Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Been There, Pinned That

See more on Know Your Meme
(Original source for the meme: Hyperbole and a Half)

For week five, we explored the use of images via the Pinterest site. I'm fairly familiar with Pinterest as a tool for professional development and presented on the topic at our regional staff development day in 2012. I think Pinterest has a lot to offer librarians, particularly if they offer storytime programs for children. Since I've already done some research in the area, I thought I'd provide some of the highlights here.

For those of you new to the site, Pinterest is a website that allows users to “pin” images—either user created or web based—to online bulletin boards. It allows you to create theme-based photo collections.

Pinterest is typically used by individuals, businesses, and non-profit organizations. 68% of Pinterest users are women and half of all Pinterest users are between the ages of 25-44. Let’s relate these last two stats to your digital library. According to a 2010 OverDrive survey, 74% of virtual branch users are female between the ages of 30-59. Your patrons are using Pinterest, and you can use it  as one of a number of tools that help you engage with them.

A quick search of the term “library” under people in Pinterest shows us hundreds of libraries are hosting online Pinterest bulletin boards: http://pinterest.com/search/people/?q=library.

So why are they using it?

o   To bookmark useful sites for future use (because you see a photo instead of a long link, you quickly remember why you thought it was interesting)

o   To make your library more visible and connect with the public

o   To connect with children and teens

The site can be used individually, collaboratively, or at the library level. Within Pinterest you can create a collaborative board and invite others to pin to the board. In the AWK Region, the Public Services Librarian, Moncton Public Library, the Regional Office and the Manager of the Salisbury Public Library all contribute to their “Storytime” board.


How Do Libraries Use Pinterest?

·         Pin book covers. Many libraries feature the covers of new books. Looking to boost non-fiction circulation? Research books and narrative nonfiction can get a boost from being pinned.

·         Create reading lists. Pinterest is a great reader’s advisory tool. Encourage people to try new books by creating a topic-specific list (ex. If you liked Harry Potter, Olympic Books etc.) Read-alike lists for popular books such as the Hunger Games and Fifty Shades of Grey are great Pinterest boards. Or how about Staff Picks? “What NYPL is Reading” contains reading recommendations by NYPL librarians. Or you can showcase a collection, like Edmonton Public Libraries’ “Aboriginal Collection at EPL” or Skokie Public Library’s It’s Your Business” (resources to help you start or run your small business).

·         Show off your library. Pin photos to a board to show off decorations or renovations. “NYPL Photos” showcases cool photos of the library, such as engagement shoots, weddings, evidence of ghostly presences, and shots by local photographers. Or you could create an inspiration board for future renovations like they did here in AWK.

·         Share your archival material. At Skokie (IL) Public Library, the “Skokie History” board, which focuses on buildings, people and events from the history of the village, is one of the most popular boards.

·         Get new ideas for library displays. There are thousands of photos on every topic you can imagine!

·         Collect ideas for/advertise programs., Edmonton Public Library advertises their movie nights by posting pictures of the movie posters on their “EPL Film Series” board. A great event to promote is, of course, the author visit. Why not pin book covers, author photos, and author interviews to advertise that upcoming author visit?

·         Draw attention to your local community. Since your library constantly interacts with your local community, showcase local attractions to build a feeling of community and encourage others to visit. Because being a community center is an important aspect of a library’s mission, boards that promote your community are great for libraries starting out on Pinterest. Ann Arbor (MI) Library has a fantastic board featuring all the sights and sounds that make up amazing Ann Arbor. The Watertown (WI) Public Library has a board for their homegrown talent, which introduces local artists and authors—some even from the library’s staff!

·         Share craft projects. In the York region, we shared superhero-themed ideas for the 2012 Summer Reading Club at Library-SRC 2012-Superheroes.

·         Connect to other libraries. Build a community where you can share ideas and help each other to grow and improve.

·         Encourage book clubs. A board for all the year’s upcoming book-club selections provides great exposure to your upcoming reads and might even attract new members to your discussions. Since we offer book club in a bag kits, why not make a board for all those titles you have available for your local book groups to check out?

·         Interact with patrons. “Books to Read,” “Books Worth Reading,” and “Books I Am Reading” are all popular board names. How wonderful if your patrons’ pins all linked back to your catalog! Or you could emulate NYPL and create a “What Are You Reading” board where patrons can pin their current titles.

Closing Thoughts
Copyright: You avoid any issue by posting original images but keep in mind when posting photos you did not take yourself:

o   The images being used are larger than thumbnails (which case law has shown are acceptable to use without specific permission).

o   The Pinterest user agreement says that users should only post that which they have copyright permission to post. And the company that owns Pinterest absolves itself of any liability.

o   Give credit to the author of the photo and always link to the original source of the image (http://linkwithlove.typepad.com/linkwithlove/how-it-works.html)

Best Practices

o   Link your Facebook or Twitter account to your Pinterest account to quickly gain followers.

o   Add Pinterest ‘Pin It’ buttons to your website or blog. Similarly, add a ‘Follow us on Pinterest’ hyperlink to your email signatures.

o   Like and comment on other people’s pins.

o   Follow users in your community and repin others’ pins.

o   Tag others in your pins by using @username.
Resources:






And on the lighter side of things: http://pinstrosity.blogspot.com



Tuesday, February 25, 2014

I heardle we're using Wordle

While exploring the use of images and the proper use of attribution, we discussed the use of Wordle for creating word clouds. I decided to try my hand at it using popular classic titles of children's literature.
Wordle: Children'sLit

I found I wasn't wild about the platform because the image it generates isn't high resolution and the site itself isn't searchable. Yes, you heard me correctly, a Google hosted image site has no search capability.

From their help page:
"Wordle is a Google App Engine application. That means that the Wordle web site depends on the capabilities provided by the GAE platform for everything it can do, including saving and retrieving the Wordles you create, storing the thumbnail images, etc. Unfortunately—and surprisingly, considering the fact that it's Google we're talking about—GAE does not provide the capability to index and search for text in saved data."

Helpful user hint: If you're creating lists where there are spaces between some of the words (ex. Anne of Green Gables) that you want to treat as a single unit, you can use the tilde character (~) between words that go together. The tilde will be converted to a space when drawing the words, and the words will be treated as a single word.

Unfortunately, I didn't realize until after I'd typed my list that Wordle will treat each word typed as a separate unit. I created my document only to find that Where was located in a different place than the, Wild, Things, and Are. I hit backspace to return to the create page and discovered this leads you to the initial blank slate and not the words you'd provided. So, realizing I hadn't copied the text I entered, I set about re-typing all my titles into the box.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Renovations for librarians

The reno shows have it all wrong.

This is an addition worth having.




















Attribution: WH Pyne [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons