both the degrees of learning and attitude toward a course helps point the instructor in the direction as to what should be used and how it is modified to meet the needs of learners. This is not an easy task when clearly technology is getting ahead of instructional development.
Libraries are faced with the task of helping to provide distance learners with the resources and access to resources like never before in the history of the profession. Learners are all over the world in all types and sizes of communities. They often need finger-tip access to resources never before delivered by small libraries in isolated communities. One can make the case that institutions and organizations providing instruction should furnish such resources or access. This is true and should be the case, but local citizens usually provide the basis of support for local libraries. To completely ignore distant learner needs, and the numbers using distance learning, may not be a wise decision by a local library looking for additional support. In the same vein, those families committed to home schooling their children deserve extensive support from local libraries

Certainly, the major resources and access should be provided by the institution delivering the instruction. Often institutions provide a distance learning librarian who works directly with learners taking such courses and instructors delivering content. Some institutions have developed extensive distance learning library Web pages giving immediate access to the OPAC; serial indexes and sometime actual articles along with on-line reference collection learners can access over their computers. Comprehensive interlibrary loan units act to borrow materials and deliver them directly to the home of the learner via FAX, mail or other facsimile.
New librarians must be prepared to work with distance learners in nearly all types of libraries. Not only educational institutions, but also businesses and industry are also providing extensive distance learning courses, workshops and seminars. An education major may need access to the school library media center to read and view materials for a young adult literature course, while a middle manager from a company may call upon her public library to access resources on a Leadership Seminar she is taking. A production-line worker may visit the community college library to review research on assembly efficiency. Distance learners live in the communities served by libraries supported by tax dollars and these libraries must be prepared to meet the needs of these unique citizens.

Every new librarian entering the field should be prepared to conduct formal needs assessments in the type of library community in which they work. This means time and effort must be expended to survey various aspects of the library community to determine not only their information needs, but also the format and level required by this user population. It will not be acceptable in the future to sit in isolation of the library community, regardless of the type of library, and arbitrarily determine the information needs of that community. As painful as it may seem for some in librarianship, technology makes all of us reconsider our priorities based to some degree on the demands placed upon us.

One of the best ways for librarians in the field, and those entering the field, to develop their understanding and appreciation for distance learning is for them to take a course as a distance learner. There is nothing like first-hand experience and walking in another’s shoes to gain knowledge not found in books, video and other resources. Learning first hand what it is to organize one’s time, meet deadlines, work with limited resources or resources that require a Herculean effort to obtain can give a librarian a whole new perspective to the developing area of distance learning.

We are just now beginning to see continuing education and staff development activities offered via distance learning for working librarians in the field. Most of these efforts on the market are workshops, seminars and short courses over the Internet or interactive video. These distance learning opportunities can be an advantage for busy librarians since they do not require driving long distances or leaving their office or home to take advantage of updating themselves. Another and more critical advantage is that the person giving the instruction can be anywhere in the world and have several other experts on the subject working with learners without the expense and time required to bring everyone together in one location.

Distance learning over the Internet is radically changing the way we deliver education and provide instructional resources for the learner. Librarians must be at the forefront of this effort to deliver quality access, environments and resources that meet the needs of the distance learner. The old way of doing things in libraries like developing collections, organizing materials and servicing the user will not occommodate learning needs today.

INTEGRATED LIBRARY SYSTEMS

Evaluating ILS Systems: What Matters to Patrons?

Three vendors responded to our RFP: Endeavor, Ex Libris, and Sirsi. In addition to the traditional elements of evaluation--review of the vendor responses to the RFP, verification of the responses through visits and calls to existing customers, demos by the vendors, and follow-up questions to the vendors--the Evaluation Team worked with the Functional Sponsors to add patron input to the process. We invited faculty and students to attend vendor demos but found, as expected, that few were able to attend. Clearly, we needed to pursue other methods for gathering faculty and student assessment.
Our patron partners pointed out that some of our survey questions were 'rather obscure.'
Another good source of input was queries by faculty and graduate students to their colleagues at other universities where the three vendor systems were used. Talking to other librarians is a time-honored and effective way to gather information about the strengths and weaknesses of a system, since colleagues will often speak candidly about their experiences. The same is true when faculty ask faculty, or grad students ask grad students. As is often the case with other librarians, faculty and student perceptions of a new system are colored by what system was in use before. Allowing for that bias, the perceptions of patrons who use a particular system are invaluable--direct, unfiltered, and based on their daily needs.
Our final method for gathering user input was holding a series of focus groups to discuss trade-offs among the three systems. There is no one vendor system that has only strengths, so every system selection involves weighing the relative importance of strengths and weaknesses. The Evaluation Team distilled the major trade-offs and reviewed them with the library staff and patrons. For the user review, we hosted a faculty and student focus group where we demonstrated the differences that we believed would have the most impact on them.
What Would We Do Again?

All of these consultation and outreach methods helped us raise campus awareness of the ILS selection process and gave faculty and students a way to feel engaged in the decision. We would probably repeat all of them for that purpose alone. Some of the methods, though, yielded input that had particular impact on our decisions and approach.
• The Functional Sponsors were excellent partners, and we would recommend such a faculty and student advisory group to any university library that's evaluating and selecting a system. To be effective, the members of such a group should be active library users who care about the outcome, should reflect a mix of disciplines and areas of expertise, and should be sufficiently experienced to bring perspective and credibility to the group.
• Tapping faculty expertise on technology and database design was very helpful and we would recruit such advice again. To be most effective, such an expert should have a mix of scholarly and real-world perspective. We were fortunate to have a faculty member who had extensive consulting experience with corporate clients as well as impressive scholarly credentials.
• Having faculty and students test drive the systems deployed at other institutions was a wonderful way to involve patrons in concrete evaluations. To be more effective, if we did this again we might structure the feedback survey more tightly, and we might be more aggressive in recruiting test drivers.
• Having people conduct "reference checks" among their colleagues at other universities was very helpful. We asked only the Functional Sponsors to participate in this process. To be more effective, we would want to recruit more faculty and graduate students to get a broader set of comments.
Understanding Patrons' Views Influenced Our Selection

This assessment process reaffirmed for us that involving patrons in system selection is both crucial and challenging. By focusing on the real differences among the systems and asking faculty and students questions that reflected their approach to the catalog, we were able to elicit thoughtful feedback. With a committed, talented user advisory group and a willingness to see the system selection process through their eyes, you, too, can turn your patrons into valuable partners in the system evaluation and selection process.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Evolving Web, Evolving Librarian

