Archive for the ‘Advocacy’ Category

State Library will Sponsor First Workforce Recovery Program on Tuesday, April 17

Wednesday, April 4th, 2012

Since the beginning of the economic downturn, Kansas librarians have been helping people conduct job searches and find the resources they need. Libraries across the nation have been praised as effective first responders for people who urgently need help.

In April and early May, the State Library Staff will host a series of three workshops inspired by WebJunction’s Project Compass Program. These workshops are intended to help Kansas librarians continue to contribute to economic recovery in their communities.

The first program in the Kansas Workforce Recovery Series will be held on Tuesday, April 17, from 10:00 to 12:00.”Helping Job Seekers” will emphasize the importance of providing assistance to job seekers and make the participants more aware of national and state resources that are available for those helping job seekers. We will also have a discussion on what different types of job seekers need to know.

The Blackboard Collaborate link to access this program is available at:

https://sas.elluminate.com/m.jnlp?password=M.D859DDED8E97862E7A0DFFBD9276AF&sid=2011591

Participants may come in after 9:30 to check their audio equipment.

The second webinar will be held on Thursday, April 26, from 2:00 to 4:00 PM. It will be on the Learning Express Job and Career Accelerator. This program will be held on the Kansas Collaborate Training Platform, and it will emphasize the Learning Express features for organizing a job search, the information on occupations, the best ways to locate desirable jobs, and the skills for getting hired for desirable jobs. It will add another layer of excellent resources to those covered in the April 17 program.

The Collaborate Link for this program will be sent right after the Kansas Library Association Conference.

The third webinar will be held on Thursday, May 3, from 10:00 to 12:00. ”Partnering with Business” will emphasizes a different aspect of community economic development. Librarians have a growing interest in partnering with small business and entrepreneurs in their communities. Many economists believe that small business will be a major driver of the long-term economic recovery. This program will emphasize the amazing resources that Kansas librarians have available through WebJunction and Gale Business. Once they understand that they already have a Business Resource Center, Kansas librarians can assess what partnering with business can do for both the library and the community.

The Collaborate Link for this program will be sent in late April.

Please save the dates for these spring programs on Workforce Recovery, because we will be sharing a lot of  information that is critically important for Kansas citizens who are still trying to cope with a difficult economy. These resources are essential to excellent customer service at Kansas libraries. All three programs will be archived.

If you have any questions or concerns, please call 785-296-2148, or send email to Shannon.Roy@library.ks.gov.

State Library Will Sponsor Workforce Recovery Series in Spring of 2012

Thursday, January 5th, 2012

Since the start of the recession, Kansas librarians have been helping people conduct job searches and find the resources they need. Libraries across the nation have been praised as effective first responders for citizens who urgently need help.

In the spring of 2012, the State Library of Kansas will host a series of three workshops inspired by WebJunction’s Project Compass Program. These workshops are intended to help Kansas librarians continue to contribute to economic recovery in their Kansas communities.

The first of three webinars in the Kansas Workforce Recovery Series will be held on Tuesday, April 17, from 10:00 to 12:00.”Helping Job Seekers” will emphasize the importance of providing assistance to job seekers and make the participants more aware of national and state job search resources that are available for those helping Kansas job seekers.

The second webinar will be held on Thursday, April 26, from 2:00 to 4:00 PM. It will be on the Learning Express Job and Career Accelerator. This program will be held on the Kansas Collaborate Training Platform, and it will emphasize the LE features for organizing a job search, the information on occupations, the best ways to locate desirable jobs, and the skills for getting hired for desirable jobs.

