Design, technology, and libraries

Baltimore : The City That Reads

Via Camay

I visted the city that reads, and it’s historical bibliophile establishments. These inclue Enoch Pratt Free Library, George Peabody Library, and Book Thing.

The Book Thing was a big warehouse full of free books, absolutely breath taking. From their website

Our mission is to put unwanted books into the hands of those who want them.

While walking around in a bibliocloud, maybe thinking about Charlie Robinson, I posted a tweeted about my delight. To my surprise I received a response from the Enoch Pratt Library!

Baltimore truly is “The City That Reads” and has a great library team that is obviously monitoring the Enoch Pratt brand.

Via Leo Reynolds

Via Leo Reynolds

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“Mapping New York’s Shoreline”

The New York Public Library is hosting one of the better exhibitions I have seen in some time at the moment. It’s named Mapping New York’s Shoreline, and deals with Maritime and Colonial photographs and maps from the very beginning of our country up until the Civil War. It’s well worth the trip up to the Bryant Park, plus there’s always Orvis and Kinokuniya around the corner.” VIA DRINKIN AND DRONIN

Very cool concept and well designed website.  Great outreach which is obviously engaging the public.

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ICANN approves non-Latin Domain Names

How will this change your library service? It’s pretty exciting to see the internet becoming a global phenomena and allowing users to use their own language, rather than latin characters, to access websites. Hopefully, this will make access to information easier for those around the world, will the library of the future serve the entire world rather than a community?

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Hong Kong Central Library

Recently, I went on a vacation to Hong Kong. I was excited to stumble upon the Hong Kong Central library located near an extremely populated and heavily traveled area of Central Hong Kong. The street side of entrance of the library offered a n art gallery and a busy public meeting area. The street level gallery had an exhibit on children’s reading and illustration with several books provided by the library as examples of artists work.

The Hong Kong Library was focused on patron use. On each floor there were multiple computer terminals which seemed to all be in use. In addition, an entire floor was  a dedicated children’s library with an additional  area used solely for toddler use. The  ”Toy Library” is an area where children can play with toys inside an area that also has books, an extremely interesting way to get young users involved. 

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Creatives on creation

The role of the library is changing. It was once a place where people accumulate information and is now becoming a space (physical or virtual) where people are able to create information or actively interact with information packets that already exist.

Chicago Public Libraries new YouMediaLab which encourages teens to create, innovate, and interact with each other in the library space.

This DJ Station allows teens to play with old vinyls from the CHIPUBLIB collection

This DJ Station allows teens to play with old vinyls from the CHIPUBLIB collection

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L!brary Project

At just 5 percent of a school’s total real estate, the school library is the most powerful and efficient way to reach 100 percent of the student body. But far too many of the nation’s public school libraries lack even the most basic resources to support learning and encourage achievement. The nonprofit L!brary Initiative, created by the Robin Hood Foundation, has been workingÊsince 2001Êto enhance student literacy and overall academic achievement by collaborating with school districts to design, build, equip, and staff new elementary school libraries.

Your library should order this book and let me check it out. Preorder available here : PaPress

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This Public Works

Speaker Night #2
Friday August 21st 2009, 7pm to 10pm
Free!

Andrew Rafacz Gallery
835 W. Washington Blvd. Chicago

Justin Fines – Demo
… is an artist and designer. DEMO, Fines’ freelance endeavour, was founded in 1997 in Detroit, MI. An award winning designer, Fines has worked in several design media, with projects ranging from record covers to corporate identity, tshirts, motion design and direction, skateboards, books and more. Recent projects include a line of snowboards for ROME, an artist series board for Zoo York, limited edition T-shirts for Nike, and a collaboration with Adidas and Chinatown Soccer Club. DEMO is headquartered on Rad Mountain at the Old American Can Factory, which is located in the beautiful Gowanus district of Brooklyn, NY.

Jason Teegarden-Downs – Delicious Design
… is one half of Delicious Design League: a two-man duo fighting out of Chicago, Illinois that specializes in graphic design and illustration for the music industry. Mostly recognized for their limited edition hand screen-printed music posters, they also create a plethora of anything that can and should be designed, logos and identity design, retail and promo packaging, magazine illustration, and so on. Their growing clientele includes Jane Magazine, Clothes Optional Vintage Clothing Boutique, John Brown Citrus Publishing (U.K.), Cilichili magazine (Czech Rep.), Metro Chicago, The Fillmore New York at Irving Plaza, Live Nation, Firebelly Design, Draft FCB, Mozilla, The Royal Order, and many bands such as, Gomez, Ben Kweller, Pelican, Office, Alla, and on and on.

Chris Eichenseer – Someoddpilot
… is a photographer, designer and musician. He has spent most of his life attending band practice, and this not only taught him how to be an entrepreneur, but determined the nature of his work. Chris founded Someoddpilot in 1999 and since then has built an internationally recognized body of work, including branding and designing the Pitchfork website, photographing musical luminaries such as RJD2 and Steve Albini, designing dozens of record covers for Consumers Research, Chocolate Industries, and Mush, and designing industry websites for Drag City, Windish Agency, Fat Possum, Mad Decent and many more. Someoddpilot calls Chicago home with an office located in the crook of the Ravenswood industrial strip on the city’s North Side.

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Interview : Erin Murphy

Tell us about yourself and your music project
Well, I’m a townie from the heart of Sarasota. I grew up here, moved away, and then moved back with a new appreciation for everything that’s going on here. I got into music as a coping mechanism as a result of the usual relationship ringer, and was encouraged by very supportive friends to get myself out there and start playing shows. I really don’t know much about music outside of what I like to listen to and how to make it simply. I wish I was more educated and experienced with theory and stylistic nuances, but I’m not. I just started strumming and banging on things and writing stuff that helped me get out what I wanted to say.

