Here is a “Faculty Minute” I did for the Syracuse iSchool on Expect More and libraries.
Communities in Crisis
“Communities in Crisis” Association des bibliothécaires français. Strasbourg, FR (via video).
Abstract: How do libraries respond in times of crisis? They dive deeper into their communities. Is this an act of politics? Yes.
Slides: https://davidlankes.org/rdlankes/Presentations/2015/france.pdf
Screencast:
This video has French captioning. A very heartfelt thank you to Nathalie CLOT, Directrice Bibliothèque universitaire d’Angers and Raphaelle Bats for the translation and opportunity.
Below is the timecoded translation:
More Details on the Collaboratory
I’ve received a lot of interest in the Expect More Collaboratory, and a lot of questions. I put together this short video to try and answer those questions. Still need more info? Fill out the form at http://www.ExpectmoreLibrary.com
Here is the Master Class referenced: https://davidlankes.org/?page_id=6599
Here is the current version of the Expect More book: https://davidlankes.org/?page_id=4598
F. Franklin Moon Memorial Library Joins the Collaboratory
The F. Franklin Moon Memorial Library of the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry has joined the Expect More Collaboratory.
Join the Expect More Collaboratory
Four Years ago I wrote Expect More: Demanding Better Libraries For Today’s Complex World to start a conversation between librarians and the communities they serve. Since that time thousands have used the book to start conversations, teach students, do board development, and even shape director and dean searches. The time has come to take Expect More to the next step: The Expect More Collaboratory.
This is a call to join partners in expanding Expect More into a comprehensive and expanding set of community building resources. These resources will include online learning events for library decision makers, a physical and digital workbook, and an ongoing series of engagements to advocate for greater community focus and involvement in libraries. The Expect More Collaboratory will deliver a multimedia web-based curriculum for use by librarians with boards, principals, provosts, and communities.
So consider this a call for crowd sourcing. Please help in preparing our communities for better libraries. I’ve put together a site for more information and a brief video call for participation.
Expect More Collaboratory (http://www.ExpectMoreLibrary.com)*
*Please note this used to point to the Expect More World Tour, and you may need to refresh your browser. The direct link is https://davidlankes.org/?page_id=7974
The World Tour Adds Dates in Italy and Vatican City!
Please Note: This post is being updated with more details as they become available.
The Expect More World Tour rolls on. There is a great deal of interest in New Librarianship and a community focus for libraries in Italy particularly after the publication of the Atlas of New Librarianship (L’atlante della biblioteconomia moderna) in Italian. To meet with the folks interested in a new approach to libraries I’ve added four dates:
Pistoria Library
July 10, 2015 Pistoia, Italy
Supported by the U.S. Embassy in Rome
Topic: Community as CollectionNational Library of Rome
July 13, 2015 Rome, Italy
Topic: Participatory Librarianship & LIS Education
Where: National Library of Rome
Organized jointly with AIB (Associazione Italiana Biblioteche) and the National BoardThe American University of Rome
July 14, 2015 Rome, Italy
Supported by the U.S. Embassy in RomeKoninklijk Nederlands Instituut te Rome / Vatican School of Librarianship
July 15, 2015 Rome, Italy
Supported by the Vatican Library School, Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, URBS, KNIR, U.S. Embassy in Rome
Topic: The Changing Role of Librarians in Learning
A special note of thanks to Gimena Campos Cervera and the U.S. Embassy in Rome for support and logistics. In addition to the support of the embassy, thanks to Syracuse University’s iSchool for trip support. Also a big thank you to Anna Maria Tammaro of the University of Parma and Raffaella Vincenti of the Vatican Library/Vatican School of Librarianship.
Expecting More From Our Libraries
“Expecting More From Our Libraries” New York Library Trustees Association. Syracuse, NY.
Abstract: Wondering how your library’s expansion into broader programs, technology classes, Maker Spaces and more relate to the library’s role in your community? Get a better feel for the big picture as our libraries play a vital role in community engagement.