The Authors
Amy Benson, Program Director, Digital Services at NELINET, Inc. (benson@nelinet.net)
Robert Favini, Program Director, Educational Services at NELINET, Inc. (favini@nelinet.net)
Abstract
Purpose – To review and discuss significant developments in the evolving Web environment and how these developments impact librarians and library services. Design/methodology/approach – The article discusses how four major information industry trends, personalization, self service, mobility, and technology have helped to create a Web environment that is transforming how users are interacting with information and how libraries must adapt. Findings – The article puts these four trends in the context of library systems and services, illustrating how the role of the librarian has evolved. Originality/value – The examination of the evolving web as it relates to librarians and library services can provide a unique perspective for librarians who are thinking about, or are in the process of evaluating the effectiveness of services to users.
Introduction
The information landscape has changed dramatically over the past ten years. The World Wide Web (WWW) has had a major impact on how librarians and library users alike access information. New developments in technology have occurred that have moved us from the early web to Web 2.0. As the web evolves, so too must librarians. In the ever-changing environment that is the web, it is critical to stay abreast of technical developments, as well as user behavior and expectations. Now it is time to consider how librarians can take advantage of these new developments and help their libraries to evolve in a similar direction.
Web 2.0 is a term that has been used to label new web technologies (O’Reilly, 2005) that allow users to create, personalize, and share information in ways that were not possible a few years ago. These technical developments include blogs, wikis, and web sites such as Flickr (a photo sharing site), MySpace (a site for watching and sharing original videos). The use of these sites is continually growing. According to a June 2006 comScore Media Metrix report, MySpace saw over 51 million unique visitors in May 2006. YouTube had over 12 million visitors and Flickr welcomed over five million[1]. The popularity of these sites indicates a real interest in the ability to share and communicate with others who have similar interests.
Over the past five years the evolution of the web into Web 2.0 has been shaped by four major trends that have acted as primary drivers of the ever-evolving information landscape. These drivers not only affect the high-tech sector, but the consumer technology sector as well. Their influence can be seen in countless web-based services, computer hardware, software, handheld devices and cell phones:

