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BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!

Bobert 26 Aug 03 - 09:05 AM
John MacKenzie 26 Aug 03 - 01:26 PM
open mike 26 Aug 03 - 02:02 PM
GUEST,MMario 26 Aug 03 - 02:08 PM
open mike 26 Aug 03 - 04:59 PM
artbrooks 26 Aug 03 - 06:02 PM
Noreen 26 Aug 03 - 06:28 PM
Bev and Jerry 26 Aug 03 - 06:28 PM
artbrooks 26 Aug 03 - 06:57 PM
Noreen 26 Aug 03 - 07:42 PM
Rapparee 26 Aug 03 - 08:52 PM
Bobert 26 Aug 03 - 10:07 PM
Rapparee 27 Aug 03 - 09:22 AM
Bobert 27 Aug 03 - 09:51 AM
Wilfried Schaum 22 Oct 04 - 06:42 AM
Wilfried Schaum 22 Oct 04 - 06:44 AM
Rapparee 22 Oct 04 - 08:49 AM
Stilly River Sage 22 Oct 04 - 10:25 AM
Once Famous 22 Oct 04 - 10:55 AM
Sarah the flute 22 Oct 04 - 11:25 AM
GUEST,bbc at work 22 Oct 04 - 11:25 AM
GUEST,SueB 22 Oct 04 - 11:45 AM
Pogo 22 Oct 04 - 01:56 PM
Stilly River Sage 22 Oct 04 - 02:10 PM
GUEST 25 Oct 04 - 08:14 AM
Stilly River Sage 09 Jun 09 - 02:27 PM
artbrooks 09 Jun 09 - 05:53 PM
gnu 09 Jun 09 - 06:05 PM
Rapparee 09 Jun 09 - 10:19 PM
Sandra in Sydney 09 Jun 09 - 10:24 PM
Slag 09 Jun 09 - 10:43 PM
Will Fly 10 Jun 09 - 04:01 AM
Roger the Skiffler 10 Jun 09 - 08:24 AM
Rapparee 10 Jun 09 - 09:32 AM
GUEST,leeneia 10 Jun 09 - 11:05 AM
Rapparee 10 Jun 09 - 01:15 PM

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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Bobert
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 09:05 AM

Yo, Rapaire:

Yer dirty piccures musta been purdy danged steamy 'cause they've been sensored...

Bobert


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: John MacKenzie
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 01:26 PM

I'm a Libran, does that count?

Giok


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: open mike
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 02:02 PM

blickifier test
butte county library -HDQTRS Oroville, CA
and here is a picture of "my" book mobile
keep on bookin'
I saw one in idaho that had this painted on it:
"Take Me To Your Reader!"


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: GUEST,MMario
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 02:08 PM

so - is it true about L-space?


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: open mike
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 04:59 PM

what's L-space?


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: artbrooks
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 06:02 PM

LadyJean, are you in Pgh?...that library's where my daughter's working now.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Noreen
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 06:28 PM

Terry Pratchett's idea, Laurel- he's very complimentary about librarians.

And of course it's true, MMario!


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Bev and Jerry
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 06:28 PM

We've been hearing a lot about liberrians lately. Aren't they having a big civil war over there or something? Isn't Charles Taylor a liberrian?

Bev and Jerry


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: artbrooks
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 06:57 PM

No...Mr. Taylor is a Libertarian.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Noreen
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 07:42 PM

What is this L-Space thing


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Rapparee
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 08:52 PM

Yo! Bobert!

Looky here.   And here. (That's the International Federation of Library Associations). And here. And here. And of course, this one.   Not to mention the one here. And the one over there. Let's not forget this this one, either.

Those'll keep you busy for a while.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Bobert
Date: 26 Aug 03 - 10:07 PM

Whew, Rapaire. Yuou weren't kiddin' when you say I'd be busy with these folks. Man, Iz come away with a new perspective. Man them Alberta liberrian chicks is some hotties. Yeah, I ordered the calendar.... And them Deaducated, as in "Dead heads" were a trip but them gals with them awfull tatooes were way out.... Maybe I'll go back and see if I can get a job as a liberrian just so I can hang with them cool folks....

Yo, Rap. How comes they won't let the liberrians play their gitfiddles while thay is on the job. Hey, I think that would make going the the liberry a little more inneresternatin'.... Man, like I could just take my reso in there and play blues all day long, get a pay check, groove with them foxy liberrians and go home at night knowin' that....