The third webinar will be held on Thursday, May 3, from 10:00 to 12:00. ”Partnering with Business.” will emphasizes a different aspect of community economic development. Librarians have a growing interest in partnering with small business and entrepreneurs in their communities. Many economists believe that small business will be a major driver of the long-term economic recovery. This program will emphasize the amazing resources that Kansas librarians have available through WebJunction and Gale Business. Once they understand that they already HAVE a Business Resource Center, Kansas librarians can assess what partnering with business can do for both the library and the community

Please save the dates for these spring webinars on Workforce Recovery, because we will be sharing a lot of  information that is critically important for Kansas citizens who are still trying to cope with a difficult economy. These resources are essential to excellent customer service at Kansas libraries. All three programs will be archived.

If you have any questions or concerns, please call 785-296-2148, or send email to Shannon.Roy@library.ks.gov.

WebJunction Offers New Resources and Praise of WebJunction Kansas

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

Kansas is known across the nation for being one of the WJ Partner states that has had a happy and productive relationship with WebJunction.

 

This month, there is a “Spotlight on WebJunction Kansas” in Crossroads, the monthly WebJunction newsletter. Crossroads comments:

“The State Library of Kansas has partnered with WebJunction to provide access to courses, webinars, and content focused on the practice of librarianship in Kansas. WebJunction-Kansas supports innovative professional development opportunities, like the recent Working with Library Boards program, by housing topic and workshop workbooks, online session archives, a document repository for student projects and a discussion board for brainstorming, sharing and support.”

In addition to the Kansas content placed on WebJunction Kansas, there are always new resources being developed by WebJunction staff and WebJunction members.

Since we are approaching mid-November, the State Library of Kansas wants to remind Kansas librarians and trustees to take a look at the December webinars that will be offered (and archived) by WebJunction. They are available on the “Webinars” tab on the WebJunction Kansas home page or at:

http://ks.webjunction.org/events/webinars

Free Windows 7 Curriculum: Basic Computer Training at Your Library is actually designed to help librarians offer basic computer training for adult learners. The program was built after extensive research on how less tech-savvy adults want to learn new computer skills. It will be offered on December 6, 2011 and taught by Todd Watts.

A program of wide interest to small and rural libraries in Kansas will be offered on December 14, 2011. It is called A Small but Powerful Webinar for Winning Big Support for Your Rural Library and it is an introduction to the popular ALA publication A Small but Powerful Guide for Winning Big Support for Your Rural Library

Even if you don’t take time to watch the webinar, do take time to look at the publication, which is well-named, concise, and packed with ideas for marketing and advocacy.

Another new resource you might want to take a look at if you are dealing with the exciting, but bewildering proliferation of new technology being used in libraries, is Betha Gutsche’s compilation on the latest gadget landscape: The Gadget Ecosystem.

 

Broadband Everywhere

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011

Broadband Everywhere Logo

Does this statement accurately depict your community?

“The lack of high speed broadband availability or broadband that is too slow or too costly is crippling Kansas communities.”

Your library is not alone in its need for higher speed broadband. Kansas libraries are the voice of need in their communities.

How can your voice be heard?

Attend one-day training in your Regional Library System.
Take home:
•    a broadband advocacy message for your community;
•    an action plan for expanding and sustaining high speed broadband access in your community; and
•    a list of partners who can help you be successful.

There is no charge for this single-day training, underwritten by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and delivered by the State Library of Kansas staff.

All trainings are scheduled from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. including a free lunch.  Each training session will have a drawing for participants; prizes are a FLip video camera and a computer headset.

Training Schedule:
September 14 – SCKLS – Newton Public Library
September 20 – CKLS – Port Library, Beloit
September 29 – NWKLS – Norton Public Library
September 30 – SWKLS – Dodge City Public Library
October 7 - NEKLS – NEST at Valley Falls
October 19 – SEKLS – Iola Public Library
October 26 – NCKLS – Manhattan Public Library

Contact your Regional System office to register.  [Note: SCKLS Libraries send your registration to Shannon Roy at the State Library. Send e-mail to shannon.roy @ library.ks.gov, include your name, library and the number of people who will be attending with you.]

Communicate the Value of Your Library

Wednesday, January 12th, 2011

CalculatorThis month, WebJunction Kansas is focusing on Communicating the Value of Your Library.  We know you understand the value of getting the word out to your library board, funders and the community at large, but what if you could be even more effective in your communications, without spending extra time or energy? This month the courses we’re highlighting help you do just that.

Beginners and seasoned presenters have plenty to learn from this group of courses designed to help you improve your communication effectiveness and efficiency.  From creating a plan, to developing and refining your messages and then getting them out there through a wide range of delivery methods, we’ve got you covered with these courses.

Join with us this month in learning more about how to get the best results through the right messages to the right audiences… and start celebrating more effective communication than you’ve ever known.

Course information and links are all found here: http://ks.webjunction.org/commvaluecourses.

Got Advocacy? One dozen ideals for your campaign

Wednesday, December 22nd, 2010

One dozen eggsAmerican Libraries, Leonard Kniffel offers 12 library ideals that illustrate why libraries are good for America.  Whether you work your way down the list or start at the bottom, this list is a reminder of why libraries work so hard for their communities.  Read Kniffel’s article, “12 Ways Libraries are Good for the Country” at American Libraries.  Here is a taste of what you’ll find:

5. Libraries nourish creativity.

By providing an atmosphere that stimulates curiosity, libraries create opportunities for unstructured learning and serendipitous discovery. As repositories not only of books…”

*Thank you, Melany Wilks, Pioneer Memorial Library for sharing this on KANLIB-L

Webinar Training on Resources for International Business/Exporting

Wednesday, June 16th, 2010

When:  July 29, 2010 / 10:00am – 11:00am
Where:  Your Computer

The U.S. Commercial Service helps your patrons find exporting success.

Exporting helps U.S. businesses sustain and create jobs.  Decreasing domestic demand can depress prices and force companies to reduce production.  By selling to international markets, firms can maintain or increase current production levels.  Now is the best time for Kansas companies, especially small and medium enterprises (SMEs), to diversify their client portfolios by focusing on growing global markets.  As with any new venture, however, conducting international business offers unique challenges, and companies are always looking for information on resources to assist them in this process.

This training session will give you an insider’s overview of how to counsel your library patrons:
•  Market Research
•  Free Trade Agreements
•  Trade statistics
•  Trade Financing
•  Protecting Intellectual Property
•  Sources for Importing
•  Resources from the U.S. Commercial Service
•  Referrals to our office

To Register:

Please go to the following link -   https://emenuapps.ita.doc.gov/ePublic/newWebinarRegistration.jsp?SmartCode=0Q7T
Once you’ve registered, watch your email for the Internet Login and Audio information for this webinar.

For full information see the following flyer:

Kansas Libraries Webinar flyer2.1 

New Ideas suggest that Libraries Should Expand Role in Economic Development

Wednesday, June 9th, 2010

[This article by Phil Shapiro appeared in PC World Business Center on June 2, 2010]

Suppose you have an idea for a new digital services business – a business that delivers some value to others over the Internet. No matter how good your idea might be, getting such a business off the ground requires a given amount of capital. And this business might require business skills that you do not possess. You could check around with friends to see if any of them are interested in joining you in such a venture, but you could spend months finding the right friends who are interested and available.

Every business is a jigsaw puzzle that requires just the right pieces to fit together. To help those pieces fit together, the concept of the business incubator was born. The function of a business incubator is to identify promising business ideas and then assist entrepreneurs in supplying the missing pieces to their jigsaw puzzle.

Traditionally, business incubators have existed completely separate from public libraries. In the age of manufacturing, this made a lot of sense, but in the digital age – the age of information – public libraries are ideally situated to assume the role of business incubator. Why? Smart people congregate at public libraries to learn and share ideas. Public libraries are where questions are formulated and answers are found. Public libraries are set up to promote wondering. Wonder how libraries could develop greater sustainability? Well, yes, a digital services business that was incubated at a particular library could have a business plan where 20 percent of all proceeds from that business were returned to that library.

If a public library were able to spawn just one successful business, that business could bring in a revenue stream lasting the duration of its life. How long do businesses last? Some last three years, some last 30 years, some last longer. And if a public library were able to spawn several small businesses – you get the picture…

By now you might be wondering, “How do new businesses arise?” A business is a solution to a problem. New businesses form when people gain a clear understanding of some social need and see a path to meeting that social need. Some of the best business ideas arise from people trying to figure out how to meet one of their own needs. Once they devise a solution for themselves, they can see a way – a method – for bringing this solution to others. And for some people, they can just imagine the sweet taste of working for themselves. And yet not enough business ventures get off the ground because of the difficulty of assembling just the right pieces at just the right time. Business opportunities are fleeting. If you’re not ready to move and act this month, the opportunity might not exist next month.

The most fertile innovation happens when people in a community have a clear idea of each other’s talents and interests. Those talents and interests can often be the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle. Not all talents within a community are accessible for new businesses, but some of those talents are. And it behooves public library staff to start maintaining an inventory of talents within their community and to initiate discussions of emerging new roles for public libraries. Some of those discussions could take place within the library’s walls. Figuring out how to have those ideas shared in the most productive way possible is the new challenge for public libraries.

Suppose your local neighborhood library spawns the next Google. Is that a good thing for that library? You tell me.

Libraries can be places that statically house ideas or places where ideas are put into action. We’ve seen a lot of the former. Maybe it’s time to see some of the latter.

Celebrate National Library Week!

Monday, April 12th, 2010

April 11-17 is National Library Week with the theme “Communities Thrive @ Your Library”. 

The most recent data shows that library use is up all across the country.  Libraries DO make a difference -  especially during these tough economic times.

Support your local library this week, and celebrate Kansas libraries and the difference they make in Kansas communities and schools every day!

Promotional materials and resources can be found at:  http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/pio/natlibraryweek/nlw.cfm .

Recruiting New Library Board Members

Friday, March 19th, 2010

by Mickey Coalwell, Consultant, Northeast System

As every serving trustee and library director in Kansas will readily tell you, recruiting new board members can be challenging. The civic responsibility of serving on a local library board requires time and commitment, and it’s difficult to ask busy people to add another task to their schedules.  

But there are good people out there who are up to the challenge. Kansas libraries have survived and thrived because of the outstanding leadership local library boards have shown over the years.

 

So, instead of dreading them, try to see impending vacancies as opportunities to renew and revitalize the library. Every new member brings new ideas and new energy to the board.

Before discussing specific recruitment strategies, let’s review the purpose, authority, and focus of the public library board.

In Kansas, the Library Board of Directors (individual directors are also called Trustees) is charged with formulating policy and providing adequate funding and staffing for the library. Municipal governments levy, collect and distribute the tax dollars which fund the operational budgets authorized by local library boards.

This relationship, created by library law in Kansas, is intended to protect library boards from partisan politics and ensure the independence and integrity of library services for all citizens of the community.

The library board has the statutory authority to determine the library’s budget. They also have the political responsibility to be good stewards of public funds, and to justify expenditures to the municipal officials.

Public library trustees of a city library are appointed by a municipality’s governing body, generally with input from the library board and staff. A trustee is appointed for a four-year term with an option to be reappointed for an additional four-year term. Trustees can become eligible for appointment again after a one-year hiatus. (Boards of district libraries are elected, and are not bound by renewal limits.)
 
Unless exempted by a municipal governing body through local ordinance, library trustees must be residents of the taxing district in which they serve.

Members of the board cannot serve as paid staff members. They can volunteer for the library, but they should not interfere with the director’s role as manager of the library. Individual board members have no authority, but together, as a board, they are empowered to establish and support operational policies.

Dr. Robert J. Grover, who is currently Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs at Emporia State University, where he has also held the position of Dean and Professor of the School of Library and Information Management, sets forth the following criteria for good board members:

- Knowledge of the law
- Political savvy
- Diversity (opinions, professions, skills, experience)
- Representation from the entire community

Grover says trustees should keep abreast of local government goings-on, and know the people involved in local government, because they will be called upon to act as liaisons between the library and the community. Library board members must have, or earn, the respect of at least one governing official in order to be effective. 

The first task of the library board is to negotiate its role in the trustee appointment process. Most governing bodies will look to the library for recommendations when it comes to trustee appointments, but this is not always the case. If you are not already doing so, become a legitimate partner in the process. While it is up to the governing body of the municipality to make the official appointment, it is only logical that the library should have a voice in recommending candidates.

So, where should you look for someone who might make a good board member? The first place you should look is in your own library. The best candidates are people who use the library regularly. Mothers with children, entrepreneurs who use the library’s resources to support their home businesses, and retired people who spend a great deal of time in the library are the people you should be considering. Homeschoolers are also heavy library users, and these parent-teachers are another possibility worth exploring.

Here are a few more:

- Business people (retailers, bankers, insurance agents, farm implement dealers)
- Church and civic leaders
- Teachers and educators
- Daycare providers
- Police and law enforcement personnel
- Veterinarians

Approach potential candidates with a short invitation speech and a simple one-page overview of the duties and responsibilities of the trustee position (see below). You may need to cultivate some of your potential candidates over time, with several discussions and interactions, before they are comfortable committing, but most people are flattered to be asked. Sometimes planting the seed is all you can do. It may take several months, or even years, for an invitation to bear fruit.

Which means it is a good idea to cultivate potential candidates on an ongoing basis. Don’t wait until you have a vacancy to begin courting your potential board members. The ideal situation is to have a few candidates “in the pipeline” when your vacancy arises. There’s nothing wrong with telling people that you don’t have any current board openings, but that you would love to have them give some thought to becoming a board member in the future. You should constantly be on the lookout for good library board candidates. All current board members, the librarydirector and library staff should all become dedicated recruiters of new board members.

Here’s what you should be doing to effectively recruit new board members:

- Make it known you are looking. Get the word out that the board is always seeking new applicants. Isn’t that what you would do if you had a paid position open? Advertise current board openings in your local newspaper, in your library newsletter, on your website, on Facebook — wherever you think your candidates may see a posting.

- At library events, before programs, and in community presentations, always take  a few minutes to inform the crowd that you are on the lookout for people who want to serve as library board members or volunteers.

- Network. Current board members and library staff should be making personal invitations to people they meet at church, at work, at social events, and business meetings. Ask your city officials to be on the lookout for potential board candidates, too.

Sample Invitation for Potential Library Board Candidates

The Community Public Library would like to invite you to apply for a position on the Board of Directors of the Library. This volunteer position requires concern for and pride in our community, as well as connections and affiliations among various constituencies in our community.

We’re looking for people who believe that the public library is vital to the health and well-being of the community as a whole.  We want someone who can approach people and problems with an open mind, and have the courage to resist pressures which interfere with the community’s democratic right to a full range of library materials and services.

We want people who are passionate about learning, committed to equality, fairness and transparency, and willing to work with others to achieve challenging goals. We want someone who will be a strong advocate for the library

We think you are that kind of person. We’d like to ask you to complete an application for a position on the Library Board of Directors.

• You must be at least 18 years old and a citizen of the U.S.
• You must be a resident of the (city, township, county).
• You must be willing to commit about 6 hours of your time a month, including at least one evening meeting lasting 1-1/2 to 2 hours
• You must be willing to be an active, vocal advocate for the library.
• This is not a paid position.

Would you consider applying for a board position? We would be happy to continue this discussion with you, if you are interested, at your convenience. Please let me know when would be a good time to visit.

Here is my contact information:
Name
Phone
Email address