Personalization.
Self-service.
Mobility.
Technology.
As new technologies and information services become available and popular, user expectations evolve along with them.
User expectations
Thanks to web sites such as Google, Amazon, eBay, and others, users of the WWW, especially younger people, have come to expect a different kind of experience when they interact with the world of online information. Google’s search interface is a perfect example of some of the changes that have occurred. Compared with the Lexis/Nexis or Dialog search screens of ten years ago, a Google search is simplicity itself. There is one box-type in a few words and go. There is no need for instruction, complicated search protocols, or an intermediary. Speed is another key element of the new web experience. Google searches billions of web pages in a fraction of a second. And people expect that the answer they seek will be the first link, or at least “above the fold.” While the link a user selects might not be the best in the best of all possible worlds, it is generally close enough to satisfy most people in most cases. The simplicity, speed, and satisfaction of this experience have helped to drive user expectations in all their interactions with information on the web.
Personalization
Users have also come to expect to find information in an environment tailored to their personal needs and interests. Amazon serves as a good example of the personalized web experience. When users search for a book on Amazon, they get not just author, title, and a few subject terms, but also links to editorial reviews, the ability to browse sample pages, and a list of other books cited within the work. Based on a customer’s past search history and aggregated purchasing data from other customers, Amazon proposes similar or related materials that a person might enjoy in the hopes of stimulating additional interaction with the site.
Personalization and customization of information continue to be a challenge for libraries. Librarians have been staunch defenders of their patrons’ right to privacy and have implemented procedures which protect users’ reading and search histories. It may, however, be time to seek a new balance between information privacy and service. When interacting with the commercial web, our patrons accept, and in many cases embrace, the need to share personal information in order to receive personalized service. Libraries could allow users to create identities and profiles that, given the right technology, could be used to tailor a patron’s view of library content and services. Based on user profiles or accounts, library systems could recognize patrons and adapt search results and content alerts to their unique search and borrowing history and expressed interests. It will be necessary, of course, to continue to safeguard patron privacy, but ideally within a context that allows options for personalized information services. As searching the entire WWW becomes an experience tailored to the needs and interests of individuals, library users expect the same kind of experience when they visit the library’s information space.
Some libraries have sought to personalize the look and feel of their web sites by creating portals to information services. One example is MyLibrary at North Carolina State. With MyLibrary, users can create a personalized interface to the information resources available at the North Carolina State University Libraries. Although the site has been available for the last six years, it does not offer personalized information services beyond current circulation and request status, and links to course materials.
One area in which libraries have been making great progress by taking advantage of new technologies is in providing customized content in the form of really simple syndication (RSS) feeds to users. RSS is a process that uses readily available software to automatically deliver web content to registered users. A fine example can be found at the Georgia State University Library. Here users can choose from 20 separate feeds broken down by academic discipline. Giving users the option to receive only the information on topics that interest them is an important first step in personalizing the library user’s experience.
Personalization is taken to the next level as users of major web sites are encouraged to contribute their own content. For example, users of Amazon can contribute their own comments, reviews, or suggestions about books, movies, and CDs. They may also create their own tags. Tags are keywords, or categories that label content users may want to return to in the future, or that help other users find similar or related content. Sites that provide a means for users to share, and tag content with others such as Flickr, MySpace, and del.icio.us, have seen particular growth in the past couple of years. Del.icio.us, for example, provides participants with a means to share links to their favorite content on the web with friends and family, but also with a broader community of people around the world. Users can identify others with similar interests, explore the most popular tags, or view recent additions. Based on the growing popularity of these types of sites, it appears that there is a real interest in sharing personal content and information and finding and communicating with like-minded people in a world-wide community.
Libraries have not traditionally offered patrons the opportunity to contribute content to their catalogs, but that is changing. OCLC, Inc. has recently added a feature to the public interface of their WorldCat database. Registered users can add comments and reviews to the existing bibliographic data for any resource in the catalog. This capability increases user-to-user communication and builds a sense of community around the library’s collections.
Communities can also be built around information shared through blogs. Blogs are personalized web sites through which individuals can share anything from their thoughts on world trade to what they had for dinner the night before. Blogs also create community in a number of ways. Although the posts themselves generally come from one person, or institution, readers can create a dialogue through comments on posts, and, via RSS, the content of blogs can be easily tracked as it is updated.
The web is overflowing with great examples of innovative and dynamic blogs created by all types of libraries. A title search on the Google Blog Search site for the word “library” yielded over 250,000 results. With the increasing popularity of free, hosted blog solutions such as Blogger and Livejournal, the barriers to blog creation are non existent. It is no longer unusual for the local pubic library to publish several blogs tailored to specific audiences or topics such as children, young adults, and adult reader services. One example can be found at the Darien Library, Darien, Connecticut. Here the library publishes eight blogs devoted to specific groups such as teens and children as well as topics like movies, town events, and even books.
A more ambitious blog application can be found at the University of Minnesota Libraries with their UThink blog site. In this case, the library provides faculty and students with an account where they can have access to what is in effect a blogging sandbox. UThink is a free area where students and faculty can create blogs related to classes as well as personal interests. The result has been the creation of a vibrant, ever-changing community of bloggers. After one year in existence on April 12, 2005, the site had over 2,220 registered blog authors creating over 17,645 individual entries. In addition, these entries generated over 12,486 comments[2].
Wikis offer a more collaborative option for communities to share information. Wikis allow users to directly contribute to, and edit content on a web site. A community of users may build content around a single topic such as music resources, or create content around a conference or event, such as occurred for the American Library Association’s Annual Meeting in Chicago in 2005. A wiki example that many people are familiar with is Wikipedia. Wikipedia bills itself as a “free encyclopedia that anyone can edit.” Anyone, anywhere in the world can contribute his or her expertise to this resource by adding or editing entries. In this way, individual contributions from members of a community combine to create a larger, potentially more valuable resource than any one person or institution could. Contributors work together as a self-policing community to monitor entries for quality and appropriateness.
The use of wiki technology in the library has not been as widespread as blogs, perhaps because up to now there has been a lack of free hosted solutions such as are available to bloggers. This lack of options has recently changed with the launch of PBWiki and Seedwiki. Both sites offer free versions of wiki software that is user-friendly and does not require any programming experience to implement or use.
The relatively few (compared to blogs) library-related wikis that can be found are, in most cases, works in progress. Neither the Library Success Best Practices Wiki, nor the Library and Information Science Wiki contain a great deal of content yet, however, creating connections and building a community of library professionals might be just as important as creating a definitive resource. No doubt, moving forward the number of people who contribute will grow, and with it the quantity and reliability of the content.
The value of all types of content and data is beginning to be realized and exploited in interesting ways by numerous web sites. The Internet Movie Database (IMDB) now requires users who want to read the message boards for a movie to register first. IMDB does not charge people to register, but through the registration process they gain information about users of their site, and their behavior on the site. This information can, in turn, be used for trend analysis and to deliver advertising to targeted audiences.
Google Maps makes it possible for anyone with the right technical skills to build additional services that make use of the same map data. One such example is called GMaps Pedometer, a site that lets a person zoom in on any Google map and plot and measure a walking or running route. The site even includes a calorie counter to calculate the number of calories burned on a particular route, for example. GMaps is a fine example of using simple tools and open access to data to add value rather than keeping data in proprietary silos that deter innovation.
Libraries need to liberate the valuable data locked in their catalogs and use today’s technologies to share it with and integrate it into other information sites and services. Libraries’ digital resources are often left out of Google search results because of the way they are delivered to the web. Consequently, these library resources are generally accessible only to those who know where to look for them. OAIster, a project of the University of Michigan Digital Library Production Service, uses the Open Archives Initiative Protocol for Metadata Harvesting to aggregate metadata for 7,605,729 items from 647 institutions as of the writing of this article. People who search OAIster enter their search term once to discover content from hundreds of institutions, many of which they did not even know existed. Using freely available software tools, libraries can convert their cataloging data into the format required for harvesting and contribute it to this, or other aggregator services. To further integrate this information resource into people’s information space, OAIster offers a search engine plug-in for the Firefox browser toolbar.
OCLC, Inc. has taken the challenge to make their existing data work harder very seriously. They have made data from WorldCat, the world’s largest database of bibliographic information[3], available to Google and Yahoo, through a program called Open WorldCat. When a person enters a search for a book title in Google or Yahoo the results may include a link to find the book in a library. As part of the service, a user enters his or her zip code to find a copy of the book in the nearest library. Some libraries provide links from this site directly into their catalogs, which can provide the searcher with actual circulation information.
Libraries could take a page out of Google or Amazon’s book and begin to allow users to create personal information profiles and develop systems that would make use of this information to customize the way library patrons view, discover, and interact with library content. In a world where portable personal library profiles exist, a searcher could complete the search for a book located via Google through the library by placing a direct ILL request, or by ordering delivery of an item to his or her home, no matter what his or her library affiliation. However, unlike Google and Amazon, libraries tend not to make use of patron-specific information to deliver targeted information services. Their tradition of protecting user privacy has prevented them from collecting and using both patron-specific and unassociated aggregated patron information to assess trends, identify hot search topics, and connect communities of users. By adjusting policies and practices, and adopting new technologies, a library’s services could come to more closely resemble the services offered by commercial vendors and become serious players in the online information space. The demand for this type of interaction exists based on the popularity of these other sites, as does the technology to make it happen, but the question remains whether librarians will adapt their services to meet changing expectations.
Self-service
In the marketplace that is the WWW, the doors never close. A host of online storefronts enable customers to carry on transactions that for decades required the help of trained service professionals. It is now common for people to directly apply for loans, book travel arrangements, purchase tickets, get questions answered, make appointments, and pursue degrees online. And all of this self-directed commerce is carried out 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
The impact this has had on user expectations is predictable. People have become accustomed to, and have grown to expect, that they will be able to perform more and more activities on their own over the internet. Libraries need to recognize this expectation and make library services simple to use without complicated instructions, or recourse to a library staff member. Librarians need to remember to make it possible for users to complete tasks they want to complete simply, and without assistance whenever possible.
Mobility/technology
Another trend that cannot be overlooked is the explosion of devices that make access to information in many forms available anywhere anytime. Mobile devices such as Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs), cell phones, smart phones, and laptops coupled with the nearly ubiquitous connectivity of WiFi and cellular service, give users the ability to access information wherever they are, whenever they want it.
With the increased prevalence of cell phones and handheld devices in every area of life, integrating library information into patrons’ world will involve going mobile. There are a number of approaches libraries can take. One method is to provide access to information content that is formatted for mobile devices. These devices often sport very small screens, text entry without a standard keyboard, and little internal memory. Ideal formatting features include short, easy-to-read pages to minimize scrolling, minimal images, and easy navigation such as numbered links for cell phones. In addition to pointing library patrons to Web sites that provide content specially formatted for mobile devices such as Google Mobile, MapQuest, Westlaw, Ovid, and BBC News, some libraries have taken the next step and are providing their own library interface in a mobile-ready format. Ball State University Libraries received a grant from the Institute of Museums and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA), to develop content that supports their students and faculty on the go. From their mobile web site, users can access reference links, the library’s catalog, book locations, mobile journals, nursing instruction videos, and other content designed for mobile devices.
The Minneapolis Public Library has implemented Innovative Interfaces, Inc.’s AirPac which provides a mobile-friendly interface to their public catalog. Both simple and advanced levels of searching are available through a clean, text-based interface. Dropdown lists with search types and search limits make it easy to interact with the service, even with limited text-entry capabilities of mobile devices. The addition of circulation information and book locations in the library take advantage of the mobility of the device and add another degree of self-sufficiency to the transaction. Libraries may want to consider providing access to circulation records, book due dates, overdue notices, and ILL requests via cell phones and handhelds to better serve their mobile patrons.
Conclusion
All of these examples serve to demonstrate a significant shift in how the web and information on the web is being used. The cool sites no longer simply present information as a set of static web pages. The drivers of personalization, self-service, mobility, and technology becoming smaller, cheaper and faster have created a web-based environment where users interact with, contribute to the creation of, share, and personalize the information content in their world. In many applications the web now recognizes users, remembers past activity, and even anticipates future activity and need.
The information sphere is changing, creating a growing number of users with ever higher service and access expectations. Libraries need to address changing user expectations for a personalized, easy-to-use information experience that integrates into their lives on any device wherever they are and whenever they need information. Librarians need to learn about and adopt new technologies to help the library evolve into a new information space. To help users become more self-sufficient, the role of the librarian must expand. As more content is delivered to the desktop and handheld devices, the need for expertise to manage the flow of information will be critical. The good news is that over the past 40 years librarians have demonstrated a remarkable ability to identify, understand, and integrate new technology into the library landscape. In a real sense, the state of the evolving librarian is not a new condition, but rather a continuation of what librarians have always done.
Notes
1. Social Networking Sites Continue to Attract Record Numbers as Myspace.Com Surpasses 50 million US Visitors in May, comScore Media Metrix report, June 2006 (www.comscore.com/press/release.asp?press=906).
2. UThink: Blogs at the University Libraries General Archives, April 15, 2005, viewed June 30, 2006 (http://blog.lib.umn.edu/archives/cat_general.html).
3. WorldCat: Window to the World’s Libraries, viewed June 30, 2006 (www.oclc.org/worldcat).
Reference
O’Reilly, T. (2005), What Is Web 2.0?: Design Patterns and Business Models for the Next Generation of Software, www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html, .
[Manual request] [Infotrieve]
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Taking the information to the public through Library 2.0

The Authors
Kevin Curran, Faculty of Engineering, University of Ulster, Londonderry, UK
Michelle Murray, Faculty of Engineering, University of Ulster, Londonderry, UK
Martin Christian, Faculty of Engineering, University of Ulster, Londonderry, UK
Abstract
Purpose – Libraries as they are known today can be defined by the term Library 1.0. This defines the way resources are kept on shelves or at a computer behind a login. These resources can be taken from a shelf, checked out to the librarian, taken home for a certain length of time and absorbed, and then taken back to the library for someone else to use. Library 1.0 is a one-directional service that takes people to the information that they require. Library 2.0 – or L2 as it is now more commonly addressed as – aims to take the information to the people by bringing the library service to the internet and getting the users more involved by encouraging feedback participation. This paper seeks to present an overview of Library 2.0. Design/methodology/approach – This paper presents an overview of Web 2.0 including definitions, technologies involved and sites currently advocated as examples of Web 2.0. Findings – The major difference between Library 1.0 and L2 is that Library 1.0 only allows for a one-way flow of information while L2 is a read-write library that gives library users the power to decide the service that they get. L2 reinforces the role libraries play in the community by building on today's best and continually improving the service. L2 can be summarized as being user-driven and aiming to save each library user time in retrieving information. Originality/value – Libraries have been around for centuries and are considered places in which books, journals, CDs, etc. are kept for reference or for borrowing by the public. The term L2 was believed to have been first made by Michael Casey in his blog LibraryCrunch. Chad and Paul Miller describe Library 2.0 (L2) as a concept, very different from the service one knows today, that operates according to the expectations of today's users. They state that with this concept the library will make information available wherever and whenever the user requires it. One point to note here is that this concept is not about replacing the 1.0 technology already being used but rather about adding additional functionality.

