KEMBAR78
Hacking Libraries | PDF
To exceed expectations!	
  
 
My blog:
http://blog.schoollibraryjournal.com/
neverendingsearch/
My tweets:
@joycevalenza
My deets:
http://aboutme.com/jvalenza
This preso:
http://tinyurl.com/librarytrends2015
cognitive load
Mark Zuckerberg, Letter to Investors http://www.wired.com/2012/02/zuck-letter/
The Hacker Way is an approach to building that
involves continuous improvement and
iteration . . . something can always be better.
nothing is ever complete.
They just have to go fix it — often in the face of
people who say it’s impossible or are content with
the status quo.
culture ofinnovation
hack tweakranganathan!
2015
Books, media, tools, resources in all formats,
are for use and/or creation.
Every learner/user/patron/member his/her
media, tools, channels.
Every book or media, its user, consumer,
producer.
Help the learner/user/Patron become more
effective, efficient, and productive users and
creators of ideas and information, BUILDERS OF
KNOWLEDGE.
Library—virtual or physical—is a growing
organism, offering 24/7 anywhere/anytime
access, learning, connections and instruction.
●  Books are for use
●  Every reader his/her book
●  Every book, its reader
●  Save the time of the
reader
●  A library is a growing
organism
1931
http://cdn.nmc.org/media/2014-nmc-horizon-report-library-EN.pdf
h#p://www.nmc.org/publica4ons/2014-­‐horizon-­‐report-­‐k12	
  
	
  
http://www.ala.org/transforminglibraries/future/trends
julochka “Step right this way.” 5 Feb. 2015. Flickr. Creative Commons. https://flic.kr/p/qMiZaH
AASL’s new mission
The American Association of School Librarians empowers
leaders to transform teaching and learning.
What does transformative library leadership look like as we
rethink our platforms, collection, space and new opportunities
for instruction?
Leadership from the center is not new, but perhaps it is an
especially new school essential in a transitional time.
ACRL’s new framework
Authority Is Constructed and Contextual
Information Creation as a Process
Information Has Value
Research as Inquiry
Scholarship as Conversation
Searching as Strategic Exploration
	
  
What is Metaliteracy ~ Metaliteracy MOOC
From: Lankes, R. David.. “The Radical School Librarian.” 6 Mar. 2015. BOCES Keynote. Slide 9.
http://quartz.syr.edu/rdlankes/Presentations/2015/BOCES.pdf
How should librarians react to
radical change based on our
fundamentals, relevant to
emerging needs, in excellent and
cool ways?
Inertia. People at rest will
remain at rest, and people
in motion will keep
moving in the same
direction unless an outside
enchanter acts upon them.
Let yourself be enchanted
in small ways.
If you don't toot your own
horn, don't complain that
there's no music.
For hackerspiration
G. P. Quackenbos A.M. A Natural Philosophy: Embracing the Most Recent Discoveries in the Various Branches of Physics,
and Exhibiting the Application of Scientific Principles in Every-day Life (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1859) 95
How are we hacking/leveraging
our new tools to
lead, serve, innovate?
How are we/might we newly imagine
librarianship?
S
http://njgalarza.blogspot.com/2011/03/locus-of-control.htmlNestor J Galarza Diaz, MD
hack
reference!
exceeding
expectations
more than ever,
People are actively engaged
in reference on their own.
Reference occurs over
multiple modalities and platforms. New modes of
discovery.
Leonard, Elisabeth. The State of Reference Collections. Jun. 2014. Sage Publications.
http://www.sagepub.com/repository/binaries/pdfs/StateofReference.pdf
Major findings
http://www.pewinternet.org/files/2015/04/PI_TeensandTech_Update2015_040915.pdf
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Reference_desk
http://ask.fm/
https://answers.yahoo.com/
https://whisper.sh/
http://www.yikyakapp.com/
http://www.yelp.com/
http://www.answers.com/
http://www.patientslikeme.com/
http://www.instructables.com/index
hack
“researchadvisory”!
https://www.apple.com/retail/geniusbar/
http://www.bcpl.info/services-policies/my-librarian-appointment-request
What might
the package
look like?
What can we
learn from Ikea?
?
http://library.pdx.edu/
diy/
video
h#ps://www.youtube.com/user/loots1964/videos	
  
h#ps://joycevalenza.makes.org/popcorn/2m0l	
  
	
  
h#p://popcorn.webmaker.org/	
  
h#ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FzkHG4tc_tg	
  
	
  
	
  
Interactive video	
  
Courtney L. Young (2014) Crowdsourcing the Virtual Reference Interview with Twitter, The Reference Librarian, 55:2, 172-174, DOI:
10.1080/02763877.2014.879030 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02763877.2014.879030
Crowd-sourcing
questions
http://www.ala.org/acrl/sites/ala.org.acrl/files/content/conferences/confsandpreconfs/2015/Stonebraker_Zhang.pdf
https://sites.lib.purdue.edu/crowdaskdemo/index.php?qa=about
Our goal of developing CrowdAsk was to
develop sustainable user engagement
and community involvement as part of
the Purdue University Libraries website.
Our libraries all have communities which
we serve, but not all of us have
communities with which we collaborate.
Crowdsourcing is one step towards a
library that not only lends information, but
shares information with its users in
partnership.
http://www.ala.org/acrl/sites/ala.org.acrl/files/content/conferences/confsandpreconfs/2015/Gardner.pdf
hackCommunication/access
phone
text / livechat
skype/hangout
follow-up text/email?
Cassidy, E. D., Colmenares, A., & Martinez, M. (2014).
So Text Me—Maybe. Reference & User Services Quarterly,
53(4), 300-312.
“This study demonstrates that significant issues exist
with staff attentiveness to monitoring text reference.
Some improvement is also needed in areas of
friendliness and follow-up.These findings confirm a
need for the reference department to offer more in-depth
staff training than has previously been provided. Over
the next academic year, the researchers plan to create and
implement various support tools to educate staff about
performance targets. These tools may include sample
message templates or signature lines and guidelines for best
practices in providing text-reference service. The
researchers hope that the assessment rubric resulting from
this study will provide a template for other libraries to adapt
and implement in their own self-assessment” (p.307).
3-year examination of academic library text reference service
Rubric clustered into four categories: listening and inquiring, interest, searching, and follow-up
Highest score: searching Lowest score: follow-up
Limited returns, unclear non-operational hours
The mobile device
will be the primary
connection tool to
the internet for most
people in the world
in 2020.
(Rainie	
  &	
  Anderson,	
  Pew	
  Internet	
  &	
  American	
  Life.	
  Future	
  of	
  the	
  Internet	
  III	
  
h;p://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2008/The-­‐Future-­‐of-­‐the-­‐Internet-­‐III.aspx)	
  
h#p://www.prweb.com/releases/2012/1/prweb9119090.htm	
  
	
  
	
  
http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/04/01/6-facts-about-americans-and-their-smartphones/
http://www.pewinternet.org/2015/04/01/us-smartphone-use-in-2015/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aa_FtqZpxs4
 
Academic Reference in
the Trenches, RU
March 12, 2015
Mobile
phones & tablets
ROI
silo issue
expectations
realities of computer use
convenience
user diversity
24/7ishness
less frequent visitors
h#p://sthslibrary.golocal.mobi/	
  
h#p://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2013/08/31/qr-­‐codes-­‐for-­‐your-­‐apps/	
  
	
  
h#p://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2014/12/06/abdos-­‐new-­‐ebook-­‐solu4on-­‐instant-­‐access/	
  
	
  
h#p://www.graphite.org/	
  
	
  
 
h#p://www.ala.org/aasl/standards-­‐guidelines/best-­‐apps	
  
h#p://www.ala.org/aasl/standards-­‐guidelines/best-­‐websites/2014	
  
	
  
h#p://www.pinterest.com/joycevalenza/library-­‐qr-­‐codes/	
  
http://www.bcpl.info/find-info/databases-mobile
Boopsie
http://librarylinknj.org/discounts/capira-mobile http://www.textalibrarian.com
http://librarylinknj.org/discounts/mosio-libraries
http://www.capiratech.com
http://www.slideshare.net/CatyJ/slam-the-boards
http://www.skype.com/en/translator-preview/
https://kaizena.com/
http://libguides.madisoncollege.edu/Skype
hack
communityengagement!
understand/empathize/respond
ENGAGE	
  
rovingreference
http://quartz.syr.edu/blog/?p=6514
http://www.fandm.edu/bell-and-tower/community-news-notes/librarian-house-calls-returns
h#p://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2013/03/23/i-­‐love-­‐these-­‐markers/	
  
http://web.library.yale.edu/pl
http://ask.library.yale.edu/
https://www.pinterest.com/ArtPictureNYPL/
https://www.pinterest.com/ArtPictureNYPL/mad-men/
JV: So who is your audience?
Billy Parrott: At NYPL we have our own patron base. Mid-Manhattan has between 3,800 and
5,000 people a day coming through its doors, but NYPL as a brand, is far-reaching. There are
people on the other side of the world who follow what we do. They read our blogs; they go to
our website, they use our resources, but they will never be in the library.
So our audience may be the Mad Men fans who live in California who have never been to New
York to visit the Library, but they can still connect to the library through the things we do.
So, as far as audience, I am always thinking big picture. At the same time, if we do something like
a Mad Men reading list or a Pinterest board, there could be something relating to that in the
branch—a book display. So people come into the branch who may not know about the Pinterest
board, see a great display of Mad Men materials and see a link or a QR code or something that
will take them to a blog post or the Pinterest page.
People who are aware of our social media platforms may not aware of our collections. So it’s
making connections among our resources on multiple platforms.
BP: The most important thing is that the user needs to see that there is a person
behind the effort. There’s nothing wrong with scheduling tweets, but no one wants
to be talked at with a robotic feed of information.
It doesn’t take a whole lot of effort to add a little personality to a tweet to make
it seem more personal and you are talking with somebody, rather than at them. So
when it comes to Pinterest, you can treat it as your own personal board. I’ve got
some like Billy Parrot is Reading, Billy Parrott is Listening Too. I suspect people think
if this guy likes the same kind of images I like, I may very well like the same kind of
books he’s reading or music he’s listening to. If someone whose movie taste I admired
told me he also liked a book, I would trust his judgment.
I think it was a local market that came up with the phrase, “nobody will care until
you do.” If you engage, it makes the job fun. Engagement is connecting with people
who use the library or might not use the library but are aware of the library.
“We are not in the book business,
we are in the St. Paul business.
(The Mobile Workplace)
h#p://youtu.be/tWbgQLjXPIk?t=45s	
  
h#p://youtu.be/tWbgQLjXPIk?t=1m46s	
  
	
  
h#p://www.bcpl.info/hours-­‐loca4ons/mobile-­‐library-­‐services	
  
	
  
h#ps://storify.com/PrincetonPL/superstormsandy-­‐and-­‐princeton-­‐public-­‐library	
  
	
  
h#p://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/amidst-­‐protests-­‐bal4more-­‐libraries-­‐stay-­‐open-­‐provide-­‐community-­‐support/	
  
	
  
h#p://www.newsweek.com/ferguson-­‐library-­‐open-­‐286946	
  
	
  
http://www.webjunction.org/content/dam/WebJunction/Documents/webJunction/9.24.13.Leaving.Fort.Ref.pdf
	
  
h#p://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/2012/06/13/
community-­‐reference-­‐making-­‐libraries-­‐indispensable-­‐in-­‐a-­‐
new-­‐way/	
  
Libraries are a central hub of
the community.
Librarians who are paid to
wait? Are we set up to fail?
We are not info people: We
are Relationship builders,
storytellers, community
assets.
85% of questions did not
require an MLS
community reference: Is it
time to leave the desk?
Is it time to leave the
building and add value?
	
  
h#ps://instagram.com/explore/tags/bookface/	
  
h#p://www.ny4mes.com/2015/05/03/fashion/oh-­‐those-­‐clever-­‐librarians-­‐and-­‐their-­‐bookface.html?smid=tw-­‐share&_r=0	
  
	
  
h#ps://instagram.com/usnatarchives/	
  
	
  
h#ps://instagram.com/nypl/	
  
	
  
Collection rethink.
Increasingly, collection is less
what you buy
and more what you
use and make discoverable.
We need to hack old notions of
collection to include the tools
learners/users need to create and
share and grow and make a difference
in the world. Virtually, we can curate
easily accessible collections of tools
for digital storytelling and finding
content to ethically remix. 
white boards, green screens,
tripods, cameras, puppets,
maker kits, 3D printers, cake &
Pans, cookie cutters, seeds,
games, instruments, dolls,
tools, hardware, experts,
apps . . .
h#p://sr.ithaka.org/sites/default/files/files/SR_Issue_Brief_Educa4ng_the_Research_Librarian050715.pdf	
  
	
  
It’s bigger than the stuff.
collection-centered
	
  
user-centered
h#p://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2015/04/21/think-­‐about-­‐it-­‐what-­‐else-­‐can-­‐you-­‐share/	
  
h#p://cityroom.blogs.ny4mes.com/2013/01/22/doll-­‐of-­‐pioneers-­‐spirit-­‐explores-­‐the-­‐city-­‐one-­‐loan-­‐at-­‐a-­‐4me/?_r=0	
  
	
  
h#ps://www.pinterest.com/alahqlibrary/what-­‐will-­‐libraries-­‐
lend-­‐next/	
  
126
h#p://www.mightyli#lelibrarian.com/?p=1068	
  
	
  
h#ps://www.flickr.com/photos/49483751@N02/sets/72157631353464278/	
  
	
  
h#p://liberrygurl.blogspot.com/2012_11_01_archive.html	
  
	
  
h#p://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2014/06/09/popping-­‐the-­‐shelves-­‐at-­‐brisbane-­‐boys-­‐grammar/	
  
Your collection is not just what
you buy.
It is what you curate, point to,
make discoverable, usable.
Acknowledging OER
& open access	
  
h#p://www.dl2sl.org/	
  
	
  
Local authors!
Student Book
Budgets
Andy Plemmons
Crowdsourcing/crowdfunding is the new bake sale/book
sale: for advocacy and for making stuff happen,
reference, collection development.
	
  
h#p://www.donorschoose.org/	
  
	
  
OPAC databases free content ebooks libguides
http://ruk.ca/content/welcome-crazytown-public-libraries-confront-digital-objects
http://www.inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2013/building-a-community-of-readers-social-reading-and-an-aggregated-ebook-reading-app-for-libraries/
http://heardaroundthestacks.com/tag/public-libraries/
Roskill, A. (2014, May 14). Get a read on this — libraries bridging the digital divide:
Andrew Roskill at TEDxCharleston. (2014). Charleston, S.C.Retrieved from
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J198u5HK0pY&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Rukavina, P. (2013, February 5). Welcome to crazytown: public libraries confront digital
objects. Ruk blog. [Personal Blog]. Retrieved from
http://ruk.ca/content/welcome-crazytown-public-libraries-confront-digital-objects
Leonard, Elisabeth. The State of Reference Collections. Jun. 2014. Sage Publications.
http://www.sagepub.com/repository/binaries/pdfs/StateofReference.pdf
Dissatisfaction with patron’s awareness of reference resources
Discovery services. Google-like one-box search
allows users/students to quickly access full
collection across multiple silos and brands,
potentially maximizing use of all digital content
—ebooks, journal articles, media, and more. Users
see the big picture.
But . . .
search results can be huge, underscoring the need
to cleverly use filters and descriptors to execute
an artfully constructed query.
Guide on the side
h#ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=55frLSbNO6U	
  
	
  
