Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Fun Question

A question came in the mail today here at AskNYPL asking about a fable. Yes, we still have postal reference!

I thought the fable was interesting:



Clad in a lion's shaggy hide,
An ass spread terror far and wide,
And, though himself a coward brute,
Put all the world to scampering rout:
But, by a piece of evil luck,
A portion of an ear outstuck,
Which soon revealed the error
Of all the panic-terror.
Old Martin did his office quick.
Surprised were all who did not know the trick,
To see that Martin, at his will,
Was driving lions to the mill!
In France, the men are not a few
Of whom this fable proves too true;
Whose valour chiefly does reside
In coat they wear and horse they ride.
Jean de La Fontaine
Book 5, Fable 21


Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Librarian Fail

So... I've learned yet another tid bit of vast amount of information one should know being a librarian. The Collyer brothers original hoarders.

Such an intersting article!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collyer_brothers

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Google+

Yesterday I was given an invite to Google+.

I have a few thoughts:

First, it's very easy to use. I like the circle idea, but I don't know how much I really need them. I generally keep personal thing personal and professional thing professional.
Certainly there's overlap, but these circles of people seems like it's going to require a lot of upkeep.

For instance, you have the family sphere. Okay, great! Family.
We can update on how 'ol Great Aunt Merna is doing, but half my family isn't going to care, they don't know Aunt Merna. Do I have one sphere for in-laws and one for my side?
Great!
That's not too hard.

Now for people who want to share links but don't want to get in a tiff going with Uncle Fred before the reunion about supporting or not supporting a political candidate, social cause, etc. Do we then make left leaning and right leaning circles to appease?



How many layers before this becomes too annoying or are we just going to maintain the "if I don't want everyone to see it, I won't post it" type practices?


On anther point, I have two other people who also have Google+. It's kind of boring.
I also didn't use Picasa before.
Actually until checking to make sure I spelled Picasa correctly, I didn't know pictures uploaded to Blogger went on the site. That's really quite creepy.



All in all, I won't have much use for the site for a while. Everyone's on Facebook and people are pretty loyal.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Paper Accepted!


I’m excited to announce the paper I was working on for ASIS&T has been accepted. Here is part of the e-mail that arrived in Lupita’s inbox on Thursday:

Dear Ms. Lupita S-O’Brien:

On behalf of the ASIST-2011 2011 Program Committee, I am delighted

to inform you that the following submission has been accepted
to appear at the conference:
    Understanding Privacy Behaviors of Millennials within
          Social Networking Sites
  
So, there it is.
The conference is in New Orleans, Oct 9-13.
Dr. Shah, who worked with us on the paper, said he’ll get funding for us to head down to New Orleans.

As third author I most likely won’t have much of a role in the presentation. This will be a new experience for me, so I’m now thankful I didn’t take the lead for the project.
Other than the Beyond Books (un)-Conference I haven’t been to a gathering like this. I don’t know if Beyond Books was really all that normal in terms of a conference. There were no presenters, no set classes, and no submissions (other than for the stipend). It was a wonderful experience, but I don’t know if it really compares to other information related events.

There’s a ton of work to be done on the paper. The reviewers gave us a nice long list of things to work on. I’m very happy I stayed up to work on the paper for submission.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Librarians In The Movies


I was looking up information on Librarians in movies. Turns out someone has already done the work for me:
http://emp.byui.edu/RAISHM/films/bibliography.html

I’m particularly interesting in reading Bitch Magazine’s take on Librarians in films:
Abigail Leah Plumb.  "The Dewey-Eyed Decimal System: Checking Out Librarians on Film."  Bitch: Feminist Response to Pop Culture 14 (Summer 2001). 

I mentioned before Dr. Radford’s work is also on my radar. Looking forward to reading this:
Marie L. Radford and Gary P. Radford.  "Librarians and Party Girls: Cultural Studies and the Meaning of the Librarian."  Library Quarterly 73(1): 54-69.

The site also hosts a link to this with even more resources:

I hope someone has time to enjoy these with me.




Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Loved This Book!

This Book is Overdue! How Librarians and Cyrarians Can Save us All.
Marilyn Johnson
2010 – Harper Collins
978-0-06-143161 (pbk)

I finished reading This Book is Overdue today on my way home. What a fun read. I recommended it anyone interested in the Library world especially those who want to know about the digital side (which I assume is everyone). It’s an easy read and had me very much looking forward to my NYC commute. Here’s a few of my favorite pieces, I won’t give the whole book away.