Introduction
Libraries were never the primary source of knowledge but they have always played a major role where people of all ages, gender and religion could go and engage with the various forms of resources. This is proven by the fact that 96 percent (Chad and Miller, 2005) of people of been to a library at some point in their lives and 89 percent of the UK population trust libraries. Library 2.0 (L2) wants this to remain but it has new aims that it hopes will work. The term L2 was believed to be first made by Micheal Casey in his blog LibraryCrunch. (Chad and Miller, 2005) describe Library 2.0 (L2) as a concept, very different from the service we know today, that operates according to the expectations of today's users. They state that with this concept the library will make information available wherever and whenever the user requires it. One point to note here is that this concept is not about replacing the traditional technology adopted by libraries already in use but rather about adding additional functionality. Most internet users will have come across the terms “blog”, “wiki”, “podcast”, “RSS Feed”, and “CSS and XHTML Validated”. These are all associated with the umbrella term of “Web 2.0”, although the actual definition of this term is still hotly debated. Web 2.0 offers a means by which data and services previously locked into individual web sites for reading by humans can be liberated and then reused, in ways sometimes referred to as mashing up. Importantly, it also introduces the notion of a platform, meaning that others can build applications on pre-existing foundations and thus benefit from economic scale without reinvention.
Leveraging the approaches typified by Web 2.0's principles and technology offers libraries many opportunities to better serve their existing audiences and to reach out beyond the walls of the institution to reach potential beneficiaries where they happen to be, and in association with the task that they happen to be undertaking. This new approach makes it possible for searchers to be presented with choices to view online, borrow locally, request from afar, buy or sell as appropriate to their needs and circumstance. However, with the rise of Google, Amazon and more, there is a fear that many users will bypass processes and institutions that they perceive to be slow and irrelevant in favour of a more direct approach to alternative services. Libraries should be seizing every opportunity to challenge these perceptions, and to push their genuinely valuable content and expertise out to places where people might stand to benefit from them; places where a user would rarely consider drawing upon a library for support (Miller, 2005). One of the aims of L2 is to encourage feedback and participation from the community. This can be done via blogs. A blog is like an on-line diary that usually contains entries of what is happening in a person's life as well as topics that they find interesting (Miller, 2006a). L2 aims to be easy to use, attractable to new users and be constantly re-evaluated and updated. L2 has provided a framework within which we are able to re-evaluate virtually every aspect of classical librarianship with the end goal of usability and findability in mind (Blyberg, 2006). L2 is built upon the principles of and is a direct result of the term Web 2.0. Next we discuss some Web 2.0 concepts in more detail before delving into Library 2.0 in more depth.
Web 2.0
“Web 2.0” was first used by O'Reilly Media as the name of a series of web-development conferences (www.web2con.com/) that started in 2004. Sub-categories of what Web 2.0 encapsulates include usability, economy, participation, convergence, design, standardization and remixability. These categories are further broken down with sub-categories such as blogs, audio, video, RSS, open APIs, wikis, social software and focus on simplicity. This paper presents an overview of Web 2.0 including definitions, technologies involved and sites currently advocated as examples of web 2.0. Tim O'Reilly defines Web 2.0 as:
Web 2.0 is the network as platform, spanning all connected devices; Web 2.0 applications are those that make the most of the intrinsic advantages of that platform: delivering software as a continually-updated service that gets better the more people use it, consuming and remixing data from multiple sources, including individual users, while providing their own data and services in a form that allows remixing by others, creating network effects through an “architecture of participation”, and going beyond the page metaphor of Web 1.0 to deliver rich user experiences (http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2005/10/web_20_compact_definition.html).
A general comparison between Web 2.0 and Web 1.0 is shown in Table I.
There are those (Shaw, 2005) who debate the validity of the term “Web 2.0.” claiming that Web 2.0 does not exist and that the term is merely a marketing slogan that is used to convince investors and the media that the companies are “creating something fundamentally new, rather than continuing to develop and use well-established technologies”. Whatever the actual definition, the most widely accepted idea of what makes a web site Web 2.0 is the following set of criteria:
User-generated content, as opposed to content posted solely by the site author(s). One example of this would be the recently developed www.newsvine.com, which allows users to post their own news articles and maintain their own news columns.
Treats users as if they are co-developers of the site: The more people that use the service, the better it becomes. User contribution, by means of reviews, comments, etc. is encouraged.
Highly customisable content and interface. For example, allowing users to put their own news feeds on their homepage as in www.netvibes.com, rather than serving content that the user has little to no control over, as in the home page of MSN, BBC or NBC.
The core application of the web site runs through the browser and web server, rather than on a desktop platform.
The incorporation of popular internet trends such as “blogging”, “tagging”, “podcasting”, “wikis”, the sharing of media and content and the use of web standards such as validated XHTML and Cascading Style Sheets (CSS).
Integration of emerging web technologies such as Asynchronous JavaScript and XML (AJAX), Really Simple Syndication (RSS) and Application Programming Interfaces (APIs).
The use of hyperlinking on Web pages underpins the 2.0 Web. The high level of connectability between content on the web has encouraged sustained growth as more and more users add new content. Users can then link to newly discovered sites in a way similar to dendrites forming relationships in the human brain. The success of Google is a result of 2.0 technologies. Google have created a business from linking users of one site to the information or service provided by another. Google has none of the trappings of software provider's products. These trappings are the purchase cost of the software, limited applications to a particular platform and the product life span where the next generation would involve the consumer having to purchase an upgrade or a whole new software package. There are no direct costs to the users of Google; all the business costs are met by advertising and the placing of sponsored links in prominent positions. Continuous upgrades are of very little significance to the end user, as they have no direct input either with time or resources. The key to Google's success is the use of PageRank, which used web link structure as opposed to the page content to rank search results. This open source operating systems would have been impossible to run with Web 1.0 technologies supporting the argument that Web 2.0 is a platform where the user has control of the information provided (McCormack, 2002). While it is clear that Web 2.0 has no clear and concise definition, one could argue that the term is useful in that it allows non-technical users to define the complicated set of concepts and technologies that are constantly being developed for use in new web sites, and it allows companies to promote their web sites to the masses without having to explain the sophisticated array of technologies used to create the application. Web 2.0 is more interactive than its predecessor. Web pages are now described as “User dependant web portals”. These portals require user input and feed back for success. eBay is an online business that depends on transactions conducted by it members to sustain growth. In a way similar to the web, eBay is a supplier of content that supports user activities with continued market domination almost guaranteed due to its sheer scale of operation. The major high street retailers are now flexing their collective business muscle on the web. Tesco.com provides all the facilities of their physical store online enabling the customer to shop from home using JavaScript and secure internet connections to facilitate transactions. Other business can now compete with the big retail companies even if they are based solely online. Ryan Air provides agent free bookings removing the middle man and more importantly for the consumer, agent fees from air travel. Web 2.0 applications have helped Ryan Air grow as a company at a time when the general air industry is in recession (MacManus, 2005).
A lot of the people involved in the development of Web 1.0 are today involved in the Web 2.0 industry, this bank of knowledge can only help guarantee the success of Web 2.0 applications. In Web 1.0 many companies which were involved in the original dot com era had moved on to join larger companies. This suggests that there is plenty of web experience in the mix. These people will have the knowledge of what works and what doesn't. But more importantly, why something does or does not work. Today's web sites are now dynamic rather than being static, web sites have become platforms for web applications for end users. With the use of development systems such as AJAX (Asynchronous JavaScript and XML), there are now many web-based applications which imitate standard computer applications, for example word processing, spreadsheets and slide show presentations. These are applications that the general public is familiar with, making it easier for an end user to operate these applications. These new web applications are often much more complicated to design and create creating employment opportunities for it professionals. The way in which communities interact socially has changed with Web 2.0 innovations. No longer do people depend on written letters in the post or telephone calls to communicate. Web 2.0 has helped to create online social networks for public use; some of them provide social software that members can use to connect with each other. Microsoft's MSN and Bebo.com are two of these online communities. Benefits to web 2.0 include the fact that it holds collective intelligence. This makes the work on it collaborative. Also, because everything is updated instantly, using RSS feeds, there is an instant gratification. Users have a sense of ownership over the web because it holds their work. This makes them much more passionate about using the web and updating it regularly, meaning everyone who reads the information on the web gets up to date information all the time. The early web was primarily for the reading of information by users, today on the web the user can still just read but they also now can contribute to a web site. Today's online tasks are more than surfing for information, they now include shopping, down and uploading, blogging and sharing files with web users both known and unknown to the user. There is no argument against the fact that there have been major developments in the way today's web is run or in the applications and expectations end users now have of the web. Even when all the previously discussed developments are considered there still is no direct evidence that Web 2.0 exists as an actual methodology or technology. It seems to be a phrase used to describe recent innovations in the natural development cycle, although some older technologies have been included under the Web 2.0 banner (MacManus, 2005).