Global is the new literacy (the new author visit, the
new field trip, the new textbook, the new
research)
Heidi Hayes Jacobs, describes global literacy as the ability to be a fluent
investigator of the world, to be able to examine different perspectives, to
be able to report on and share ideas, and to take action on those ideas.
http://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2014/07/02/going-global-a-literacy-a-call-to-action-and-some-resources/)
1:1 / mobile is the new computer lab
More embedded librarianship suggests staffing needs when
librarians are out in classrooms. We are rethinking library
space once allotted to labs, in a device-agnostic ecosystem.
As more and more schools deploy tablets, librarians are tapped to
manage and distribute devices, implement instruction and
professional development, and thoughtfully select apps for
learning and creating.
from Shannon Miller
Renoir, Girl Reading, 1909
Renoir, Two Sisters, 1889
EdLeadership, March 2012
Erin Agnew
The reading experience, the relationship between
author and reader, and the book itself are evolving.
And this shift means that many young people are
embracing books and reading as never before.
Valenza & Stephens. “Reading Remixed: Far from killing reading, digital technologies are helping
young readers become more engaged in books than ever.” Educational Leadership. Mar. 2012.
Jessie Adams
http://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2014/03/07/expanding-the-universe-of-the-book/
http://worlds-of-learning.com/author/larflemingyahoo-com/
Transmedia storytelling
Michelle Luhtala’s catalog
NON FICTION
Hack your bookclub!
Google Hangouts
Hack your Author visit!
New measures of academic impact?
A new social “media” contract for scholars?
Article downloads from ResearchGate or Academia.edu?
Tweets about research / presentations?
Blog post views? Comments?
Slides viewed / slides downloaded SlideShare/ AuthorStream?
Collaborations on Mendeley?
Sharing on Bibsonomy?
The library catalogue as a social space, or online community, draws together elements of
trust, interaction and contribution, discoverability, personalization and customization,
intuitiveness, belonging, and immediate access to information. In all, they create a level
of experience that has been, up until now, found only in the physical library.
(Tarulli & Spitiri, 108)
•  24/7
•  house multiple types of media
•  customization of records
•  interactive
•  welcome contribution
•  personal: respond to interests and needs, Amazon-like suggestions-read-alikes
•  mobile?
•  Intuitive, “did you mean?”
•  provide a virtual browsing experience
•  folksonomy: user-generated tags, collaborative tagging
•  support book clubs
•  mine & leverage user-generated data to improve collection practices (click throughs,
cater to specific local needs)
•  single search (federated/discovery and faceted/filtered)
•  Visual shelf browse
•  Lists
•  Merge back office with RA services
•  Make use of blogs
•  Incorporate tools like NoveList and LibraryThing
What might reading lists and
face-out shelving and apps look
like when they engage the reader
attractively and interactively in
selecting the right book in any
format?
h#p://www.pinterest.com/joycevalenza/reading-­‐sugges4on-­‐engines/	
  
	
  
Choices	
  Summer	
  Reading	
  Elissa	
  Malespina,	
  South	
  Orange	
  (NJ)	
  Middle	
  School	
  
http://www.pinterest.com/westonhslibrary/
http://www.pinterest.com/oplteenzone/
http://www.pinterest.com/westonhslibrary/new-nonfiction/
augmented is the new reality
	
  
	
  	
  
http://www.aurasma.com/
Examples from Elissa Malespina
Tutorials
http://vimeo.com/44982605
http://theglobalclassroomproject.wordpress.com/2014/02/13/flat-stanley-aurasma-project/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jrHsOscTJ0
https://vimeo.com/93684123
h#p://www.capiratech.com/products/capiramobile/ibeacon/	
  
	
  
h#ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m648ji7Ro8Y&list=PLVfFyHGAwJ3FcRREnFUOkgiYmD22ynpA8	
  
	
  
Hacking the pop-up book!
h#p://ebookfriendly.com/library-­‐future-­‐technologies/	
  
Robin Good:
JV: Are librarians losing opportunities?
RG: So far, dear librarian, we have come to you. You’ve been sitting, and standing actually,
behind the desk. We’ve come to you for help to find information on a topic, to be guided
to the appropriate readings, related works of research, or novels that could inspire.
We’ve come to you, dear librarian. But now, the Internet reverses this. We ask Google. We
ask friends or our social networks where and how to find information.
But you, librarian, you are a container of deeply valuable information. So if you don’t make
yourself available, interceptable in a way that displays and showcases all that wonderful
knowledge, without requiring every single person to come and ask you in person and by
voice, you are really doing a disservice, not just to us, but to yourself. Start to
capitalize, to scale all the great work researching, studying, and organizing that you’ve
done, but provide the opportunity for others to access that knowledge and experience.
You do that by creating collections. There are millions of ways that librarians can become
guides. Start from your strongest interests and passions. We don’t expect every librarian
to be the reference point for everybody in the world, but we would like every librarian
to take a little part of it.
Someone might be interested in psychology or flying through the stars. Other are more
interested in poetry and algebra. That’s all fine if you can become a reference point to
indicate what are the things to study and then become more innovative with the
storytelling portion. Create YouTube videos.
This is what we need. We need people to guide us to the good stuff.
h#p://www.alastore.ala.org/detail.aspx?ID=11262	
  
	
  
Social media IS the new media.
Get over it.
Social media is about learning, connecting, creating. It’s about relationships. It is
our landscape and it’s thorny, but it’s here and we need to leverage it and
teach in it. Our students deserve agency and the ability to engage and share
their voices creatively and academically. If social media is blocked, get it
unblocked. This is an urgent equity issue; it’s an intellectual freedom issue.
Lead the teaching in leveraging social media to model authentic ways to
communicate and collaborate, to build community, to let our children/patrons/
members participate!
	
  
INADEQUATE!
 
h#p://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8kCV4EEy2IE&t=11m50s	
  
	
  
Are	
  we	
  building	
  knowledge	
  ci,zens?	
  
	
  
Everybody	
  is	
  becoming	
  a	
  specialist	
  in	
  library	
  science.	
  	
  
You	
  do	
  it	
  for	
  yourself	
  to	
  organize	
  your	
  memory	
  but	
  at	
  the	
  same	
  4me	
  you	
  	
  
organize	
  the	
  memory	
  for	
  others.	
  	
  
	
  
Every	
  4me	
  that	
  you	
  that	
  create	
  a	
  link,	
  every	
  4me	
  that	
  you	
  put	
  a	
  tag,	
  you	
  
are	
  organizing	
  the	
  common	
  memory.	
  
	
  
You	
  exercise	
  the	
  role	
  of	
  the	
  keeper	
  of	
  a	
  library.	
  So	
  this	
  is	
  a	
  very	
  new	
  
thing	
  and	
  I	
  think	
  that	
  the	
  ques4on	
  of	
  categoriza4on	
  is	
  very	
  important.	
  
You	
  do	
  it	
  in	
  a	
  conscious	
  way.	
  
	
  
HR:	
  So	
  it	
  sounds	
  like	
  you	
  are	
  talking	
  about	
  something	
  for	
  which	
  we	
  don’t	
  
have	
  a	
  word	
  yet,	
  that’s	
  kind	
  of	
  like	
  a	
  knowledge	
  ci,zen.	
  	
  	
  
PL:	
  That’s	
  it,	
  yes.	
  	
  A	
  ci4zen	
  of	
  the	
  knowledge	
  society.	
  
	
  
Joyce	
  Valenza,	
  Brenda	
  Boyer	
  	
  Social	
  Media	
  Cura.on,	
  ALA	
  Tech	
  Reports,	
  October	
  2014	
  
#	
  
books	
  
journal	
  ar4cles	
  
mobile	
  apps	
  
aggregated	
  content	
  	
  
infographics	
  
google	
  docs	
  
ebooks	
  
presenta4ons	
  
student work
museum collections
So much
stuff!!
h#ps://www.pinterest.com/oplteenzone/	
  
	
  
	
  
h#p://edu.symbaloo.com/mix/makerspaces	
  
	
  
https://www.smore.com/f677-a-copyright-friendly-toolkit
h#p://flipboard.com	
  
	
  
	
  
http://sdst.libguides.com/researchtools
h#p://sdst.libguides.com/poetryslams	
  
	
  
Archive and portfolio
	
  
h#p://mentormob.com	
  
	
  
Learning playlists
h#ps://edshelf.com	
  
	
  
h#p://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2013/04/10/dealing-­‐with-­‐dashboard-­‐decisions/	
  
app smashing/app curation is the new
collection building
gather and model the creation of useful collections, or palettes, of
high-quality, useful apps into learning dashboards. Librarians must
curate for mobile, as well as desktop, scout out the best of the
emerging mobile tools.
Librarians wanted for smashing, blending, toolkit building)
	
  
Curation for search
CuraKon	
  tools	
  as	
  search	
  tools!	
  
h#p://sdst.libguides.com/aecontent.php?pid=184760&sid=1558486	
  
http://blog.schoollibraryjournal.com/neverendingsearch/2011/09/30/curation-tools-are-also-search-tools/
h#p://libguides.com/community.php?m=i&ref=libguides.com	
  
	
  
	
  
Jenkins on participatory culture:	
  
1. relatively low barriers to artistic expression and civic engagement
2. strong support for creating and sharing what you create with others
3. informal mentorship whereby what is known by the most experienced gets passed
along to newbies and novices
4. members feel that their contributions matter
5. members feel some degree of social connection with each other. Not every
member needs to contribute but all need to feel that they are free to
contribute when they are ready and that what they contribute will be
appropriately valued if they do.
Jenkins. From participatory culture to participatory democracy. http://www.henryjenkins.org/
2007/03/from_participatatory_culture_t_1.html
	
  
audience	
  changes	
  everything	
  
Flexible learning environments and maker spaces. .
Learning by doing, challenge-based, interest-driven, project-based,
and self-directed learning. You don’t need a 3-D printer. A small
area, with some portable, tech-friendly furniture can encourage
collaborating, creating, performing, and project-based,
personalized learning.
Among the options:
sewing, gardening, crafts; STEAM-oriented activities--coding and
engaging in electronics and robotics with Arduino, Squishy Circuits,
Brushbots, MaKey MaKey.
Postaletrice.	
  “For	
  All	
  Your	
  Grocery	
  and	
  Hardware	
  Needs.	
  (1905)”	
  13	
  Jan.	
  2009.	
  
	
  Flickr.	
  <h#p://www.flickr.com/photos/32008531@N08/3194325451/>.	
  
Hugo,	
  Nancy.	
  “Arts	
  and	
  Crats	
  Kitchen.”	
  8	
  Mar.	
  2007.	
  Flickr.	
  18	
  Mar.	
  2010.	
  	
  
<h#p://www.flickr.com/photos/7293578@N02/444867414	
  >.	
  	
  
h#p://blogs.slj.com/neverendingsearch/2014/12/19/making-­‐inside-­‐the-­‐space-­‐and-­‐
outside-­‐the-­‐box/	
  
	
  
Shannon’s	
  bag	
  
h#p://worlds-­‐of-­‐learning.com/2014/03/24/if-­‐you-­‐let-­‐them-­‐build-­‐it-­‐they-­‐will-­‐learn/	
  
	
  
h#p://cha#library.org/4th-­‐floor	
  
	
  
http://www.theverge.com/2014/5/28/5754968/the-cheap-and-beautiful-mod-t-is-3d-printings-best-chance-at-going-mainstream
h#p://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/21/3d-­‐printed-­‐skull_n_2868406.html	
  
h#p://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/04/dad-­‐prints-­‐prosthe4c-­‐hand-­‐leon-­‐mccarthy_n_4214217.html	
  
	
  
http://www.wired.co.uk/news/archive/2014-03/26/3d-printed-skull?utm_term=music&utm_content=music
h#p://ww2.kqed.org/mindshit/2015/04/29/
how-­‐public-­‐libraries-­‐balance-­‐thorny-­‐issues-­‐
raised-­‐by-­‐3d-­‐printers/	
  
	
  
h#ps://edshelf.com/profile/joycevalenza/digital-­‐storytelling-­‐tools	
  
	
  
h#p://sdst.libguides.com/content.php?pid=265291&sid=2711981	
  
	
  
http://digitales.us/evaluating-projects/scoring-guides
h#p://virtualdebate.weebly.com/	
  
h#ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8sDshpR6m4&feature=youtu.be	
  
	
  
JFK	
  Library	
  Website	
  
h#p://goo.gl/0oFMcU	
  
Mystery Skypes
Stacy	
  Ford	
  
	
  
h#p://flipgrid.com	
  
	
  
h#p://padlet.com/joycevalenza/tlhack	
  
h#ps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZdMnkWHG7s	
  
	
  
http://vanmeterlibraryvoice.blogspot.com/2013/09/joyce-and-i-brought-our-students.html
What is social capital?
Resources and support accumulated by an
individual, institution or group through
relationships and the possession of a
durable network.
or . .
The tappable goodwill you have available
personal /
Professional
ego-centric
We can learn to hack community by leveraging, by hacking,
each other. Through the inventive ideas for emerging
practice we blog, tweet, pin, scoop, socially bookmark and
tag, we are hacking the old file cabinets and flash drives
and desktops and building on each other’s discoveries and
new visions of effective practice.
As we connect and share and mentor globally, we bring
back to and build our local communities.
Social
Capital
is
reciprocal
The more you give
. . . the more you get
Sipyeykina,	
  Dar'ya	
  “Speechless.”	
  	
  25	
  Jan.	
  2009.	
  Flickr.	
  h#p://www.flickr.com/photos/10522622@N00/3228273137	
  
It won’t help to be a social media introvert.
conference
tweets
blog posts
sketchnotes
######
#######
########
Amplify the signal
Anyone can be connected to any other
person through a chain of acquaintances
with no more than five intermediaries.
Milgram,	
  S.	
  (1967).	
  The	
  small	
  world	
  problem.	
  Psychology	
  today,	
  2(1),	
  60-­‐67
	
  
Innovation is the new
librarianship/the new
leadership
	
  
Not about stuff
It’s about experiences, relationships
S
Always demonstrating
your passion for this
profession and
your community
Are you modeling this passion, imagination and hacker spirit?
What NOTto hack:
COMMITMENTS/
VALUES:
equity
access
IF
content
learning
knowledge building
Privacy
People
Community
 
My blog:
http://blog.schoollibraryjournal.com/neverendingsearch/
My tweets:
@joycevalenza
Reach me:
joycevalenza@gmail.com
My deets:
http://about.me/jvalenza
This preso:
http://tinyurl.com/librarytrends2015
http://www.ala.org/alsc/mediamentorship
Media Mentorship in Libraries Serving Youth
Altmetrics: New (additional) measures of academic
impact? A new social “media” contract for scholars?
•  Article views, downloads from ResearchGate or Academia.edu, etc.?
•  Tweets about research / presentations / publications?
•  Blog post views? Comments?
•  Videos/TED talks views/comments?
•  Infographics/online research posters (visits/comments/downloads)?
•  Visits to CV? Where is it posted?
•  Slides viewed / slides downloaded SlideShare/AuthorStream?
•  Collaborations on Mendeley?
•  Sharing on Bibsonomy?
•  Follows/followers
•  Bookmarks
•  Conversations (forums), Q&As
•  Likes, favorites, +1s
•  Shares
•  Clicks
•  Ratings?

Hacking Libraries

Editor's Notes

  • #5 No textbook
  • #58 CrowdAsk provides librarians and users with an online, community-driven, and persistent help information source. Users on CrowdAsk receive research help from not only librarians, but also a community of researchers with expertise and shared interests. They were motivated through a variety of gamification means--points, badges, bounties, levels. In the spring 2014 semester we implemented CrowdAsk with three undergraduate courses at Purdue University, including English 106, Management 175, and General Studies 175.
  • #68 Library users want their stuff to be portable!
  • #76 Copyright meant to be for the creators as an incentive to create—scientists, scholars, artists-and for work to be useful to others—not about protecting the middlemen Medical research, science, scholarship, education depends on being able to quote.
  • #209 For what Pierre Levy calls, knowledge citizens.
  • #214 At ten my three-ring notebook really held all my school stuff. I know by now that binder can’t contain my research   The student, the student. Curation The student, the student. Curation.
  • #217 Tools for curation.
  • #218 Curation can help you scale your practice. Especially important if you are working with more than one library.
  • #230 You can invite others to help.
  • #267 Just some of the new tools for student creation.
  • #283 Being a social media introvert is not a good idea. In a crisis we have to sell our message.