The Social Duty of the Library

I got this off the PLG listserv.  There's lots of talk in libraryland about what the future of libraries will be so I thought I'd pass along one person's tongue-in-cheek (?) take on the question…

There was a time when we were mere purveyors of books and periodicals and related media -- and, by extension, of ideas and viewpoints --  and the "go to" people for finding information and referrals to just about anything that might come up.

Thankfully (and partly thanks to the wide availability of online material and search engines), those days are behind us forever, and
we can now focus on our long-neglected social responsibilities.

Every librarian, as a steward of the public trust, has a duty to eliminate race and income inequity, promote diversity, and serve the needs of downtrodden and oppressed people everywhere who do not have voices with which to speak. Every librarian, as an employee of government, has a duty to be an agent of social change, fulfilling
the role of government as repairer of wrongs and nurturer and caretaker of its citizens.

At my library, we, too, struggled with balancing the high cost of books and periodicals with the cost of the social services we wished to provide. Every year was another balancing act that left no one particularly happy.

Then we had our epiphany.

In the digital age, books and periodicals are irrelevant, and viewpoints and ideas are dead. These things are emphatically NOT what our patrons want or need.

They want computers and games. They want food. In some cases, they want and need beds and showers. Above all, they want our help, and I do not mean help to find a copy of Tale of Two Cities.

So we got rid of our books and periodicals.

Every one of them.

I am now happy to say that we offer a wide array of social services unimpeded by the worn-out, tattered cultural baggage of bourgeoise society.

We have on-staff, onsite social workers and psychiatric therapists.

We offer space for lawyers working pro bono. There is space for weekly visits from county health services staff and space for child
protective services functions. We can treat people with substance abuse problems. We can shelter anyone needing respite from abusive
relationships, and we can shelter the homeless, thanks to generous contributions of bedding from local furniture retailers.

We were able to greatly expand the restrooms and add full showers to those facilities. We have expanded the coffee shop to a full-service cafeteria, with free or reduced-cost meals (eligibility certified by the former reference librarians). We have partnered with local second-
hand stores to provide a full line of clothing and shoes.

All these services -- and many more I haven't even mentioned -- were made possible by the simple expedient of eliminating the books and periodicals! Remember that you save not only the cost of the items and subscriptions, but the considerable cost of cataloging and looking after them!

We are entering a new and exciting phase of librarianship in which we truly help people in need -- even offering them the good parenting
they never had -- and move beyond the narrow viewpoint of merely freely offering access to the word in all its forms.

It is a brave, new world!

And we are free of books, and the inordinate amount of tending they took, forever!

-- Joe Schallan
New Phoenix, Arizona

Friday Fun Link – ALA Rural Librarianship Salary Survey (August 24, 2007)

The ALA recently released a survey of rural librarians with all kinds of interesting, enlightening and downright depressing comments and statistics.

As someone who willingly chose to work in a rural library as my first job over a city position, this survey also hits close to home
(although I do believe that the situation in Canada for salaries and
working conditions is much better than in the US for the most part.)

(via the always jam-packed ALA weekly e-newsletter which, unfortunately isn’t online)

Pachelbel Bedtime, Pachelbel Rant, Pachelbel Rock

A couple variations on Pachelbel's Canon

I Scooped Newsweek

Of course, that's the equivalent of saying you beat your grandfather in the 100 metre dash but still…they're just getting around to a cover story on the latest trend in cyberspace, Facebook while my article for CLA's Feliciter on the very same topic came out a couple months ago (though it wasn't a cover story either so I guess it's really a tie in some ways.)  

Anyhow, since CLA has recently approved an open access policy that frees up most of their intellectual property including the full contents of all the but the most recent issue of Feliciter, I thought I'd post the article here now (it's not on the CLA web site yet as the redesign is still ongoing.)



Facing Off With Facebook: E-mail For the 21st Century

By: Jason Hammond 
(https://headtale.com)

I have exactly 159 friends
online.  This includes 78 from the
University of Western Ontario where I attended library school, 28 from my home
province, 12 friends of friends, a former CLA President, the current CLA
Treasurer, and an assortment of others that defy easy classification. 

            And how do
I know these numbers and relationships with such precision?  I’m a member of the social networking web
site, Facebook (www.facebook.com).  You may have heard the term “social
networking” but might not be sure what it means.  Don’t worry – neither do most people as it’s a fairly new
technology (and I’m including myself in the list of people who are still trying
to figure out what it is exactly.)