Library 2.0
Library 2.0 can be seen as a reaction from librarians to the increasingly library relevant developments in ICT (Web 2.0 and social software) and an environment that is saturated with information available through more easily accessible channels. The reaction comes in the form of increased openness and trust towards library users, both online and in the library, and in the development of new communication channels and services that are more in tune with social developments (Brevik, 2006). Talis for instance is a UK based library automation service which is taking a leadership role in L2 they argue however that for L2 to work, it must not be a Talis only creation (Chad and Miller, 2005). L2 requires all relevant companies coming together and creating an application that can work for everybody. Table II shows the principles of Web 2.0 from which L2 was directly developed. All of these principles are needed to form an effective and efficient L2 and leads to the following
Browser + Web 2.0 applications + connectivity=full-featured OPAC
The word browser' here refers to a web browser, which is an application that is used to access the World Wide Web (WWW). This along with Web 2.0 applications and connectivity will lead to a full-featured Online Public Access Catalogue (OPAC). OPAC is a computerised online catalogue used to hold the details of the resources held in a library. This database has replaced the card catalogue in libraries and allows library staff and the public to access it through the internet at anytime and from anywhere. OPAC's form part of an integrated library system, which is a group of library systems working together to achieve the same goal.
Figure 1 shows a L2 Meme Map (Biancu, 2006) which reveals all the principles and important parts of L2 that need to be in place for it to be as efficient and as effective as possible.
Adopting the Web 2.0 principles will allow libraries to better serve their customers as well as allowing for the opportunity to gain more customers. Using this service, users would be able to (Miller, 2006b) view online, borrow locally, request from afar and buy or sell as appropriate to their needs and circumstance.
L2 is all about change and ultimately survival of the library. When looking back to what the first libraries were and comparing them with the library of today, there have been many changes, albeit, gradual ones. These changes have all been done to keep up with the changing needs and expectations of the world. As we are getting more and more reliant on technology and the internet, L2 is just another method of keeping libraries attractable to the community. In order for libraries to survive they must be able to keep up with the way internet-based services such as Google provide access to information at a click of a button from any where at any time at the point of need. This would mean that users don't have to physically go to a library in order to gain the information that they require. This would then minimise the problem of limited opening hours (Chad and Miller, 2005). For L2 to work effectively and efficiently the entire community as a whole needs to have a willingness to change, a willingness to try new things, a willingness to constantly re-evaluate service offerings and a willingness to look outside our own world for solutions.
Library 2.0 in action
Public librarians have been the most influential movers of L2 therefore, for it to work effectively and efficiently, L2 should be determined and formed by librarians and library users. Many of the services offered by libraries are not used by a majority of the population. It is difficult to reach this group with physical services as libraries are constrained by space and money and cannot carry every item. Many public libraries now try to offer a hit-driven collection plan, putting forth popular materials that many of their existing customers request. This is fine for some traditional customers, but the wider population might be better served if librarians consider “the long tail” (Casey, 2006).
The long tail is the theory that customer buying trends and the economy are moving away from the small number of hit products widely available in offline stores and towards the huge number of one off and niche products that are only available on-line. The reason that it gets its name is because when a graph of sales against products sold is plotted, we can see that only a small number of products sell in large quantities “the hits” and there are a large number of products that only sell in small quantities “the misses”. These misses are the one off and niche products that are not available in the high street due to the expense of shelf space and therefore form the long tail. The main reason that it has become possible for the long tail to become profitable is the fall in production and distribution costs through the internet. Customers are now able to find products that are of special interest to them rather than the “one size fits all” products that are well marketed and available in most offline stores.
In 1988 a book by a British mountain climber Joe Simpson – which did not do exceedingly well, was promoted by Amazon alongside a book written by John Krakauer, released a decade later, which was also about a mountain-climbing tragedy. Amazon recommends products of similar interests to a customer when they are purchasing from the web site, i.e. Other customers buying this product have also liked … . It was this that led to the great success of Simpson's book. It went on to outsell Krakauer's 1998 book by 2-1 (Anderson, 2004). This was possible due to the public being able to leave positive feedback about the book – so that the consumer knew before they tried it how many other people had already found it interesting. This is not just true for online bookstores, the same happens in online music and media centres. The long tail is also about online retailers making products available to the public that high-street stores or cinemas cannot do due to limited demand for the products. (Anderson, 2004) highlights this fact by stating that the average movie theatre will not screen a film unless it can attract at least 1,500 people during a two-week run. This is basically the rent for a screen. Also, a typical record shop needs to sell at least two copies of a CD per year to make it worth carrying. This is equivalent to the rent for a half inch of shelf space. This model also applies to DVD rental shops, videogame stores, booksellers, and newsstands.
Addressing the diverse long tail requires a combination of physical and virtual services, a move underway in many libraries, with efforts such as interlibrary loan (ILL) purchase-on-demand from online used-book retailers, home delivery of books to customers who otherwise never visit libraries, and by offering more electronic texts. Web 2.0 harnesses the collective intelligence of everyone who uses a product and in an online environment this takes the form of feedback, user reviews, and user-crafted social networks. Blogs and wikis are other ways to engage customers and push fresh content to users (Casey, 2006). The Ann Arbor District Library in Michigan is currently using the L2 functionality. Figure 2 shows the service blog page of the Ann Arbor District Library.
The diagram above demonstrates that blogs are an important part of L2. They enable the user to give their view of the service been provided and thereby encouraging feedback. Temple University Library (http://blog.library.temple.edu/liblog/archives/events/) uses a blog to provide a place for news, events, and discussion. Saint Joseph County Public Library (www.libraryforlife.org/) used open source wiki software to create a successful subject guide that facilitates customer feedback (Casey, 2006). Libraries such as Gwinnett County Public Library (GCPL) (www.gwinnettpl.org/) have embraced L2 by providing access to online databases, downloadable audio books and music, alongside instant messaging reference services. South Huntington Public Library (www.shpl.info/), NY created an iPod Shuffle loan program. Libraries such as Cecil County Public Library (Cecil County Public Library in Elkton) have expanded physical services by creating specific areas for teen and community activities, reflecting the public's desire for a civic space and exciting new programs (Casey, 2006). Promoters behind L2 wish to develop it in such a way so that library users can access it from sites such as Amazon, Yahoo, however, it is possible that a highly successful organization that makes its money from selling books would not want to see an advertised library service that allows users to borrow books for free.
Finally, Harris (2006) sees school libraries as being different from public libraries in that they are carefully constructed information places with a specific focus on the curriculum of the different grades and classes they serve. To clarify the point, Harris states that:
Public libraries tend to serve a broad variety of interests and academic libraries (who focus on wide topics with areas of great depth and a tradition of archiving past thoughts). Business libraries are more directly focused on very specific customer needs to assist the company in meeting their research and other goals. School libraries provide curriculum based resources to help students meet specific learning goals (Harris, 2006).
He outlines in his blog (Harris, 2006) the development of a School Library 2.0/Web 2.0 based framework. School Library 2.0 is about refocusing attention to the possibilities provided to a school when it makes use of the school library platform. In addition to librarians who will be called upon more and more to be pedagogy and curriculum consultant teachers, the SL2.0 platform can also provide access to resources from and through the library platform in both physical and digital modes. The school library is the base for curriculum support resources in all their varied formats.
Conclusion
Making use of Web 2.0 is about making sure that, as a side effect to what the user is actually doing that they actually add value. In short, making use of Web 2.0 principals is making use of the long tail. In the Web 2.0 world, applications are run online, with no installation, updates are constant and continuous and access is instant from any computer with a browser.
Leveraging the approaches typified by Web 2.0 principles allows libraries opportunities to better serve existing audiences and to reach out to potential beneficiaries where they happen to be, and in association with the task that they happen to be undertaking. This new approach makes it possible for searchers to be presented with choices to view online, borrow locally, request from afar, buy or sell as appropriate to their needs and circumstance. L2 reinforces the role libraries play in the community by building on today's best and continually improving the service. L2 can be summarized as being user-driven and aiming to save the each library user time in retrieving information.
Figure 1Meme map L2
Figure 2Ann Arbor District Library screenshot of blog
Table IDifference between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0
Table IIPrinciples of Web 2.0