Slides: https://davidlankes.org/rdlankes/Presentations/2015/Trustees.pdf
Radical’s Guide to New Librarianship Update
Greetings all. There was a great deal of activity around my new book, a librarian-oriented follow-up to the Atlas of New Librarianship, at the beginning of the year. Well, it is 4 months later and there has been a lot of progress. Of course most of that progress is between me and my word processor, so I thought it would be useful to bring folks up to speed.
The first update is that the working title of the book has changed. The Radical’s Guide to New Librarianship is now The New Librarianship Field Guide. Folks made it very clear in my call for input they were looking for a book that was more linear, filled with more actionable examples, and was at it’s core about implementation. So the Field Guide now includes lots of examples, discussion questions, and field observations on implementing and teaching these ideas. To be clear I still talk about librarians as radical positive change agents.
I’m changing the pages on my site to reflect the new working title over the next few days. All the “Radical Conversations” will remain.
The other reason for the change is that Field Guide is being designed for use on the go. Not only will it be a highly portable paperback, but it will be available from the get go as an ebook. So the hope is that you can use it on the front lines with librarians and other library staff.
The big update is that the first really rough draft is now out for comments from the New Librarianship Collaborative (Wendy Newman, Kim Silk, and Lauren Britton). I’m including the current table of contents below and I need your help.
You’ll see that Chapter 19 is titled “FAQs (Frequently Argued Questions).” I’m looking for your questions or the issues that pop up when you are trying to implement the community-centric, community as collection idea. I can’t promise to include them all, but I would like to provide responses to as many as possible. You’ll see a few examples already under that chapter (and a special thanks to Lane Wilkinson for letting me use his blog post to get the ball rolling).
So email me, or use the comments below.
Here’s the current Table of Contents:
- Chapter 1: Librarianship Full Stop
- The New Language of Librarianship
- “Radical”
- “New Librarianship”
- “Member”
- Acknowledging the Atlas in the Room
- Structure of the Guide
- The New Language of Librarianship
Librarians
- Chapter 2: They Named the Building After Us
- Chapter 3: The Mission of Librarians
- A Very Brief History of Libraries
- A Two Part Mission
- Your Mission is Not Unique
- Stand for Something or Fall for Everything
- Chapter 4: Knowledge Creation
- Information is a Lie
- Knowledge, Knowing, and Pragmatism
- Recorded Knowledge is a Lie Too
- So What is Knowledge?
- 1+1=Climate Change?!
- I’ll Have the Dialect Theory with a Side of Constructivism Please
- Conversants
- Trust Me, I’m a Librarian
- Language
- Agreements
- Memory
- Conversants
- The Practicalities of Being in the Conversation Business
- Chapter 5: Facilitation
- Access
- Knowledge
- Environment
- Motivation
- All Together Now
- Chapter 6: Participatory Systems
- Pressure for participation
- The Pressure to Converse
- The Pressure for Change
- The Pressure for Social Interaction
- The Pressure of Limited Resource
- The Pressure at the Boundaries
- What Should Be
- Go to the Conversation
- Focus on Aspirations not Problems
- Pressure for participation
- Chapter 7: Improve Society
- Service
- Learning
- Openness
- Intellectual Freedom and Safety
- Intellectual Honesty
- So What is a Librarian?
- Chapter 8: Librarians
- The Salzburg Curriculum
- Transformative Social Engagement
- Technology
- Asset Management
- Cultural Skills
- Knowledge, Learning, and Innovation
- Management for Participation
- Advocacy and Librarianship by Wendy Newman
- Assessment
- The Salzburg Curriculum
- Chapter 9: Pragmatic Utopians
Libraries
- Chapter 10: What is a Library
- A Library is a Funded Mandate
- Facilitated Space
- Stewards
- Chapter 11: Saving Money and the World
- Collective Buying Agent
- Economic Stimulus
- Center of Learning
- Safety Net
- An Assured Path to Irrelevance or An Outright Impeachment of Our Basic Principles
- Steward of Cultural Heritage
- Third Space
- Cradle of Democracy
- Democracy and Transparency
- Democracy and Access
- Democracy and Education
- Democracy and Higher Expectations
- Symbol of Community Aspirations
- Chapter 12: A Platform for Knowledge Development
- A System of Systems
- From Lending to Sharing
- What’s Your Passion
- Components of the Library Platform
- Access Provision
- Knowledge Creation
- Environment
- Motivation
- Chapter 13: Fitting Knowledge in a Box
- Daedalus’ Maze
- Yeah, Yeah, Yeah, But What About Academic Libraries
- Chapter 14: Academic Libraries
- A Library with an Integrated Research and Development Agenda
- Integrating Students Across the Campus in Library Service
- The Library Serves as a Hub for New Forms of Instruction
- Reinventing the Academic Press to be a Publisher of the Community
- Making the Most Important Decision a Faculty Makes More Informed
- Academic Library Conclusion
- Chapter 15: School Libraries
- iTeams by Sue Kowalski
- iTeams Take-Aways
- Chapter 16: Public Libraries
- Community Reference
- Public Library Summary
- Chapter 17: Engines of Advancement
From Mission to Missionary
- Chapter 18: Battle Plan for the Faithful
- Continuing Education
- Expect More World Tour
- Lack of Staff
- Fear of Failure
- ILEAD USA
- New Librarianship Master Class
- Expect More World Tour
- Key Success Factors
- Emphasize Teachable Skills
- Link to Longstanding Concepts
- Build Cohorts
- Use Projects and Inquiry When Possible
- Cross Boundaries
- Demonstrate Comfort with Ambiguity
- Build Communities Not Websites
- Provide Opportunities for Introspection and Inspiration
- Continuing Education
- Chapter 19: FAQs (Frequently Argued Questions)
- Open question #1: What about fiction?
- Open question #2: What about librarians who don’t work in public services?
- Open question #3: What about the autodidacts?
- Open question #4: What about non-institutional libraries?
- This Approach Doesn’t Work for Small Libraries
- New Librarianship is Just for Public Libraries
- Your Turn
- Chapter 20: Coda
Lankes to Keynote 125th NYLA Conference
The New York Library Association is joining the Expect More World Tour this October.
On Thursday, October 22 from 9:00 – 10:15 AM in Lake Placid, NY Lankes will give the keynote for the association’s 125th annual conference: NYLA125: Explore. Learn. Grow.
The talk will be titled “Day 45,626″
Here’s the abstract:
This year NYLA celebrates its 125th anniversary (45,625 days). 45,625 days ago Melvil Dewey, one of NYLA’s founders, saw the future of libraries in standardization, efficiency, and industrialization. 45,625 days ago the future of libraries was in shared structures, shared methods, and librarians devoted to the maintenance of institutional libraries. On day 45,626 this is the formula for disaster. On day 45,626 the future of libraries is in librarians building libraries around the unique communities they serve. The success of the next 125 years is intimately tied to the success of the counties, cities, towns, and villages of New York. Our next 125 years is in the dreams and aspirations of New York’s citizens, students, and scholars not our stacks.
Massachusetts Library Association Pre-Conference Invite
Greetings all,
We’re putting together a pre-conference session for the Massachusetts Library Association as part of the Expect More World Tour in May and you are invited. If you’re in the area, please sign up (it’s free) and come join the conversation.
Here are the details and the actual invite:
Tuesday, Tuesday May 5, 2015
8:30 a.m. – 12 noon
DCU Center
Room E
50 Foster Street
Worcester, MA 01608
Coffee, refreshments and snacks
Space is limited, so please RSVP
online at Eventbrite:
https://expectmoreworcester.eventbrite.com
or by calling (800) 494-9330
It is free and open to all comers (we just ask that you pre-register).
Click here for the official Invite