Marilyn Johnson ropes you in with talk of an old lawless town and how its library is functioning on a giant scale in Second Life. Second Life has an entire chapter dedicated to it later in the book, and as someone who hasn’t been near Second Life, I’m not oddly captivated by the whole idea.
Anyways- Deadwood, South Dakota.
This is where the book starts. How can someone not keep reading? You’re a sneaky one Ms. Johnson. Getting the reader hooked early.

After reading the chapter I felt obligated as a library person to check out the Deadwood Library Website. While there isn’t much to see on the site itself, it makes me want to check out the Deadwood Library collection all the more in Second Life. The chapter also made me want to go to Deadwood and be a part of the reenactments, so take that as you wish. What I’m trying to say while getting very much distracted in the regularly forgotten awesomeness that is South Dakota, is the Deadwood Library, according to Marilyn Johnson’s book has an amazing digital collection in Second Life.

Next Point – Sickness…
Information Sickness.

I learned about this in passing in my Digital Libraries class last semester at Rutgers. Marilyn Johnson seems to share the sentiment of it being a humorous idea, while at the same time, in a weird way being absolutely plausible in some fashion. The idea comes from Ted Mooney’s novel Easy Travel to Other Planets. While I have not read this book myself, it seems that there is a character who comes down with information sickness having taken in too much information and they lose their mind or control of it or something to this affect. Like I said, I haven’t read the book; all of this is secondary information. Marilyn took a gander over at NYPL in the very building I spend much of my time, so perhaps on a slow day I’ll meander down that way and take a gander of my own. See what all the fuss is about.

The book goes on to talk about catalog upgrade nightmares and the realities of being a front line librarian including a section dedicated to poo, which was especially funny and upsetting.

More upsetting were the changes for the New York Public Library. While I have mad love for this library, I am very much a new comer to the city and The Library. The changes that went down were kind of outrageous and detrimental to the researchers of the library and the writers who used the collections as inspiration. Interestingly, I think the library has learned what it has lost in a way. For the centennial celebration, The Library hosted hundreds of writers over night to help write a book inspired by the collection and marketed the idea as revolutionary (see Find the Future). However a chapter in Marilyn Johnson’s book shed light on how the library had actually been doing this on a much greater scale where specialists and reference librarians noted for their greatness were helping writers get what they needed and become inspired. This service must have not been publicized very well, because surely there would have been uproar with the shifts away from these aids. It’s these types of things that have academically minded people flocking to The Library and why people think so highly of NYPL.  Now it seems the library is trying to reverse the damage while at the same time making it seem like something new and not really hoisting themselves back to the standards they once held. This is great publicity for the library but only mildly exciting for fans of books and those who write them.

On a lighter note, I was exposed to the American Kennel Club Library, which I now have on my top libraries to visit. Very excited it's not far.  
Her descriptions of Book Cart competitions at ALA conferences and the over all bad-asses that Librarians tend to be - Very enjoyable.

So- thank you Marilyn Johnson. I’m glad to have been exposed to the wonders of Libraries, Second Life, eccentric librarians and the bureaucracy that often overshadows the greatness of the libraries through your book. This Book is Overdue is certainly much more positive, fun, informative, ADVENTUROUS, and I encourage you to check it out.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

First Submission To ASIS&T and The Six Lessons I Learned From It All

Tuesday (or very early Wednesday morning) I did it. I submitted a paper to The American Society for Information Science & Technology (ASIS&T). While I did not do this alone (thanks Lupita, Chirag, and Pam), it sure felt like I was come 4:30am. Oi, it was a long (lonely) night.
The week before was unexpectedly rough, and did as unexpected family things can certainly do to a schedule, which made for a not so pleasant Tuesday deadline. The entire day I was cursing myself for having thought research was a good idea:
“What was I thinking?”
“Why am I writing this? School is finished for summer.”

I must say, despite questioning my ambitions, the next day I felt pretty good about myself. I can honestly say if I wouldn’t have been up editing this paper would not have gotten submitted. No one else had time (or energy?) to get this thing pushed to the end. My group was pooped. 

Even if it doesn’t get accepted, it’s a piece I’m proud of. 

It was definitely a learning experience for me as well, not just the topic of the paper (privacy habits of Millennials in social networking sites), but the process of putting a paper together. A lesson well learned I assure you. 
If you’re looking to publish, the crucial steps are all set up. It’s very easy to be guided through the basic steps of research, so I’ll spare the details. Here are six lessons I’ve learned that are not in the books. 

First- Do your own literature review (at the very least, play a very large role): As much as someone goes over the documents they would like to have included in the paper, when it comes to writing you’ll have no idea what’s going on in this integral piece of the work. 

Second- When working on a time sensitive project, only work with people you know you work with well. Do not try and jump into a project with someone whom you have never met. Although this person may be very sweet, there is no telling what types of things that are seen as a priority and what are not, and there may be conflicts. 

Third- When conflict arises and people seem confused, take charge. Make the project your own and delegate work rather than waiting around for people who had taken leadership to continue in this role. 

Fourth- Know all of your team mates writing styles BEFORE you need to start writing. This will help when sorting through everyone’s work and making it one. It will also help to know who writes most eloquently when in a tough spot. 

Fifth- Have every member of the team write the methodology section independently then compare as a group. This way everyone is on the same page as to what information the group is looking for, how it’s going to be found, and how the data will be analyzed. 

Sixth- Write a paper you can be proud of. People are going to read it and you want to be taken seriously.


When I read over the paper I can spot all the details I helped gather, ideas I had, themes I discovered (the paper was based on questions I thought up), tid-bits from my interviews, and the sections I wrote well the first time. All that thinking ahead I did in the beginning paid off big when it came to writing.The piece is going to be read as one, but to me certain parts shine brighter because their mine and I'm allowed to be proud of them.

I look back and think of the weeks I spent thinking of how to put this project together, how I thought about the details I wanted to include in the paper for weeks before they were written down, and how good it felt at 4:46am on a Wednesday to lay down in my bed and know I have accomplishing something, a milestone of sorts, and now have very little on my agenda for the summer.

It feels good.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Scholarship Update

I was able to get in touch with the Business Manager at the Rutgers School of Communication and Information.
Very sweet (and helpful!) lady: Louise Forman.

She was able to pull up the scholarship amount for the past few years. Looks like about $4000. I'm very excited about this number as it will mean two free classes. Paying out of state tuition can be hard on students, especially after graduation once you have to pay it all back!


I feel very fortunate and I am very appreciative of the award.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Masters of Library Studies Service Scholarship

So, I've been awarded the Masters of Library Studies Service Scholarship for next year (2011-2012). 

I'm very excited about the whole thing. I haven't actually been awarded a scholarship that wasn't given to just anybody who applied previously. 
Also, I don't think I've ever applied to a scholarship that I had to compete for. So.. Hurray! 

Funny- I have no idea how much the scholarship is actually worth. I suppose I'll find out in August when my term bill comes. 

Those who know me also know I love the adjective/descriptor "outstanding". So I was particularly happy to see this bit 
"...outstanding academic achievement, dedication to service, and commitment to the disciplines and professions..."

They spelled my name wrong on my letter, so I had actually assumed I didn't get it. Usually award letters spell your name right and rejection letters just kinda toss out a name similar to that of the applicant. So imagine my surprise when it said I had been selected. Woohoo!


I've included the letter below:


May 3, 2011

Dear Jacqueline Woolcott,

We are very pleased to announce that you have been selected by the Master of Library and Information Science scholarship committee as the recipient of the distinguished Masters of Library Studies Service Scholarship for the 2011-2012 academic year.   Given the outstanding academic profile of many of our students, this year’s scholarship review was very competitive and your selection is testimony of your outstanding achievement in the Master of Library and Information Science program.

The Master of Library and Information Science program prides itself on the tradition of presenting these awards to acknowledge and reward students for their outstanding academic achievement, dedication to service, and commitment to the disciplines and professions within the School of Communication and Information at Rutgers University.  We hope this award affords you more opportunities for success throughout your continued matriculation in our programs.

As part of your scholarship award, we will be honoring you at the 2011 SC&I Scholarship Reception. Although you will be receiving a formal invitation this summer, please save the date for Thursday, September 22, 2011 from 6pm-8pm in Livingston Hall of the Livingston Student Center. We strongly encourage all scholarship winners to make arrangements to attend. You will also be invited to bring two additional guests to the event, and we look forward to celebrating your achievements together!

If you intend to accept this award, please send an email confirmation to scholarship@comminfo.rutgers.edu no later than May 10, 2011. If you accept the award, the scholarship money will be applied directly towards your fall 2011 term bill.  Please note that for some awards, the exact dollar amount will not be determined until August (but before the August 10th term bill due date).  If you do not intend to enroll in the Fall 2011 semester, or if for any other reason you cannot accept this award, the scholarship committee may present this award to an alternate candidate in the scholarship applicant pool.  If you have any questions, please contact the Student Services office at (732) 932-7500 (press 2 @ prompt).  Congratulations once again!

Sincerely,

Kevin J. Ewell
Assistant Dean for Student Services
On behalf of the Master of Library and Information Science Scholarship Committee

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Building Digital Library

I've been working with a local museum who needed a bit of help digitizing photos in efforts to make a quality digital library for my Digital Libraries class at Rutgers.

The process has been long, but putting everything together I'm now finally able to see my work in one spot and looks nice. Even for a cookie-cutter type website.
I had to abandon the website I had built from scratch due to it showing up on search engines. My robot.txt file just wasn't working at the student web page level, and the museum wanted to keep the photos from being findable due to copy right concerns.

So, I started a Google Site so it wont end up on a search engine, but I can still have it accessible to people I want to share it with. I must say- working with Google Sites has been a pleasure! I'm thinking of using one to build my e-portfolio.

Aside from the tech stuff (which I am loving), the meta data and learning Past Perfect has been so much fun. The software is user friendly and versatile. My boss said it's widely used so it will be a benefit to me if I'm comfortable using it. There's a lot of repetitiveness of filling in information with digitizing the photos while building a library in Past Perfect and also for my assignment, so I'm fortunate my assignment is due this week.

I'm also sad my assignment is due this week. It's been one of the most enjoyable and rewarding assignments I've worked on in my year as an MLIS student. I'm hoping to see more creative, technical based, and overall rewarding tasks in my future. 

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Twitter

Those of you that know me know I am no fan of 140 character restrictions, but all the same I have been told by many people twitter is where you go when you need to know.

I'm not sure I 'need to know' but I might. What am I missing out on?

Well- I signed up, and have found LOTS of libraries, librarians, funny people, and interesting accounts. I don't tweet much, mostly I use it for other people's tweets and have been re-tweeting pretty heavily.

All the same- I've embedded it on the side bar, and if you by chance missed it, here's me:
http://twitter.com/#!/jaqwoolcott

Thursday, April 21, 2011

I love Working the Ref. Desk

Sitting here at the Douglass Library helping with reference questions. A lot of help with subject searching and asking what resources people can try.

Nothing makes my day more than someone you helped two hours ago (and quite honestly didn't know if you helped at all) come back and thank you. She then showed me the stack of papers she printed out, explained why they were most relevant, and told me how she has lots more on her flash drive to weed through and how she would have been lost without me.

She's going to e-mail me and let me know how her paper goes.
Love the ambition, love the appreciation.

Thanks Rutgers students.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Party Girl


I recently watched Party Girl, a movie about a girl/young lady, Mary (played by Parker Posey) who most definitely does not have her stuff together and is taken in by her librarian God Mother. It’s a very interesting movie especially from a librarian’s perspective. It’s also obvious there weren’t any librarians consulted in making it (too many errors in how libraries are run) and several stereotypes that just don’t add up. All the same, it really enjoyed it.

My spouse and I watched it together. He said it’s “a movie exclusively for librarians.” While I don’t entirely agree with that statement, I did enjoy it and I’m sure non-librarian minded folks would do the same. 

I won’t spoil the ending since you just might watch it. It’s available to play instantly on Netflix

I learned about the movie due to the movie poster my Professor has on her office wall. I figured, ‘why not?’ When I told Dr. Radford I had watched the movie she was very excited and incidentally had written a paper on the movie. How neat! She gave me a copy. I have yet to read it over, but I’m planning on it. A bit of summer reading for me:

Marie L. Radford and Gary P. Radford.  "Librarians and Party Girls: Cultural Studies and the Meaning of the Librarian."  Library Quarterly 73(1): 54-69.