            But if
you’re not sure what social networking is, one easy way to think of it is as
“e-mail for the 21st century.” 
In fact, a colleague at a University of Western Ontario library told me:
“It’s crazy – the students log-in to check their e-mail then immediately log-in
to Facebook.   Except they log-out of
their e-mail but stay on Facebook for as long as they’re on the computer.”

What’s the appeal?  Social networking sites such as Facebook
allow you to add friends and colleagues to your network, post pictures and
biographical tidbits about yourself, leave private or public messages for other
people and join groups on pretty much any topic you can imagine.  There’s an unofficial CLA group which has 36
members when I started writing this article, 74 when I submitted it a couple
weeks later, and hopefully one more by the time you finish reading! 

Once you’ve built a network of
friends, Facebook has a “News Feed” feature that displays your friends’
activity every time you log-in.  This
article isn’t nearly long enough for a discussion of the changing view of
privacy in the Internet age.  But I will
mention that of the great strengths of Facebook is that it gives you a high
level of control over who sees which parts of your information.  With this said, it’s important to remember
that the default setting is that anyone in your network can see your
profile.  So if you join the “University
of Toronto” network or the “Winnipeg” network, anybody from those groups can
see your profile unless you change your privacy setting.

So is it worth it for you to
join?  If you’re reading this, I’m
guessing there’s a pretty good chance that you’re not a twenty-year old college
student who’s looking to post pictures of last weekend’s beer drinking
exploits.  But, contrary to stereotypes,
that’s not what social networking sites like Facebook are about anyhow (okay,
maybe MySpace is but that’s a different article entirely!)

Facebook, and other social networking
sites like it, are yet another tool, like your phone, your e-mail and your
instant messaging client, to stay in contact with your colleagues and your
friends as well as to meet new people. 
It costs nothing to join so why not sign-up, explore the site a bit and
see what all the hype is about?  Add a
few friends.  If you’re concerned that
you won’t find anyone you know, ask a colleague to join at the same time.  Or join the CLA group and be surprised at
how many people you already know who are on the site.

Once you’ve established your
network, the appeal of this new form of communication will become clear.  Although I’m sure you would never let
yourself get hooked like those crazy college kids at UWO’s Weldon library, you
might find yourself logging in every day or two (or even a few times per day)
to see what’s happening and what your friends are up to, just like you do with
your e-mail already. 

If you have any thoughts on
Facebook, I’d love to hear from you at <jason@hammond.net>. Or better
yet, leave me a message on Facebook after you join!

Further Reading: Why I Registered on Facebook.
By: Lemeul, John, Chronicle of Higher Education, 00095982, 9/1/2006, Vol. 53,
Issue 2

Next Issue: “Finding Your
Space on MySpace”

(Editor's note: The MySpace article was bumped for post-conference coverage but will hopefully be in an upcoming Feliciter.)

Jason Hammond is a recent
MLIS graduate, the new Branch Supervisor with the Southeast Regional Library in
Saskatchewan and a close, personal friend of “Naked Gun” star, Leslie Nielsen
(or at least somebody claiming to be him on Facebook.)   


When 'They' Became 'Him'

We had this discussion on my blog once already.  But anyhow, since it's one of my personal grammar crusades, here's another article on the history of using “they/their/them” as the first-person singular instead of the contemporary but much more awkward “he/she” convention. 

…for most of the existence of the English language, ‘they’ was used
as the accepted singular gender-neutral pronoun. The use of ‘it’ was
reserved for objects, as it is today, but for people the pronoun of
choice was they/their/them.

So how did this all change? Courtesy of the English Parliament.”

Damn Interesting » When They Became Him

This Is Why Wikipedia Exists…

List of acquired tastes – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

(I'm proud to say that “cilantro” and “clamato” were two additions I made to the list although cilantro is still one I don't have a taste for – I think I have that enzyme thing where it tastes like rotted hell “an unpleasant soapy taste and/or rank smell” to use the terminology I took right from the Wikipedia cilantro entry.)

How Good Is the CFL This Year?

I turned on the end of the BC-Calgary game on Friday to see a wicked back and forth tussle ending with the new (?) overtime format where the teams play two “mini-games”, each team starting at their opponent's respective 35-yard lines with regular rules in place to as they attempt to score.  The game ended still tied after both teams managed to score majors on each of their possessions for each mini-game

Then last night, Pace and I were settled in to watch the Riders-Eskimos game.  It's another exciting back and forth game with first place in the West in the balance if the Riders win.  Then, near the start of the fourth quarter, the CBC feed goes out.  I wait as long as I can stand it but finally turn it off, my mind deadened by the “Just For Laughs – Gags” program they put on while the feed was out. 

