Planet Cataloging Planet Cataloging July 30, 2020 OCLC Next The New Model Library. Welcome home. Imagine heading out for a well-earned, two-week vacation. To a place you love to visit and know well. When you get there? It’s all as you remembered. And you packed perfectly. As a frequent tourist, you know what you can buy if you need and what the hotel shop has and where you can go for a good … Then, abruptly, you’re told—you can’t go home. You’re no longer a visitor. You are now a resident. This place where you were so comfortable and relaxed as a tourist? You have to live and work here now. For many students, professors, teachers, and researchers forced by the COVID-19 pandemic to work at home full-time, all the time, that’s what has happened. They went from being skilled digital visitors to unwilling digital residents. Washed up on the shores of Zoom My colleagues and I have been researching and writing on the topic of “Digital Visitors and Residents” for many years now. It’s a simple concept to define, but with many deep implications for how we approach library research, teaching, and scholarship. If you want a fun, quick introduction, I suggest you try out the interactive “mapping app” we put together. At its most fundamental level, though, what we know is this: people approach some digital tools and spaces as visitors and others as residents. A student, for example, may use email almost exclusively for classwork and to get messages from faculty and only when absolutely necessary. For her, that is a “digital visitor” activity. Likewise, she may use YouTube for study, to upload videos for friends and family, and to watch entertainment and news. She’s very comfortable with it in all aspects of her life. So, for her, she is a “digital resident” of YouTube. Many of us are hybrids—in some situations we may be digital visitors while in other situations we are digital residents. The New Model Library. Welcome home. #OCLCnext Click To Tweet Just like tourists mix and mingle with the locals, digital visitors’ and residents’ online lives overlap all the time, of course. But—again, the similarity is striking—just like with real life tourists and locals. Passing through a lovely seaside town to go surfing for a week in July is very different from living there all winter. What we found during the COVID-19 crisis was that many, many people working in education and libraries and many of the communities they served were forced to switch, very quickly, from using digital tools as visitors to adopting them as residents. In some cases, these were tools and processes that some librarians had been pushing for years. But, to be honest, in some cases these tools and processes had been avoided. “If we weren’t pushed, we would be doing smoke signals with the students.” ~ Head Librarian, community college, North America And how many stories have we heard—funny, sad, frustrating, and sweet—about professors, students, library users, and staff—trying to make all this “new” technology work during the past few months? How many Zoom meeting horror (or comedy) stories have you heard? These are the frustrations of a group of people trying to accommodate new digital lives using a set of tools they’d packed for a vacation. But now they have to live here. And where can they turn to understand the transition? Who can help them go from visitors to residents when it comes to understanding these important shifts? Welcome to the New Model Library. A project that provides the OCLC Research team an opportunity to discuss with global library leaders the changes that were made in library practices and policies to accommodate their communities during the COVID-19 pandemic. And where library leaders can also reflect on how a New Model Library could evolve beyond these changes. We are guides, cartographers, and hosts Librarians have been doing this for decades. Maybe forever, depending on how you look at it. When there are new “containers” for information, we’re there helping both visitors and residents figure out how to use them. For people in my generation, the library often was the first place where we used a copier, printer, or videotape player. For many others, it was—and sometimes still is—the only place where they could go to get access to a computer and, later, the internet. We know that many students and users don’t care which “container” their content comes in. They often can’t recognize if a quote, fact, study, or paragraph came from a reputable article, database, primary source document, book, magazine, or out-of-date journal. They just want a citation they can use in their final paper, and they want it now. Library staff and educators have had to do as much work educating about the telltale signs of epitext and peritext as they do the technical tangles of log-ins and Boolean search parameters. “Before that [the pandemic] library [was] just a building, now they know the contents of the library, what we have online in the library. Access to libraries has increased a great deal during [the] pandemic; students realize importance of [the] library. Hope that continues.” ~ University Librarian, research library, Asia Pacific We know how to help evaluate the needs of individual digital novices, get them to the right tools and resources, provide good maps, and establish them as successful digital residents or visitors—whichever is appropriate for them—in their journeys. What we haven’t done before is deal with a wave of forced resettlement on a scale like that of a world-changing geological event, massive drought, or … global pandemic. The New Model Library That’s what I and some of my colleagues are calling a library that is, first and foremost, an institution built for digital natives … and for those who have washed up on this shore, or who came as tourists and are now being asked to stay. Whatever happens after COVID-19, we know that a large number of these new, “mandatory digital residents” will not be moving back. They might not be comfortable doing so much online at first. But their jobs, their schools, their universities will require it, and will provide more digital options. They will want—and need—libraries that support them in this new land. “I think that is the beauty of virtual—it is much easier to share. I think that will become more prevalent going forward.”  ~ Chief Executive Officer, large metropolitan public library in North America And for some of them, the library will be the only place where they will be fully, digitally “at home.” We already are seeing new cracks in the digital divide. Laptops, smartphones, and home Wi-Fi that may work fine for casual or entertainment purposes … that may work for one adult for checking email or minimal web surfing … will not be enough to support a full family of digital residents. These individuals may need to “live” at your library for a time. Not literally, of course. Because we’re talking about “digital residents.” But we all knew children—maybe you were that child—who didn’t have access to books at home. And we say of them, lovingly, that they “lived at the library” when they were young. That will hold true for some of these new digital residents at the New Model Library. They will find their home with you as they learn to navigate a world where school, work, and life are more online than ever before. This is, I believe, a wonderful opportunity for us. “Getting embedded in the LMS [Learning Management System] makes it clear that the library isn’t just some place over there if that is in fact what some students still think—the library is all around us. It is here; it is wherever you need to be; it’s wherever you are. So, as long as they are online.” ~ University Librarian, four-year college library, North America We can learn from many of the changes that were forced on us because of COVID-19. We can make transitions to longer term, positive transformations. The library leaders we’re in discussion with are sharing how they think the New Model Library might emerge. A report of these discussions and this vision will be available later in 2020. We already are very good at these things. We are good at sharing. We are good at learning. We are good at virtual and electronic. Now, we just have to be even better and more purposeful as we help these new residents find their place. They only packed for a vacation. They weren’t prepared for this. But we are. The post The New Model Library. Welcome home. appeared first on OCLC Next. by Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D. at July 30, 2020 08:14 PM July 28, 2020 TSLL TechScans (Technical Services Law Librarians) From Cancellations to Coding: Pandemic-Centered Tech Topics on Day Two of the OBS/TS Summit 2020 So far, day two of the summit has delivered fantastic programming. I wish I could attend it all! The final virtual event takes place at 6 PM EST tonight. This morning my two favorite sessions both dealt with the new realities we are living in post COVID-19 closures, touching on this from the perspective of budget cuts to work from home workarounds. Here were my takeaways: Top Left to Bottom Right: Gilda Chiu-Ousland, Wendy Moore, Heather Buckwalkter, Anne Lawless-Collins. TS Resource Management Roundtable: Budget Cuts & Collecting Pivots I was really on the fence about which of the earliest morning sessions to attend, and I am so glad I selected this one on resource management and collecting pivots. Wendy Moore from the University of Georgia Law Library led the discussion with a powerful statement that really summarizes the entire roundtable and the timeliness of the topics: "Crisis can lead to LOTS of creativity." What followed were introductions from each of the panelists including Heather Buckwalter, Gilda Chiu-Ousland, and Anna Lawless-Collins. Each shared the state of things at their institution, the fallout from COVID-19 closures including the stopping of shipments and the addition of online study aids and other e-resources to help students and faculty get through a quick pivot to virtual learning, and the budget (if they had %'s or figures yet) that they are each facing for fiscal year 2021 and 2022. This session (as with several from day one of the summit) was not recorded to allow attendees to feel more comfortable sharing the details and situations of their library, law school, or larger institution. Two polls were executed in the larger Zoom room before dividing into smaller groups for more personalized and in depth discussions. The polls were very interesting, revealing many of us still do not know our budget, or have vague %'s that are yet to be approved, and that the majority of us are cutting print journals more than any other area of our collections. In the smaller groups, attendees were better able to share their own situations, including some very creative strategies for how to negotiate with vendors, what data they are using to make those decisions about what and how to cut items from the collection, and what they have already or are planning to cancel to meet the demands of the coming fiscal year. There was a big focus on mitigating expectations of faculty and other stakeholders, and many were open about having these difficult conversations with their faculty members related to monograph acquisitions and with their institutions related to print course reserve materials. Overall an excellent program that was really open to sharing their situations so we can all learn from one another and continue best serving our library users. Hot Topic: Technologies We Use Presented by Jesse Lambertson, this session was more of an open discussion than a straight-forward presentation. Sharing his own library system as the beginning example, Lambertson pitched questions to the audience with lively responses in real time and invited members to un-mute and speak to their specific system challenges in the work from home environment. It was really interesting to hear