Saturday, July 2, 2016

@elpasolibrary Services

#listening to The Weekend "@elpasolibrary Services"
#KTEP w/ #LouieSaenz @utep
6/4/2016

Listen Now! click here 

Great program detailing the El Paso Public Library's services throughout the city including a new program for adults 19 years of age and up, Career Online High School (COHS)!  Check it out and to learn more about COHS visit elpasolibrary.org/attend/career-online-high-school

Hearing Voices Librarian-Produced Podcasts by Steve Thomas

Hearing Voices Librarian-Produced Podcasts
by Steve Thomas
Article: click here

This summer while volunteering my time at the University library I tuned into a few podcasts thanks to this article by Steve Thomas. The first librarian produced podcast I ever tuned into was Andromeda Yelton's Open Paren episode with Cecily Walker click here.  I plan on posting links to podcasts here on the blog.  You can check out other podcasts on the links list to the right.  Below is a shareable #tweetcite of Steve Thomas' article.

"Hearing #Voices #Librarian-Produced #Podcasts." @stevelibrarian @amlibraries @ALALibrary 1/4/2016 <https://americanlibrariesmagazine.org/2016/01/04/hearing-voices-librarian-produced-podcasts/>. #tweetcite

Saturday, May 28, 2016

Understanding MARC21 Bibliographic Records

Excellent introduction webinar online about MARC 21 bibliographic records.  MARC stands for MAchine Readable Cataloging, a communication standard and framework for catalog records.  Below are links to the online webinars I've had the chance to view.  In addition, the presenter has uploaded assignments and resources at the following link: click here.  As I work my way through the sessions, I'll update this post. 


Understanding MARC21 Bibliographic Records
Session 1: click here

I'm very detail oriented and have a sincere interest understanding the background of how things work.  MARC is a sort of coding system that I learned was originally created for automated printing of card cataloging in 1966 and was started by the Library of Congress' Henriette Avram.  This video provides a great overview of the MARC21 system. Great introduction by emily Dust Nimskont of the Nebraska Library Commission.  Provides the following resources:

MARC Standards Library of Congress www.loc.gov/marc/

Bibliographic Formats and Standards OCLC www.oclc.org/bibformats/en.html

SLC Catalouging Cheat Sheets special-cataloguing.com/cheats

Understanding MARC LOC www.loc.gov/marc/umb/


Understanding MARC21 Bibliographic Records
Session 2: click here

Follow up to Session 1, and a step into understanding the common parts of a MARC record, starting with the 2XX fields.  Notes the importance of the AACR2, the cataloging rules and why the code is written the way it is (sets the standards.  I learned the $ means subfield and I figured not to confuse with the letter S in developing code.  Also discusses the use of indicators with reference to the assignments for the following week.  I'm having difficulty accessing the Word documents, however there is a preview mode available that allowed me to view the content and copy.

Introducing Mijo's Library #mylibrary

Introducing Mijo's Library #mylibrary

If I had the technical know how, I would create a social media platform called "myLibrary".  I'm not sure how it would work or how it would function to make people want to use it...I just had an idea... thinking about our lives as libraries these questions come to mind...

If you were a library what would the library be called?  What kind of books would we find in your library that tell us about who you are and what you've experienced? What photographs would you include that tell a story of your family tree?  What kinds of music would people be able to check out?  Would there be any vinyl, CDs, cassettes, or would digital audio be available?  What music genres?  What kind of services would be available to the community in your library?  What events would you host in your library?  If certain time periods in our lives could be documented in book shelves what kinds of books would define your adolescent shelf? Would any of your family members have a book shelf or specific archive?  If there was time to write a story book about a sibling, who would you want to write about? What would the book be called?  What kind of book would it be?  What would be on the cover?  What kind of geography books or maps about your life and where you've been would be available? What languages would the resources in your library be written in?  How would your library be designed when it comes to its architecture?  Where would it be located?  When would it close? One hundred years from now, what kind of value would a library about your life have to your family and community? 

Ever since my childhood years, libraries have been an important space for how I engaged in learning outside of what we had to do in school.  Whereas school tended to shape everybody's learning in similar ways, public libraries gave my young imagination a sense of freedom to look at reading as a choice.  It gave me a chance to read stories that I could relate to.  When it came to summer reading programs, it gave me a chance to look at reading as an incentive.  Since I couldn't get to the library by myself as a kid, it also created a "learning bond" between my parents, myself, and younger siblings.  Having those memories of my Mom and Dad walking me into the library and letting me wander the stacks is something I'll always remember.  Especially when thinking about the authors and books I discovered as a result of those learning moments.

If my life was a library it would be called Mijo's Library. It would be located in El Paso, Texas in the neighborhood I was raised in.  Everybody on my Mom's side of the family, especially my Mom and Dad, call me Mijo...til' this day.  If you don't know Spanish, Mijo translates to "my son".  This blog site and the Twitter I created @mylibraryep will help me find time to learn more about libraries and the opportunities that these spaces offer to people in the community.  It's also intended to provide everyone that has goals to one day volunteer or work in a library with resources about library and information science.  While I'm no expert in the area, as I'm learning, I'd like to have a space online to save info and share it for others with similar interest.  

This #myLibrary concept is also inspired by a book that I read with my younger brother years ago titled The Library Book, The Story of Libraries from Camels to Computers, written by Maureen Sawa and illustrated by Bill Slavin.  There is so much to learn and value about the role libraries have played in society for thousands of years and the role they'll play in our future.

Welcome to #myLibrary, Mijo's Library.