Half an hour later, I log on to TSN and see it reported that the score didn't change and the final is 32-27 for Edmonton.  Darn.  So close but so typical for the Riders who embody Saskatchewan's “next year country” mindset – just like our agricultural sector which so often looks like it'll have a great year but always failing to deliver due to early frost, too much heat, too much rain, not enough heat, not enough rain, plagues of locusts grasshoppers – you get the idea. 

But then today, I get a call from my parent who were camping near Yorkton last night. 

“Tell me about the storm last night,” my mom says.
(Hmm, that's a strange question.)
“Well, it was a pretty big storm, lots of thunder and lightning but no big deal really.  We didn't even go out to watch – went to bed early.” 

“You didn't lose your power?” 
“No.  Didn't even flicker.  Why?” 
“The power went out at Mosaic Stadium.  I thought you guys would've lost power too.” 
“No.  I was watching when the CBC feed went out but thought that was just them.  You mean the whole stadium lost power?”
“Yeah.”
“After the game was over?”
“No, they restarted the game.  The Riders won.”
“What?”
“The Riders won.”
“I saw on TSN's web site last night that they lost.”
“No.  The power went out in the whole stadium for an hour then they restarted the game.  There were still people in the stands and the Riders ended up winning.”

By this point, I've made my way to my laptop and check and yep, somehow TSN reported the score when the power went out as the final.  But in reality, 8000+ fans stayed for nearly an hour in the darkened stadium with a full bore prairie lightning storm happening until the game was restarted, just before officials were ready to cancel it. 

How insane is that – on so many levels?  That the fans stayed?  That the Riders rallied to score a final TD to take the game?  That they're got their best record at this point in the season since 1976?  Pace (who resembles a linebacker more and more each week) was inspired to put on his gear today to celebrate…

Best Tales: Some of My Favourite Posts

(Last Updated: November 24, 2007)


As I write this, I've been blogging for nearly a year a a half on a pretty much daily basis, I've written 662 posts and have received an average of one comment per post (two if you count the fact that I reply to almost every single comment I receive.)  I get quite a few site visitors (although I'm still not prepared to share the number for some reason, especially considering some of the other stuff I've shared over that same time period.    I will tell you that it's more than 10 per day and less than 1000 per day.)


Because of all that and because of the main weaknesses of blogs is that they're in reverse chronological order (usually) which means the more I write, the less likely someone is to go back and browse through the blog to find informative, engaging or humourous posts (I wish I had a “random entry” button like Wikipedia does – anybody want to whip up the javascript to do it for me?), I thought I'd go back to day one (February 28, 2006) and work my way through all 662 posts, trying to pick out some of my favourites that aren't library and library school related (I already have another spot for those but I did update my “Unofficial Guide to Library School” with various posts I didn't add there when I first wrote them.  I'll try to add to this page when it is warranted.)

Baby
First Photo of Oscar

Five “Controversial” Things We Do In Raising Our Baby



Guess Who's Pregnant?

– we announce that we're pregnant with perhaps the most disturbing photo ever to appear on this blog.


Oscar Comes Home

Oscar's (Pace's) Heartbeat
– A YouTube Video of Shea Having A Doppler Test of Pace's Heartbeat

Pace Is Here
– announcing the birth of our first child

Smaller: The Story of the Disposable Diaper
– really just a link to a Malcolm Gladwell article but so interesting, I'm putting it here.


Humour
A Plea for Saskatchewan Separation

– a trip to Montreal inspired me to post this tongue-in-cheek essay I wrote as an undergrad.



Shea's Career vs. Jason's Career

–  a humourous comparison of nursing and librarianship


You Should Have Come Home Earlier
– I'm out drinking after my final class and get caught in a blizzard.  Shea pinch-hits to keep my “daily post” streak alive and gets a lot of great comments on top of it!


Your Next Candidate in Souris-Moose Mountain Is…

– I briefly considered running in the federal election…until I remember what day it is.



Miscellaneous
10 Books on Books
– I have a lot of lists on this blog so will only include a couple favourites on this page.  There's a  list category as well if you want to see all of my “list posts”

2006 End of the Year Meme
– using a couple different memes to summarize my year, this is something I hope to remember to do each year. 

How To Boost Your 'Books Read' Count Really Quickly
– some thoughts on how many books a person might read in their lifetime.


I Swear
– one of my favourite Friday Fun Link posts.

Is There A Universal Book?
– another post that generated way more discussion than I ever expected (and led to me posting the question at Ask MetaFilter as well.)

Myths of the Developing World
– this is how you do a presentation!

Public Humiliation (aka The Public Library Game)
– as a new grad who was extremely interested in public libraries, I decided to try to name the ten top level Dewey categories.  I end up getting 5.5/10.

Some Thoughts on the Four Day Work Week
– some thoughts on one of my pet causes

Sometimes I Post Just To Say I've Posted That Day

this post gets, by far and on a continual basis, the most hits of any page on my site.  I have
no idea why.  It might be the reference to Darth Vader and Eminem, it
might be that somebody has somehow managed to embed an invisible porn gallery. 


Suggestion For A New Statutory Holiday
– I won't say I called it but I did foresee the implementation of Family Day in Saskatchewan by a few months.  (Now, if someone would only take up my idea for “You-Day”.)

The Concept of Alphabetization
– one of my favourite Friday Fun Links ever

Warriors and Wusses

– some thoughts on the (contradictory?) idea that you can be against the war but support the troops


Personal
About Me – A Timeline of My Life
– this is linked from the blog's header but I thought I'd stick
it here as it really is a favourite post plus maybe the single post
I've put the most effort in to of anything I've ever written –
thinking back over personal milestones during my lifetime, talking to my parents and confirming dates, digging up and scanning appropriate old photos. 

And Now, I Am A Librarian

– I accept my first position post-FIMS

Dad's Filing Cabinet

– a slightly sentimental post about family, passing on traditions, and
attempting to impose order on the world to understand the world.


Eulogy for Grandma Peet

Eulogy for Grandma Hammond

Eulogy for Grandpa Peet  (and the post I did on the following Remembrance Day about him)

My “Co-op” Is Over (Ten Best Things About My New Job)
– looking back at my first four months as a professional librarian



My IQ Is…

– 130 (according to a CBC test anyhow)  Plus a critique of IQ testing and my own theory of multiple intelligences. 




My Myers-Briggs Personality Type
– or save yourself a clicky and know that it's ENFP as it has been since I first took the test in 1997

My Political Compass
– you probably don't have to read this blog very long to figure out where I stand politically.  But this shows you in handy-dandy chart form. 


Technology
A Failed Experiment

my first attempt at creating a new entry in Wikipedia for the Spirit of Librarianship award gets deleted in
very short order. From this entry, you can click on “A Failed
Experiment 2.0” which was the following day's post and contains more
thoughts on this process. (By the way, the page I created for reality TV blip,
Lukas Rossi, as a quasi-protest is still going strong !)

All Walls Crumble in Time (Thoughts On Setting Up A Facebook Account)
– my wife joins Facebook giving me a chance to reconsider the process with a fresh set of eyes

Crackbook Musings
– random thoughts and links to Facebook-related information

E-Music vs. iTunes
– I hate DRM.  That is all. 

Facebook's Dark Side (and Some Thoughts On Why I Blog)
– mostly about sharing information versus retaining your personal privacy

Facing Off With Facebook
– an article I wrote about Facebook for CLA's “Feliciter” magazine

Firefox Extensions I Use
– interesting but out of date now as I keep adding (and occasionally deleting) extensions all the time.

Five Easy Ways To Improve Facebook

Five More Easy Ways To Improve Facebook

Yet Five More Ways To Improve Facebook

Five Things Google Could Learn From Wikipedia (and Five Things Wikipedia Could Learn From Google
– my first ever submission to Digg (which got me 11 Diggs – yee-haa!)

Google Ad-Words Experiment
– I briefly delve into the world of online advertising to promote my blog.

When Did Facebook Replace E-mail?
– although I definitely wasn't the only one to observe this, I was just ahead of the curve on this idea and this entry got a lot of links from elsewhere in the blogosphere.

Friday Fun Link – See Who's Editing Wikipedia (August 17, 2007)

Wikipedia allows anonymous edits but it does track the IP of anyone
who makes the edit. So a Cal-Tech computer grad student, inspired by
news last year that Congress members’ offices had been editing their
own entries, and curious whether other organizations were doing
anything similar, developed a program to make it much easier to see the affiliation of anyone who made edits to any Wikipedia page.

This has led to numerous revelations
about corporations like Fox News, organizations like the CIA and
individuals such as staffers for a current US Presidential candidate
abusing the intent of Wikipedia

(via MetaFilter which has lots of other links I didn’t include in this post)

"I Am *Not* Impressed!"