individuals sharing the pros and cons of their various integrated library system platforms once they were catapulted into teleworking. The clear up-side to having a web-based interface was the ease that these librarians and their staff could quickly pivot to working from home without the hassle of using VPN or requiring remote desktop. These included those using TIND and Alma to name a couple. Several of us still working with iii's Sierra were able to join in chorus about our struggles in working from home with spotty VPN support and the differences in Sierra web as compared to the desktop client. Presenter Jesse Lambertson screen shares Python script snippets hack for working with CSV data. For importing and exporting records, both individually or in batches, many hacks were shared including creative ways use Marc Edit when working from home and the potential for more API's between Marc Edit and the ILS. It is of course that time of year when we are all gathering statistics. With much overlap from the previous session I attended, many of us commented we are accessing collection and user data much more right now to better inform decision making in a time of budget cuts. As a result, further roadblocks and workflow workarounds were discussed for various systems. Several attendees shared how they query their system for cataloging and other statistics, the issues they experience in the format of the data they pull out, and the obstacles that come with trying to do this type of work from home or with very limited access to the library. Many individuals (myself included!) are periodically retrieving data from their systems, exporting it at txt or csv files, and then taking it home on laptops of flash drives to be able to spend more time with it when teleworking. However, and few shared more innovative approaches to both massaging data as well as collecting and sharing it. Lambertson shared a highly creative approach using Python scripts to automate certain aspects of the csv to Excel conversion of his data. Another attendee shared their library's customized Google Sheets dashboard which pulls data from the ILS into the same location as reference transactions statistics (populated by Google Form responses). A truly fantastic session with lots of open dialogue between attendees. I am so glad I attended and I can't wait to see and hear how the experiential system and data approaches our members are working with now unfold in the coming months and years as access to our offices and systems remains largely unknown during a pandemic. TSLL Tech Scans Blog by noreply@blogger.com (Unknown) at July 28, 2020 05:21 PM July 27, 2020 TSLL TechScans (Technical Services Law Librarians) Functioning at Lightspeed: Day One of the OBS/TS Summit 2020 & Linked Data in Libraries Conference Screenshot from the Summit's OBS-SIS Business Meeting Seriously, how fast is time going by these days? It seems like just yesterday I was attending the Work Smarter Not Harder Technical Services virtual conference from Amigos in mid-February, but here we are at the end of July on the heels of AALL 2020! Today the first ever summit of our two special interest sections is literally happening as I type this blog post. I could not contain my excitement for the topics covered so far, and felt compelled to go ahead and blog about two of the sessions. To find out more about the summit schedule which is still underway, (including business meetings too!) visit the AALL Calendar item. A big announcement from the OBS-SIS business meeting is that the official name of the SIS was voted to change to "Library Systems and Resource Discovery"! Now without delay, here are my two favorites with takeaways: Facilitating Open Knowledge: The Intersection of Wikidata and Libraries - Presenters shared how "inter-collectional connections broaden the experience to go into parallel and related items". What a fantastic summary of Linked Data, and Wikidata in particular. The hyperlink for this session title will take you to the slides which I highly recommend saving as a resource if you are interested in more Wikidata. Many slides gave specific examples of using Wikidata for legal faculty scholarship.  Of course it was noted in the session and from commenters in the Q&A that "we’re in the wild west days of wikidata (just like wikipedia used to be - it is very community based)." When considering Wikidata, remember that most things in wikipedia are in wiki data, but it is not always true the other way around. The discussion following the presentation focused heavily on "notability". Presenters made sure to comment that Wikidata allows you to create entries for faculty members that might not make it into Wikipedia. Questions were asked like "is just being a faculty member enough notability to be in Wikidata?" But the goal here is to build a robust citation network in Wikidata, adding items to support structure and more. One problem discussed what that not all language versions of Wikipedia have embraced Wikidata (yet) so the benefit of Wikidata is not across the board. Presenters also shared about a new Wiki-project called Wiki abstract which hopes to dynamically pull summaries from Wikidata). The biggest takeaway was “Notability (wikidata) is not the same as bibliographic warrant (authority control - NACO)”. Finding the Silver Lining in System Migrations-  What I discovered at the end of this session was that it was originally intended as a large face-to-face program in new Orleans had the AALL annual meeting and conference not gone virtual. It was planned to be a platform-neutral panel with speakers from a variety of law libraries talking about their migrations. As a result of things going virtual, this smaller session amd the one following it (Hot Topic/Local Systems Committee Meeting Making Post System Migration Efficient and Effective") covered the same terrain in two slices. There were so many takeaways from this session that I can't possibly share