Digital reading groups: renewing the librarian image

The Authors
Gitte Balling, The Royal School of Library and Information Science, Copenhagen, Denmark
Lise Alsted Henrichsen, The Royal School of Library and Information Science, Copenhagen, Denmark
Laura Skouvig, The Royal School of Library and Information Science, Copenhagen, Denmark
Acknowledgements
This article is a reworked and extended version of a paper presented at the 15th BOBCATSSS symposium: Balling et al. (2007)
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this article is to discuss the stereotype of the librarian and to point to the fact that changing the public view of the librarian requires more than just talking about it. Librarians themselves need to take action. A way to change the image of the librarian could be a new form for reading groups: digital reading groups initiated by libraries. Design/methodology/approach – This article presents a Danish project concerning digital reading groups and the experiences made so far by the involved groups e.g. librarians and readers. The article introduces a historical view on the stereotyped librarian and uses a case study to illustrate the situation today. Findings – The historical conditions that constitute the Danish librarian stereotype show a discrepancy between the role and function of the modern librarian and the way the librarian is seen in a wider public. The applied case study, concerning digital reading groups, shows that digital reading groups work both as a way for the librarian to communicate with the reader in a more dialogical fashion, as a way for the public library to test new promotion tools which point in direction of Web 2.0 and as a more flexible promotion offer to the busy reader. Consequently, the digital reading groups offer a model that can bridge the gap between the librarian stereotype, the librarian and the library user. Originality/value – This article is based on experiences made in connection with a Danish literature promotion project where digital reading groups are launched for the first time. It shows how public libraries can use literature promotion on the internet, not only to reach new users, but also to change the librarian stereotype and upgrade the librarians in direction of Librarian 2.0.
Introduction
Discussions of librarians’ image and its reception by a wider public are numerous and always followed by the statement: we have to market ourselves as information specialists, cultural workers, information architects and so forth. Still, librarians are to a large extent identified with dull spinsters whose prime concerns are meticulousness and organising books in a sphere of efficiency. This stereotype does, however, not correspond with the reality for many librarians in public libraries, businesses and organisations. Surprisingly enough, it seems to us, librarians themselves play an active role in the constant reconstruction of their stereotyped identity. In a changing society that demands new competences from librarians they often look backwards creating an image connected to an old librarian as a bogey instead of looking into their professional competences when (re)defining their identity.
This article discusses the new digital setting and, thus, how new demands from the users and society confront the librarians’ identity and self-understanding. Our case study on digital reading groups shows how the well-known promotion of literature is changed into communication, dialogue and discussion with users. However, this dialogue is still based on the librarian's professionalism providing the librarian with a new form of authority. Also, the case study shows how the established concept of reading groups has changed in the digital setting.
The librarian stereotype has shown itself strong and has even survived the digital revolution in the public libraries. Despite new digital services, virtual libraries and a variety of different promotion features, the stereotyped image sticks to the librarian.
The main starting point is that the stereotyped librarian is both a weakness and strength for librarians in late modern society.
Much research has focused on the librarian stereotype. Our point of departure is an article written by Radford and Radford (2003) entitled “Librarians and party girls. cultural studies and the meaning of the librarian”. They discuss the stereotyped librarian and they suggest that stereotypes operate only as a negative point of orientation. Radford and Radford (2003) base their study on the understanding of stereotypes offered by Hall (1997), stating that:
… [s]tereotypes get hold of the few “simple, vivid, memorable, easily grasped and widely recognized” characteristics about a person, reduce everything about the person to those traits, exaggerate and simplify them, and fix them without change or development to eternity (Hall, 1997, p. 258).
Understanding stereotypes only as something negative is, in our opinion, one-sided and does not leave much room for what we call the potential of the stereotype. Our view on stereotypes is inspired by the work of McGarthy et al. (2002). They encircle the positive effects of the stereotype by identifying three guiding principles:
Stereotypes are aids to explanation. Meaning that stereotypes are widely accepted as an instantiation of the categorisation process; a cognitive process, which enables one to detect differences and similarities between groups. Easy recognisable characteristics of group members or social groups as a whole help to sort relevant information from irrelevant. One simply navigates in the world by categorising it.
Stereotypes are energy-saving devices. Stereotypes reduce the information processing by offering a simplified meaning of big amounts of complex and detailed information. Through the stereotypes we accommodate a situation using little cognitive energy compared to the opposite situation, where we cannot just react on the basis of stereotypes but have to meet the “unknown” and spend energy accommodating the new impressions into our worldview. In other words, stereotypes are mental shortcuts to create meaning in daily life situations.
Stereotypes are shared group beliefs. McGarthy et al. (2002) argue that stereotypes are created in a dialectic relation between individual group members, the group as a whole and individuals not belonging to the group. A diversion is not possible, e.g. saying that the librarian stereotype is created by others in order to ridicule the librarian profession. In fact the creation of the stereotype lies as much with the librarians themselves as with the outside world. Librarians create representations of themselves as group members on basis of issues such as labour unions, formal education and professional language. Representations also follow from the images that group members have of themselves due to the membership of the group. When librarians speak about professional subjects, saying “us” and “we”, they give the impression that other librarians would think and do as them. Hereby, they feed the general image of the librarian in their own mind, and potentially in the minds of others outside the group of librarians.
Based on this basic definition, the authors discuss the construction of librarians’ identity in Denmark by looking at how librarians throughout the twentieth century have (re)negotiated their identity. Another discussion theme is the fact that the self-identity of the librarians to a certain degree supports the stereotyped image. However, another point is how librarians could use the image constructively in order to overcome the stereotype. The last point is illustrated by the case study concerning digital reading groups in Denmark, where the librarian not only has to act as expert, counsellor and culture communicator, but also as a person in flesh and blood who is actually willing to exchange opinions with the individuals in the group. The digital reading groups challenge the role of the librarian, but also work in a way to renew both the image of the librarian and the communicative relationship between librarian and library user.