(Hmmmmm, Bobert? Like what would you know?)

Nevermind that last part, Rapaire...

Hey, come on back to Tweeds and get yerseff acqainterated...

Bobert


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Rapparee
Date: 27 Aug 03 - 09:22 AM

Librarians wouldn't know about da blues, right Bobert? But you could, of course, get a job here,
or here, or here.

But having figured out your Secret Musical Love, you'd probably be better off working here.

(Sorry -- there ain't no blues libraries to be found in West-By-God-Virginia. Not even in Morgantown.)


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Bobert
Date: 27 Aug 03 - 09:51 AM

A big haha on the Opera House gig, Rapaire...

But them folks down in Clarksdale, Ms. offered me a job as a janitor. Even said I can play all the gitfiddle I want in the park down the street as long is oit was during my lunch hour, ahhhh, which down in Mississippi is only 30 minutes. Mab them folks is so poor down there that they only get 30 minutes in them lunch hours....

Hmmmmm, maybe I'll rethink the Opera House gig. Heck, the P-Vine can sing that stuff and maybe I can get her a job, too, and they got real lunch hours with 60 minutes in 'em an' all. An' all that high brow stuff could rub off on me and I could lernt to spell and type and do blue clicky things like smart folks and maybe....

Sorry, Rap, I must have nodded off. Where were we...

Bobert


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Wilfried Schaum
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 06:42 AM

Doing research for librarians in the forum I found this thread.
I am a librarian, too. For more than 30 years I managed the library of the Giessen Oriental Institute, an OPL, until we both were incorporated in the University library. Nowadays I work without contact to Sometimes I miss the old days with the mostly beautyful oriental girls (NO boldness!), and their male counterparts teaching me Turkish soldier songs.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Wilfried Schaum
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 06:44 AM

Oops - Nowadays I work without contact to customers.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Rapparee
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 08:49 AM

Wilfred:

"Librarians are the secret masters of the Universe. Don't ever piss one off."   --Spider Robinson

I, too, work with little or no contact with the folks who use the library, because I'm the Director. Now I have to deal with politicians and other unsavory sorts. But I do try to see that people are pleased.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 10:25 AM

Same here, unfortunately. I am a writer and work at home (telecommuting) or in the administration office. But a call went out recently looking for bodies to work at the new Information Desk (in addition to circulation and reference, this is more general information to do with all of campus or the town or the state or whatever people want to ask), and I think I'll sign up. I like that public contact, and used to do it all the time as a National Park Service ranger.

The director of our library who recently retired always had a two-hour stint at the second floor reference desk on Fridays. His reason was that he was covering for the reference librarians who had their weekly meeting then, but whenever I went through I could see that he simply loved getting out there and working with the students and faculty every week. It kept him in touch with what they really needed and what they were really thinking.

SRS


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Once Famous
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 10:55 AM

My wife is a Tech Services Head for the last 10 years or so at our village library. She also does 1 night a week and 1 weekend a month at the reference desk.

recently, I heard a story about a minor league baseball park that did a promotion where there was to be no talking at the scheduled game. Fans who entered the ballpark were given two paddles each, one that said "YAY" and the other that said "BOO"

The hired ushers for the game?

The community's librarians, of course!


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Sarah the flute
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 11:25 AM

OK I'm a Librarian...umm but I don't do a lot of reading and I failed my O Level English Literature. However I did manage to get a degree in biochemistry and another higher one in information science and some how the Institute of Information scientists let me in and that then became CILIP the UK Library prof soc. Now I am working in a posh school as SKOOL librarian and guess what....because I'm "Librarian" all my qualifications seem to have disappeared overnight according to my Headmaster and now I am low priority because "I'm probably only needing to deal with the lower ability pupils" and because "the clever ones all use the internet these days" and anyway I wouldn't know about that because i'm a "booky person". .....Do I REALLY want to admit to being a Librarian???? worse a SCHOOL LIBRARIAN!!!!

I wish the education departments over here would look at the wonderful work done by Teacher Librarians in the USA.

MOAN MOAN MOAN...and I'm not even on a teacher's salary BUT it's HALF TERM YIPPEEEEEEE who cares

Sarah

(PS well in truth it will be half term at 1.00pm tomorrow)


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: GUEST,bbc at work
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 11:25 AM

Boy, do I have people contact! This is my 7th year as the librarian at a U.S. grade 3-5 library in a small, rural school w/ approximately 225 students. I lead 45-minute library/research classes & 30-minute computer/tech classes. Busy, busy, busy! Most of my students, parents, & colleagues are great!

best,

bbc


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: GUEST,SueB
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 11:45 AM

I'm a librarian's daughter, and heavily dependent on the Rural Bookmobile, which is a service I greatly appreciate and couldn't do without. The bookmobile, however, is my first contact with librarians who don't seem to know very much about books, which seems very strange to me.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Pogo
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 01:56 PM

I'm not a librarian but I owe a lot to my elementary school librarian who was my dearest friend as a kid (next to the books {O)). I credit her for giving me the desire to write and I still tell her when I see her that she'll get the first book I publish. And she will too...

So I hope one day that I'll have my books in all of your libraries, I salute you!!! ^_^

*whispers* Oops...sorry...Too loud...


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 22 Oct 04 - 02:10 PM

Librarians are in high demand here in the U.S.--many of the Information Technology companies have realized that not only do librarians understand tech stuff, they know how to search and use lots of databases and they on occasion know how to do all of the maintenance on their systems. And surprisingly (but happily) English majors are experiencing the same sort of cache--because they know how to read and write and do research, employers are now making the assumption that from there they can learn to do all sorts of other jobs in which reading and writing and researching are important components. It's easier to teach an English major to do a technical job than it is to teach a technician how to read and write.

Who'd a thunk it a dozen years ago when the punchline for the English major employment joke was "do you want fries with that?"


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: GUEST
Date: 25 Oct 04 - 08:14 AM

I work in a middle school library, been at it for over twenty years, I do all the cataloguing, filing, purchasing,processing, project work with kids but guess what? I ain;t allowed to call meself the librarian! Go fegger


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Stilly River Sage
Date: 09 Jun 09 - 02:27 PM

Dewey Decimal Dropped

Rangeview Library District, CO, First System To Fully Drop Dewey


WordThink is adaptation of book industry headings

Norman Oder -- Library Journal, 6/5/2009
•Goes beyond example in Maricopa
•Largest collection: 85,000 items
•Labels added by vendors, staff
The six-branch (plus bookmobile) Rangeview Library District, Adams County, CO, will be the first library system in the country to fully drop the Dewey Decimal Classification in favor of a system adapted from that used in the book industry. While Dewey has been dropped in some smaller branches, Rangeview's biggest building will have 85,000 items.

Rangeview's WordThink system, like that in the Perry branch of Maricopa County Library District, outside Phoenix, draws on BISAC (Book Industry Standards and Communications).

However, while Maricopa follows BISAC subject headings very closely, Rangeview spokeswoman Stacie Ledden told LJ, "We've narrowed and adjusted some of those categories. In some cases this required us to create more specific categories than Maricopa uses while in other cases we created our own categories for easy browsing."

"For instance, materials on parenting and child rearing were in two different categories at Maricopa because BISAC classifies them under two different subject headings," she said. "WordThink places them in a single main category called 'Parenting.'"

Beginning in two branches
So far, Rangeview's Perl Mack branch (38,000 items) and the new Bennett branch (25,000 items) use WordThink and, by the end of the year, all branches will use the system.

Rangeview, serving a growing community just north of Denver, is building three new branches, two of them replacements. The new Wright Farms library will have 85,000 items in its Opening Day collection.

"At Rangeview, our main focus is to provide exemplary service to our customers," said director Pam Sandlian Smith. "WordThink is just one more example of how Rangeview puts its customers first."

Vendor cooperation
Rangeview's vendor Baker & Taylor already has access to the BISAC subject headings, so B&T converted those to WordThink from the list provided, said Ledden.

"The materials for our Opening Day collections already have the WordThink labels included on them," she added. "For those materials we already had in-house that needed to be converted, we automatically created the new labels from our MARC records."

ILS changes
As for the library's Horizon ILS, Rangeview's collection development team has been working for months to change the records. "They started by changing records in batches by Dewey range, and then revisited the materials in each category to confirm they were in the right place," Ledden said.

"Of course, in sections of Dewey like the 'generalities,' they needed to examine each record to find the best fit in the new system," she said. "As each branch is converted, the call numbers are changed in the ILS. From a technical standpoint, there were small tweaks necessary to make to the ILS like changes to display the call numbers properly. There will be future changes necessary for statistics that we're still working on."

Other changes afoot
Some other libraries, according to Rangeview, are experimenting with BISAC: Frankfort Public Library District, IL; Richmond Public Library, BC; and Arapahoe Library District, CO.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: artbrooks
Date: 09 Jun 09 - 05:53 PM

I thought Dewey was replaced by LOC everywhere years ago.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: gnu
Date: 09 Jun 09 - 06:05 PM

ISBN?


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Rapparee
Date: 09 Jun 09 - 10:19 PM

International Standard Book Number = ISBN. A now 13-digit number indicating the country of publication, the publisher, and other stuff. Used as a number to order a book with, usually searchable by a library's automated catalog (nice, if you happen to have the damned thing), but otherwise rather useless to the general public.

I have long failed to see any benefit in dropping the classification schemes currently in use (DDC, LC, UDC, etc.) and replacing them with the "bookstore model". Instead of the expense of re-classifying everything why not simply use better signage? The classification schemes group everything by subject already.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Sandra in Sydney
Date: 09 Jun 09 - 10:24 PM

In Oz, different libraries used the most relevant classification.

Public Libraries tend to use Dewey. I worked in a small Govt. scientific library that used LC. I think there were/are other classification in use too, but I stopped cataloguing & classifying many years before I retired.

sandra


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Slag
Date: 09 Jun 09 - 10:43 PM

OK Rap, I don't get it. What is cutter that Libarian? or did you mean like a registered Liberian Cutter? I know there are a lot of Liberian freighters floatin' around out there but cutters?


On the less nonsensical side, why do so many folks pronounce the word as "Lye-berry". I hear it from news people, average folks and some who really should know better, PhD types. I cringe every time I hear the mispronunciation.

PS, No, not a librarian though I have been known to frequent such establishments on occasion.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Will Fly
Date: 10 Jun 09 - 04:01 AM

Good to hear people using the term "library", at any rate. In a bid to make them cool, trendy and popular, some UK public libraries are calling themselves "knowledge stores" or "information shops" and suchlike. Gawd 'elp us!

WF (ex-public library, university librarian for 30+ years)


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Roger the Skiffler
Date: 10 Jun 09 - 08:24 AM

The academic institution from which I am happily retired now has a "social learning space" and "information consultants". In my day a library with librarians. Potential applicants have to demonstrate "influencing skills". I used to use my boot.


RtS


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Rapparee
Date: 10 Jun 09 - 09:32 AM

"Cutter" is library shorttalk for "Cutter Number", a process whereby the main entry (author, usually) is assigned an alphanumbic combination to indicate where it goes alphabetically. For example, if the American Reproductive Society issued a book on human reproduction, it would be classified in the Dewey Decimal Class 612.6 (Medicine: Human Reproduction) and Cuttered in A512 (where the first few letters of "American" fall in the three-digit Cutter-Sanborn Table).

The Library of Congress (LC) classification makes up its Cutter numbers based upon a formula developed by...the Library of Congress.

Charles Aimee Cutter was a pioneer in the classification of materials and invented the Expansive Classification scheme (oh, go look it up!). He worked with Kate Sanborn to prepare the Cutter-Sanborn Tables so people wouldn't have to create their own numbers (naturally, LC went their own way).

Some libraries (ours, for instance) don't use Cutter numbers -- they just put the first one, two, three or four letters of the author's surname under the classification number. It's still call the "Cutter number" in the jargon.

Sometimes you see one or more letters after the Cutter number: A512w2, for example, might mean the 2nd edition of the American Reproductive Society's best selling work, "WHOOPEE! : Sex In American Life".

Please note in the above example I have used the ISBD(M), or International Standard Bibliographic Descriptor (Monograph) method of colon place..................zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.........


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: GUEST,leeneia
Date: 10 Jun 09 - 11:05 AM

I don't have a library science degree ,but I worked in the Milwaukee Public Library and the Kansas City Kansas public library, helping the public the same as a librarian.

That was years ago, however. The library today is different, and not in a good way.

For example, my niece developed serious eye problems. I had seen a book about the eye in the new books section, but I couldn't find it using the computertized catalog. Neither could a person with an MLS. Not unusual, in my experience.


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Subject: RE: BS: Librarians!' Fess Up!!
From: Rapparee
Date: 10 Jun 09 - 01:15 PM

Then the person who tried to help you should be re-educated (I mean that in a GOOD way) or the library should replace their public access catalog with one that works for the patron.


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