Through those shows I met an amazing group of friends that were also musicians, and we just started adapting my songs to a more complete instrumentation. Now we have drums, bass, xylophone, electric guitar and mandolin. We’re recording our EP right now, and with the support of other, more prominent bands, like Sons of Hippies and MeteorEYES, are starting to play out of town. Needless to say, I’m incredibly passionate about the camaraderie between bands and young folk here in Sarasota; I would have given up and just played in my bedroom were it not for them.

You can find us now on www.myspace.com/maidmoseph , on last.fm, and on facebook. Our recordings posted online are (VERY) rough versions, but our EP will be a much more accurate and ear-friendly representation of how we sound live and should be out in October, along with a new website.


Briefly explain the Intellectual Freedom Festival and some of the people involved
The Festival was the brainchild of Heather and Myles Tweed, both staff members of Selby. I heard they’d been wanting to put this together for almost two years, so it was great to see their hard work pay off with the amount of people attending. It was a free event with live shirt screen-printing, and attendees were able to donate to the bands and the Friends of the Library organization. They also had food vendors in the meeting rooms. They put out a call to artists and as a result were able to book a variety of local acts for all age groups. We had children’s music and a dance party at both ends of the lineup, so there was definitely something for everyone.

The Intellectual Freedom Festival was hosted at the Selby Public Library. Could you describe your experience working with the library and library staff?

I personally only had contact with Heather and Myles about the event, but there were many volunteers and staff members helping out. It was great to have the manager thank us for our participation and compliment us on our set, because we were so entirely thankful for the opportunity.

Has this experience changed how you view the library and the way it interacts with the community in Sarasota?
It certainly served as a unifier of the general population with the original music scene here in town. Many people are aware of the cover bands that play at bars every Friday and Saturday, but I think it heightened awareness of many people, especially those outside our demographic, that there is worth in the discovery of artists that make their own sound. Music means many things to many people, and sometimes that which is most accessible is the most well-known. Some folks actively pursue what’s new and unknown, but that usually means going out to small venues and bars. Others stumble upon it, and then make an effort to find out more. It definitely made me feel that the library is much more welcoming and tuned-in to the offbeat than I’d previously thought, and that’s fantastic.

Did the library promote any of its services during this concert?
No, since the Festival was held after hours, they let the focus stay on the music.

Do you believe more people will be interested in using the library services?
I don’t see how they couldn’t be; I know of quite a few attendees that had never set foot in the Selby Library, and then realized how beautiful and comprehensive it is.

What type of services do you wish the library offered?

I can’t think of any right now- I know they have children’s activities, clubs, space for meetings, and job placement assistance for the homeless. I think that’s pretty comprehensive. If I think of any, I know the staff is constantly looking for feedback and suggestions.

What inspires you?
Everything. People walking on the side of the road, old etiquette books, magic, farms, cats, porch jams, the simple life. Most of my songs are emotional reactions to past experiences, but I’m trying to move forward in the content I’m dealing with and write about current, more satisfying experiences. I want to write songs about raising our kitten and growing old, fat, and happy. I hope I can pull it off. :)

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Discussion Groups

For discussion groups, we will break up into three groups. Each group will be assigned a collaboration tool and discuss how they would use their collaboration tool with each model.

After this discussion, the groups will break into three new groups and teach each other about how we would use our collaboration tool with each model.

The last step is to post what you have discussed in your groups under the discussion tab on the website.

Models of collaboration:

Model A- an example of model a occurs in a large urban elementary school where one teacher-librarian serves a population of 500 students. The teacher-librarian is on a fixed schedule, and students come into the school library weekly to check out books. There are no computers in the library. The primary role of the teacher-librarian is to help students find literature that is of interest to them and materials for classroom projects. The teacher-librarian is also scheduled for booktalks with primary students once a week. Classroom teachers and teacher-librarian rarely have time to discuss specific curriculum needs.

Model B-When asked if they collaborate, classroom teachers and teacher-librarian at a middle school in the Southwest answer yes. They explain that they are involved in many units, lessons, activities, and events. They share a recent example involving sixth-grade science teachers and the teacher-librarian who worked on a science fair for the district. The teacher-librarian helped students research science topics, format brochures, and create PowerPoint presentations to accompany their projects. Teacher and teacher-librarian met to discuss the types of skills that students would need to complete their projects. They agreed that the teacher-librarian was the most qualified to teach these skills to students.

Model C-Classroom teachers and teacher-librarian schedule four units a year to work on together. After several years of trying different types of meeting arrangements, they have concluded that the best system is to block out the time together at the beginning of the year before school begins. During their desinnolib.orgther, each teacher meets with the teacher-librarian to talk about the unit and brainstorm ideas about how the teacher-librarian will be able to assist students. One year, the teacher-librarian helped a classroom teacher with a writing project involving the Civil War. She helped teach six traits in the classroom and then worked with small groups of students as they selected their topic on the Civil War, did their research, and completed their report. Outstanding projects were presented in the library at a grade-level poster presentation.

Model D-At a district-level meeting with the curriculum specialist, representatives from several schools discuss completed projects that integrated content and library curriculum. Final evaluation sheets from students indicate a high level of enthusiasm for projects that involve units of instruction created by the classroom teacher and teacher-librarian.

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Under Construction (Again)

picture-1

I probably will not be posting while I work on my new layout. This layout will be inspired mostly by modern design and heavily rely on the grid system.

Sites I am pulling inspiration from :

http://vandelaydesign.com/blog/design/resources-grid-based-design/

http://www.blueprintcss.org/tests/

http://www.thegridsystem.org/

http://csswizardry.com/typogridphy/

http://css-tricks.com/typographic-grid/

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