Digital reading groups – a case study
An example of an attempt at changing the librarian stereotype is as moderator in digital reading groups. Reading groups are not a new phenomenon. The phenomenon can be traced back as far as to the eighteenth century's saloons and coffee houses. However, the reading groups as we know them came forth at the same time as the modern public library in the beginning of the twentieth century – often as a tool to provide the underprivileged groups in society with access to knowledge (Lund, 2006). During the Second World War and the German occupation of Denmark, the reading group phenomenon expanded strongly causing a growth in literacy. New times and new habits in the 1960s meant a declining interest in reading groups. Today the reading group phenomenon experiences a revitalisation, which can be explained as a reaction to a more fragmented world and a more individual oriented society. In the reading groups, participants find a community where they can share thoughts, feelings, opinions, fears and joys in a like-minded group of people (Long, 2003). The growing focus on library users or book readers means that the libraries are very interested in reading groups – both as a way to reach book readers (and future library users) and as a way to gain knowledge about the reading habits of library users/book readers. Reading groups thus constitute both ends and means in literature promotion.
The Danish project is greatly inspired by Rachel van Riel who has created the leading British reader development organisation “Opening the Book” (van Riel and Thomas, 2007). “Opening the Book” focuses on a reader-centred literature promotion instead of the traditional book or author-centred literature promotion. Reader-centred reading groups focus on the experience of reading and are thus not concerned with a more academic approach to literature. They qualify the reader as expert no matter what previous knowledge the reader may have on the book in question. The aim is not just to bring by a better understanding of the book to each participant but also to share the reading experience in the group in order to illuminate the individual reading experience. This view of the reader/user is radically different from the way the authoritative librarian acted upon the user. Every tone or trace about the readers’ lack of knowledge or competence concerning literature is gone.
Our case concerns digital reading groups, which means that the discussion takes place on the web. The participants in the reading groups are thus not located in the same room as is the case in traditional reading groups, but they comment on each other's opinions regarding the book under debate when and where it suits them. The only thing required is access to a computer where one can read and write comments. The reading groups have between 15 and 30 members and membership is free. One needs only to mail the moderator and fill out a couple of questions regarding age, gender, place of home and reading habits. The case “The Reading Club” involves 34 librarians and 270 readers spread over 23 different groups. The project is based in a literature promotion homepage shared by a majority of the Danish public libraries (www.litteraturssiden.dk, Fangel, 2000). The following experiences are collected in connection with an evaluation of the project conducted during spring 2007 (Balling, 2007). Both users and librarians have answered via mail qualitative questions regarding their experiences with discussing literature on the web. This method has been adopted to maintain the same form of communication, i.e. written communication, as used in “The Reading Club”.
The interesting thing regarding the digital reading groups compared with traditional reading groups is the fact that the members are spread all over the country and participate in the discussion when and where it suits them. This provides on the one hand a great amount of freedom and flexibility for the members, but creates, on the other hand, less responsibility when it comes to activity in the group. In particular, flexibility is one thing which members point to when asked about the biggest advantage being in a digital reading group: “I like the fact that it is a free forum where one is not obliged to show up at a specific time and place. When ones time is limited, it's nice that I can ‘go in my reading club’ around midnight or while I watch television” (our translation). The lack of responsibility means that despite many members in the groups, only a minority takes part in the debate. This leads to the biggest disadvantage when asking both members and moderators: the dialogue is slow and sluggish. Most members point at the few participants in the discussion as an explanation hereof, but another circumstance that affects the dialogue, is the fact that it is written.
One or more librarians act as moderators in a reading group. The task for the moderators is to create a profile for the group and for herself, and to take responsibility for the group. Consequently, the librarian to a large extent stands up as an individual and not merely as a librarian. The theme, e.g. “Books on Food”, “English Novelists”, “World of Fantasy”, “French Temptations”, “Book Club of Forgotten Books”, and the first four or five titles are chosen by the librarian in charge of the group, but future titles can be chosen by the group jointly. A book is scheduled for debate one month or more in advance where the participants can discuss themes closely connected to the book or more general themes. There are no rules regarding themes, but the librarian plays the role of moderator and thus opens the debate and gets it back on track in case of diversion. The role of the librarian is thus not only as provider of books or titles, but also as participant. The interesting aspect regarding this role is for the librarian to find a balance between the role as expert (providing the group with knowledge concerning the author, the period and the genre) and the role as an equal conversation partner.
The moderator's job is in many ways similar to the kind of literature promotion that the librarian is used to – the personal mediation of fiction to a user. However, the role as moderator also encompasses challenges when it comes to a new communication form, a new media and more personal promotion praxis. The unique thing about “The Reading Club” in contrast to other virtual literary discussion forums, is the fact that the moderator is a librarian who has taken on the role as a part of his or her promotion services. Other discussion forums are typically run by a layperson with interest in literature discussions, but without specific skills concerning literature. The professionalism of the moderators creates the frame in which the discussion takes place. The role as a moderator requires not only knowledge about literature and literary analysis, about new publications and forgotten classics, but also skills as literature mediator in relation to presenting and discussing topics in a way that secure participation from all members.
New ways of communication – web 2.0
However, the digital reading groups are not solely run by the moderators. Since the launch of the project in October 2006, the clubs have gradually established their own platform and style in extension of the wishes and needs of the members in the specific clubs. This way of letting the users influence the promotion in both form and content points in direction of the Web 2.0 phenomena. Web 2.0 is a shared description for “a movement towards a more dialogue based, personally and network oriented internet where everybody exchanges knowledge with everybody. Where the users themselves, children included, take turns as sender, receiver and judge of content” (our translation) (Klastrup, 2007, p. 55). Thus, the concept behind “The Reading Club” follows the tendencies that emerge all over the internet, and which also penetrates cultural promotion in general, where the users insist on having the opportunity to influence the promotion and the discussion.
The communication form used in the digital reading groups is best explained as a web log (blog). The moderator opens the debate, the members comment or launch their own contributions which can be commented on and so forth. The blog-genre is a quite new communication form on the internet. A blog is characterised by frequent updates and by short, informal and personally angled contributions (Klastrup, 2006). A blog has typically a distinct sender who writes about a subject that interests him or her. No matter what is commented or discussed on the blog, it is chosen by the sender from personal commitment. As a blogger one can choose to have a comment-function on one's blog so that others have the possibility to comment on the topics in discussion, but not all bloggers have made this choice. In this regard the digital reading clubs do not fit the blog-category one hundred percent in as much as there is a sender, the librarian, but the subject under discussion are defined by the club members in unison. Nevertheless, the dialogue takes place on the internet as a non-symmetric communication form, and some of the problems regarding the slow dialogue, as expressed by members and moderators, are due to the blog-form.
To “talk about books” on the internet, to “have a dialogue” is for most people synonymous with a discussion between two or more individuals being together in the same room, such as in a traditional reading group. This is the case because most people are unfamiliar with blogging as a way of communication. Most of the frustration connected to the slow dialogue derives from a failing fulfilment of expectations. The participants wants to discuss literature, they want the fast dialogue that characterises the verbal conservation. Such dialogue demands a live presence of the involved individuals on the internet, such as a chat. This would, however, mean compromising with the flexibility that most members emphasise as the main benefit with the digital reading groups. Alternatively, one needs to create a more dynamic dialogue in the blog and how to do that?
First of all, the communication form requires that members and moderators visit the blog frequently. Second, it requires a habit to discuss in writing. Short, quick stray thoughts in speech tone seem to have a favourable effect on the discussion. To most members and moderators “The Reading Club” is their first experience with blogging and it is obvious that it requires habit, both with regard to written dialogue and in relation to the blog-style that raises many questions:
How often should one write?
How long should one write?
What tone of expression should be used?
Why do the other members not answer my comments straight away?
As some of the moderators put it: “It is harder than we thought to express oneself briefly and precisely and at the same time create a pleasant and relaxed atmosphere” (our translation). An examination of the members’ experiences shows that the moderator plays a very important role as link in this fragmented “conversation”, a role that on the one hand is a continuation of the traditional library work and on the other hand is unfamiliar to many of the participants.
New competences – Librarian 2.0
Most of the members are satisfied with the way the moderators fill in their role. They see it as an advantage that a person with knowledge about literature acts as moderator. More members believe that the professional skills of the moderator secure a high level of quality both concerning the book selection and in the discussion.
As mentioned earlier, the role of moderator forces the librarian into a more dialogical form of communication than in the traditional librarian-user relation. As one moderator says:
I get a chance to discuss with the users in a different way than in the ordinary lending department. In the lending department you promote more than you discuss. On the web you discuss with others (our translation).
The moderator points at a significant difference in relation to traditional promotion in the library. The traditional promotion across the desk constitutes a clear sender-receiver relationship. The user comes to the librarian with a question or inquiry, which the librarian has an answer to. The librarian acts as an expert in relation to the user.
In “The Reading Club”, the moderator acts as a member on equal terms with the other members. This is also seen in the fact that the members do not act differently in relation to the moderator than towards other members. The authority that follows the role as librarian in the relation with the user in the physical library dissolves on the web both as a result of the anonymity of the members, of the very personal way the librarian present himself or herself at the homepage and of the communication form. There is no desk on the web. The role as expert is reduced and the individual person's role behind the librarian is increased:
It is a role I had to get used to, the informal role where I to a larger degree have to use my personality. It is not that it is unnatural to me, it is just a new role (our translation).
Further, the role as moderator functions as upgrading of skills in relation to a future where digital promotion, also in shape of blogs and chat, will be a growing part of library services.
Were does this leave the stereotype? The stereotype was described as an explanation, as an energy-saving device and as a shared group belief, which altogether make the stereotype a navigation tool for librarians and library users. The librarian stereotype is so insistently well known and recognisable that it has a great potential. Furthermore, most members did underline the fact that a librarian leading the group as something that secures quality and professionalism. These qualifications are laid down in the spinster stereotype. Thus, in this case the stereotype functions as a hallmark securing quality.
On the other hand, the meeting between the librarian and the group members on the web in personal discussions on literary topics can act as a way to expand or even tear the stereotype down from within. The librarian acts in a more private and individual way that works against the concept of stereotypes. In the future literature promotion, librarianship and library services will, without any doubt, move in the direction of Web 2.0. Already, the expression Library 2.0 and Librarian 2.0 are used in LIS discourses. We would like to add to the concept of Librarian 2.0 a combination of professionalism such as the stereotype and a more personal appearance where conversation and dialogue with the library user is a central aspect.
Conclusion
This article has outlined the origin of the stereotype as a consequence of a power struggle at the beginning of the twentieth century providing the librarian with the status of being an expert. Eagerness to enforce professional but complex systems and social norms obviously made the librarians reinforce the stereotype themselves. Librarians partly worked to recreate and stabilise society, partly to meet the needs of the users. This ambiguity, along with the enforcement of the organisation systems and the strict social norms in the library, might explain the use of the adverbs strict, controlling and dull when describing the stereotype.
In the authors’ view a historical dimension gives the possibility of qualifying arguments in our discussions today. We all know the stereotype of the spinster and we are aware that librarians desperately want to avoid this stereotype. However, in doing so, they reinforce the spinster. Using history we want to illustrate how history itself has turned into what Wiegand (1999) calls “a blind spot”. Familiarity with the stereotype and its historical basis makes librarians define themselves in relation to what they see as the past librarian – not seeing what competences they actually have.
When it comes to the personal meeting between the individual librarian and the user the situation is a bit different. Since the 1960s the relation between librarians and library users has been characterised by a growing equality, but still the desk has in some way interfered with the dialogue, representing the social norms in the library. The organisation of digital reading groups sets new frames that allow the librarian to step forward as a person in flesh and blood, and thus transcend the profession and consequently the stereotype.
However, digital reading groups not only force the librarian to act in a more personal way, they also turn the roles of sender and receiver upside down making room for dialogue and for the members to play the role as experts in case they have a certain knowledge. The possibilities offered in Web 2.0 can be seen as a development tool where the librarian can practise new ways of communication and promotion.
In the future, we will see a growing demand for more user-centred library promotion that requires both personality and individuality, and also professional expertise from the librarian. However, we still need the stereotype to signal specialised knowledge and professionalism.