them all here, and even though the two speakers talked primarily about their library platforms, their joint experiences with systems and the discussion from attendees still rounded the session out to include a vareity of platforms including iii to alma, aleph, tind, wms, folio, sirsi, etc. A few of my favorite quotes and lessons from the presenters included: You have to always look out for other people (not just the records you touch) Always draw on the experience of people at other institutions who migrated before you, and don't be afraid to ask them "Please help me! How did you do this?" You’ve got to build your own team. There’s the team you are forced to be part of (your department, your library, your university, your consortium) and then your own external team. That is the team you can build yourself, where you can gather info about the migration process from those at other institutions, and share it with others like you later after you have gone through it.  Carve out management and leadership opportunities for staff and other librarians  using migration as the backbone, since it is such a major effort, it can be a milestone for any individual's professional growth and take them further in their career.  Turn it into a bootcamp (like a mini 2 day conference) where you are migrating from one platform to another. Invite others in your area going through the same process (example was a DC area libraries migrating from Sierra to Alma).  Know that other things may have to be sacrificed along the way. You will not survive migration if you try to do everything you have always done during a migration (or any other major project). If you’re the manager, you should be shielding your team from the onslaught of "all the things" during a big migration. If you keep trying to do it all you will not do any of it very well...and you may not make it. You have to think about prioritizing things in advance. What will you stop or delay to get the new, major work done?  3 years out and many are STILL cleaning up post-migration data messes. But it becomes the new normal… so it will be OK! Get to know and use your university IT department as much as you can. That has been more helpful for people migrating than their law school's IT when there is not an ILS expert in your library or a true systems librarian at your library.  Negotiate with staff and librarians to parse out what they really want and need to know how to do (you may need to reference interview the reference librarians!) Host a series of in-person if you can (or virtual if you can't) sessions to show staff and librarians how to do all the things they need for workflows as a live demo. Keep track of your training offerings and other documentation so you can show you did your due diligence for your library. Also still currently happening throughout this week is TONS of programming from the Linked Data in Libraries 2020 Conference. The entire slate of sessions have been FREE to attend! You can find the schedule including links to the sessions in sched. You can also find all completed session recordings in the YouTube LD4 2020 playlist. I'm going to embed that below, but first my favorite session (so far) was today's "Linked Data for Sound" session. This excellent live program presented the work of Bethany Radcliff of the University of Texas in Austin. She talked about AudiAnnotate, and shared all of the resources related to the project. The session slides are available online, which include links to GitHub and all of the other pieces of this project. It was fascinating to hear how Bethany is using Linked Data in a practical way to make audio more accessible. The tool is also being used by professors as a teaching tool for literary criticism. Part of Bethany's resources realted to AudiAnnotate include short virtual workshops that show you how to download and use Audactiy (one of my personal favorite free audio editing tools!) to make annotations to audio of all kinds. The discussion was interesting and robust too, with attendees speculating how the tool could be expanded and adapted for video, or for non-traditional audio recordings like bird songs. The conversations and discussions are continuing throughout this week on LD4 2020's slack channel. Join in if you can, and watch the wide variety of sessions (there are 46 videos and counting!!) that already have recordings available in YouTube below:   TSLL Tech Scans Blog by noreply@blogger.com (Unknown) at July 27, 2020 08:19 PM Planet Cataloging is an automatically-generated aggregation of blogs related to cataloging and metadata designed and maintained by Jennifer W. Baxmeyer and Kevin S. Clarke. Please feel free to email us if you think a blog should be added to or removed from this list. Authors: If you would prefer your blog NOT be included here, we will be glad to remove it. Please send an email to let us know. Subscribe to Planet Cataloging! Blog Roll 025.431: The Dewey blog Bibliographic Wilderness Blog of the Ohio Library Council Technical Services Division Catalogablog Cataloger 2.0 Cataloging Futures Cataloging thoughts (Stephen Denney) Celeripedean (Jennifer Eustis) CommonPlace.net (Lukas Koster) Coyle's InFormation First thus (James Weinheimer) Hectic Pace International Society for Knowledge Organization (ISKO) UK Local Weather (Matthew Beacom) Lorcan Dempsey's weblog METADATA and more (Maureen P. Walsh) Mashcat Metadata Matters (Diane Hillmann) Metalibrarian OCLC Next Open Metadata Registry Blog Organizing Stuff Outgoing Problem Cataloger QUICK T.S. (Dodie Gaudet) Resource Description & Access (RDA) (Salman Haider) TSLL TechScans (Technical Services Law Librarians) Terry's Worklog Thingology (LibraryThing's ideas blog) Universal Decimal Classification Various librarian-like stuff Weibel Lines Work and Expression Z666.7.B39 (www.jenniferbax.net) catalogingRules (Amber Billey) mod librarian (Tracy Guza) Last updated: February 07, 2021 03:00 PM All times are UTC. Powered by: