Showing posts with label libraries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label libraries. Show all posts

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Book Spotlight: 'The Drowning Girl' by Caitlin R. Kiernan (2011)

The Drowning Girl: A Memoir is one book I've read countless times, and it seems to get better the more I reread it. For me, the narrator's voice is compelling and memorable - she's the one writing the memoir, an attempt to piece together her contradicting memories about a woman named Eva Canning... "who might have been a ghost, or a wolf, or maybe a mermaid, or possibly, most likely, nothing that will ever have a name." But Imp is a schizophrenic who has problems with perceptions of reality. Its a book with a broad scope, so its quite difficult for me to summarize. Even this review from Publisher's Weekly, though good, is still limited, I think:

Kiernan’s finely crafted stand-alone fantasy guides an artistic young woman through a maze of false memories and blurred realities. A diagnosis of schizophrenia is no surprise to India Morgan Phelps, aka Imp; her “family’s lunacy lines up tidy as boxcars” down the generations. Meds and psychiatry help keep her stable until she meets Eva Canning, who looks just like the woman in The Drowning Girl, an 1898 painting that has enthralled Imp since she was a child. Imp’s need to learn the truth about Eva brings on dreams and memories that can’t be real, and the obsession only gets worse when Eva abruptly disappears. Could Eva be the ghost of the woman who inspired the painter of The Drowning Girl, or a priestess whose worshippers died in a mass drowning in 1991? The chiding voice in Imp’s head urges her to get her stories straight, but how can she when reality keeps changing? Kiernan evokes the gripping and resonant work of Shirley Jackson in a haunting story that’s half a mad artist’s diary and half fairy tale. Agent: Merrilee Heifetz, Writers House. (Mar.)

Here are better reviews: Elizabeth Hand's and from Tor.com.

I also don't know how to recommend it... at first reads it was quite vague and annoying, but then the mysteries began to get clearer at later reads. It can turn off some readers (from what I can gather from the negative reviews). What I admire most is how Imp was written. She's only a fictional character yet this gave the effect that she does exist, and the writer to create such a believable person is amazing. In the memoir, Imp inserts her own writings, two short stories that are my favorite parts of the book: "The Mermaid of the Concrete Ocean" and "Werewolf Smile". These are fictions inspired by Eva the mermaid and Eva the werewolf.

So... instead of trying to write a review, here are quotes from the book, which tells more about the book that what I can say about it. Though I am not insane like Imp, I do relate to her... especially the things about intrusive thoughts.

On crazy: "It’s a myth that crazy people don’t know they’re crazy. Many of us are surely as capable of epiphany and introspection as anyone else, maybe more so. I suspect we spend far more time thinking about our thoughts than do sane people."
"Am I dragging my feet because I’m a crazy woman who knows damn well she’s crazy, but who doesn’t want to be reminded just how crazy she is by having to tell two stories that are true, when only one can be factual?"

On religion: "We never went to church, because my mother was a lapsed Roman Catholic, and always said I’d be better off steering clear of Catholicism, if only because it meant I’d never have to go to the trouble of eventually lapsing."

Libraries: "All my life, I have loved visiting the Athenaeum on Benefit Street. Rosemary and Caroline took me there more often than the central branch of the Providence Public Library downtown. The Athenaeum, like so much of Providence, exists out of time, preservationists having seen that it slipped through the cracks while progress steamrolled so much of the city into sleek modernity. Today, the Athenaeum isn’t so very different than in the days when Edgar Allan Poe and Sarah Helen Whitman courted among the stacks. I couldn’t begin to imagine how many hours I’ve spent wandering between those tall shelves and narrow aisles, or lost in some volume or another in the reading room on the lowermost floor. Housed there within its protective shell of pale stone, the library seems as precious and frail as a nonagenarian. Its smell is the musty commingling fragrance of yellowing pages and dust and ancient wood. To me, the smells of comfort and safety. It smells sacred."

On ghosts: "Ghosts are those memories that are too strong to be forgotten for good, echoing across the years and refusing to be obliterated by time. That’s another thing about ghosts, a very important thing—you have to be careful, because hauntings are contagious. Hauntings are memes, especially pernicious thought contagions, social contagions that need no viral or bacterial host and are transmitted in a thousand different ways. A book, a poem, a song, a bedtime story, a grandmother’s suicide, the choreography of a dance, a few frames of film, a diagnosis of schizophrenia, a deadly tumble from a horse, a faded photograph, or a story you tell your daughter."

Intrusive thoughts: "I explained to her that, “It’s like I put on a pair of headphones, and at first there’s no sound at all coming through them. No music. No voices. Nothing. But then,” I said, “way in the background, so soft maybe you only think you’re hearing it, there’s static. White noise. Or someone whispering. And slowly that sound gets louder and louder. At first, it’s easy to ignore. It’s hardly even there. But, eventually, it grows so loud you can’t hear anything else. In the end, the sound swallows the whole world. Even if you take the headphones off, that noise won’t stop.” She nodded, and smiled, and told me I’d eloquently described what are called intrusive thoughts. Involuntary and unwelcome thoughts that can’t be shut out no matter how hard someone tries."

Hauntings: "Sirens are intrusive thoughts that even sane men and women have. You can call them sirens, or you can call them hauntings. Doesn’t matter. Once Odysseus heard the sirens, I doubt he ever forgot their song. He would have been haunted by it all the rest of his life. Even after his terrible twenty-year journey, the archery competition, even after he gets Penelope back and the story has a happy “ending,” he must still have been haunted by their song, in his dreams and when he was awake. Every time he saw the sea or the sky."

Dr. Ogilvy and the pills she prescribes are my beeswax and the ropes that hold me fast to the mainmast, just as my insanity has always been my siren. As it was Caroline’s siren and Rosemary’s siren before me. Caroline listened and chose to drown. Rosemary drowned, even though there were people who tried to stuff her ears and did tie her down. 

This book trailer got the feel of the story right:

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Library Misadventures (& more on cataloging)

If you've got a book near you, try turning to the back of the title page, the one with the publication details. You might see a Text-CIP, or "Cataloging in Publication". For example, The Drowning Girl by Caitlín R. Kiernan has these subject headings: “1. Schizophrenics – Fiction. 2. Self-actualization (Psychology) in women – Fiction.” Those are from the Library of Congress Subject Headings, and there are rules and prescribed vocabularies on assigning those terms. LC, however, is mostly used for academic disciplines and contains a lot of technical terms. (There are also other sources for subject headings other than LC, such as the Sear’s List). However, libraries now usually copy publication information from shared online databases and directly download to the library online catalog to save time. But there are materials that the library needs to classify, so the LC is an important tool in cataloging. Subject headings lead users to the resources they need and that’s important in cataloging.

This is what the printed LC looks like. We have to flip through these volumes numerous times to search and get the appropriate subject headings. 
That’s what we’re doing now in SEAFDEC AQD Library, assigning headings for research papers and journal articles. But it is brain-draining work for us who still has to analyze them, as most of these research works on Fisheries and Aquaculture are written in scientific and technical jargon. After that, it will be encoded in their database. Anyway, the librarian who’s in charge of us is a great teacher and I admit I only learned how to properly use the LCSH from his teaching. I still need a lot of practice on it. It’s only our second week there, and we still have a lot to do until February! I’m grateful for the experience here, as the SEAFDEC library and librarians have won numerous awards from library associations – especially PAARL (Philippine Association of Academic & Research Libraries).

In RL... I’m busy catching up with the hours needed for the practicum. MWF we’re in Tigbauan, TTh in school due to a couple of remaining subjects and duty hours in Henry Luce. I’m currently in the Theology Library. I’m trying my best to squeeze in what I can in reading and writing.

I like working in SEAFDEC, I like how calm it is there. I’m interested in the ocean, so reading and analyzing studies about it and its creatures is a welcome challenge. We ride their bus for free from the city to Tigbauan and back, so it’s no trouble. It seems that the only time I can read uninterrupted is during the bus ride.

I finished a book there, Two Worlds and in Between: The Best of  Caitlín R. Kiernan, vol. 1, read from my Kindle. It’s a short story collection of one of my favorite authors. The stories are more atmosphere than suspenseful plot – the recurring themes are about the ocean, space, and parallel worlds. My favorite pieces are: “Onion”, “Andromeda among the Stones”, and “The Dry Salvages”. I like The Dry Salvages best, it’s a written account about a tragic space exploration to a distant planet, told by its sole remaining survivor...

"And still we do not see that we are not gods, The holy fathers and holy mothers and demons of our lost antiquities. We do not comprehend our insignificance at the feet of eternity. We have not the time to learn. We have not the courage to admit. We have not the strength to accept, and, accepting, move beyond this grinding infancy. Instead, we bring snow and ice to birthday parties in Hell and congratulate our ignorance.”

Friday, December 20, 2013

Library Labyrinth [a poem]

(Note: This was crammed one early morning, a teacher asked me to contribute something to the scrapbook for another teacher's birthday. She forgot about it, I forgot about it, so it wasn't included in anything.)

libraries, living books, poems about books, poems about libraries, labyrinths, maze, poetry, literary

I cannot recall when I was born
But I have been wandering in this labyrinth
For as long as I could remember.
I know of no other world other than this maze,
Where infinite books line eternal shelves –
And I am in a journey where I don’t know where to go
One of the books tell of a story:
That there is another open world outside, unlike this place.
Maybe I am walking to find a way out.
I have met the blind Librarian once,
A crazed man believing himself a prophet
Mulling over tomes of braille and false Bibles,
Books all older than me by centuries.
He said that the labyrinth was a universe expanding,
And he fed me a book, and in hunger I could not refuse,
and told me I am now the book,
My skin suddenly showing tattooed typography
of a language I cannot understand,
text so dense I cannot see my skin anymore.
I did not see him again, and I hide myself in thick robes.
The other seekers of this labyrinth,
Chase after me with swords and knives,
thinking that I am what they are looking for.
They will skin me open, they believe, that I am the Book of Answers,
that I am a Door to the End of this World,
the death of this eternal labyrinth.

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Current school woes

The problem with an internet connection that sucks is that I'm unaware that I've already posted and it ends up duplicating entries...

Anyway, while I have a lot of ideas to post here, I have little free time now. It's my last semester and we're required 500 hours in our library practicum. I was assigned first in Cataloging, and the job requires me to read and scan books to determine the subject when assigning Dewey Decimal numbers for classification. I like it, though of course I find it much easier to catalog fiction than thick textbooks. So next week I hope I get more diverse material than books. We're gonna be working in the library system of our school, then for 2 weeks at SEAFDEC Library in Tigbauan.

2 subjects left, though. There's still PE, Swimming, and I'm grateful that the teacher is kind and knows how to build up people like me who don't know how to swim. There's still Spanish 2, which I could've finished in my last school. It's required in my course too, I just hope I've retained things from before. Final obstacles to overcome before graduating on March 2014.

That's all. Odd when I only realized how much free time I've been wasting when most of the day's hours are spent on working.

One thing I also realized that choosing this course was a right decision. The teachers and librarians are the most supportive I know, I love learning new things here, and I like working in places with lots of books. Really, the first time I heard of LIS was from a librarian's blog who said she had her dream job of cataloging anime and manga in her university. I thought, "Well, I could do that!" While there's no manga in Henry Luce III Library, the books there are great, especially the Filipiniana section with a wide selection of all kinds of Filipino books. I'm also thinking that if I ever enroll in a Master's degree it would still be in CPU so I can still borrow stuff from Henry Luce!

(Most of my fave books ever, I borrowed from libraries.)

Wednesday, October 16, 2013

LIS bulletin board's new look for next semester.

Yesterday's earthquake was intense. I hope people I know are okay.
- - -
Last Monday me and a classmate changed the BLIS bulletin board in the College of Education, second floor of Old Valentine building at CPU. The text is from the LIS section of myfootpath.com. Of course, I couldn't resist putting a picture of Kakashi reading in there.
library, libraries, bulletin boards for library and information science, bulletin board ideas, library displays, LIS, bulletin board, promoting course, library science, promotion, library marketing, art ideas, cool bulletin boards for libraries,  

On the middle is this 'night at the library' wallpaper (with Harry Potter, Alice, Pooh, and other fictional characters who have story-telling sessions between the shelves when no one's there):
harry potter in the library, alice in wonderland library, books, libraries, night at the library, wallpaper, fantasy library, magical library, library ghosts

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Another library tour around Iloilo

The tour yesterday (Sept. 27) was supposed to be for the second-years only, but included all BLIS students so each of us can pay lesser for the trip. Not that exciting but tiring, and except for 2 places (stops 2 & 4) I’ve been in most of them. The other schools were cancelled due to heavy rains. We went to UP Miag-ao, Makinaugalingon Press, San Agustin, Provincial Libray, and Museo Iloilo.

Stop 1: UPV Miag-ao Library
Been here, studied here, have borrowed memorable books here. I realized that as a previous library user only, it’s difficult to see the everyday nitty-gritty details of library work (hence the “librarians have it easy” misconception). University librarians are a busy lot: accreditation, buying books, budgeting, processing books, reader’s services, updating databases...

When I go to other university libraries I can’t help but compare it to how much Henry Luce III Library of our school lags behind when it comes to technology. Sure, we have a good security system and extensive collections, but the library database isn’t fully utilized and experienced programmers are lacking. I’d like quick check-in, automatic book return, and automated log-in I see in other schools, where students don’t have to write their names but only scan their IDs.

UP Libraries I will always see as the best example to follow when it comes to IT. They have a very good database developed by themselves (iLib). CPU is using Destiny, and there is an expensive subscription to pay for that. Most students complain about the library fee and don’t realize what they’re paying for (that’s why they are told where it goes during orientations, but with the thousands of students in CPU I guess only a handful of freshmen attend).

The best software I found UPV librarians use is their modified version of CDS-ISIS. It is for academic texts such as theses, papers, and journal articles and is useful for those doing research. Abstracts are important, it’s what researchers will first read in order to determine if the whole study or text will be useful for them, and students have the option to print it for their use. ISIS is actually an old software from the 90s but they updated it. CPU had it but it’s gone. As someone writing a thesis now, it was difficult to sort through too many physical hard-bound theses because the library didn’t have an adequate database.

Actually, theses can also be accessed by the OPAC, but I find CDS-ISIS more convenient because it is specialized for research works. On the OPAC, there is still the mess of other library resources included and sorting through that is a hassle.

(Which reminds me that if I eventually have a career as a librarian, I’d have to study more about computers. The curriculum of BLIS in CPU is now revised for more IT subjects, and we’re in the old curriculum.)

Stop 2: Makinaugalingon Printing Press
Toured through the details of a printing business. They have two creative departments for designing: one for school yearbooks, another for the rest. We went up a dark room where they print the image plate to use for actual reproduction, then to the many printing machines smelling of ink. Last stop was the binding area where there were large, odd machines for cutting, folding, sewing, binding, and covering books.

Stop 3: University of San Agustin Library & Archives
For me, this library has the best design of all libraries in the city I’ve been in, with large wooden desks and old chairs that look like they’re from another era but are comfortable. There are classic-looking pillars within the reading area, supporting a high ceiling, and the walls are lined with paintings of important friars, national heroes, and famous writers... giving both an inspiring and intimidating effect. The collection and electronic databases are used and promoted effectively. The library is almost full and one can see many students using the library.

Stop 4: Iloilo Provincial Library
The Iloilo Library has been transferred so many times that we were not sure where it was. Can you guess where it is? Pass? It’s under the bleachers of the Iloilo Sports Complex! It was transferred only recently, and the place is temporary. Who knows where it will be next. The librarian herself is irritated, but well, you know the government.

It was good, actually. They have a book mobile program that travels to areas which don’t have access to books. Inside, there are separate sections for: Children’s, Periodicals, Government documents, General Collection, and Archives. The only problem I can see is lack of promotion or marketing to the citizens. After all, most who know about it are government employees too (but even then, I wonder if they know where it is).

Stop 5: Museo Iloilo
The artifacts are the same since I was a kid who took art workshops here. But they have repainted the place, rearranged the old saints, put up nicer-looking infographics. The new thing I liked is the floor to ceiling hanging cloth paintings of an ancient Philippine map, a Pintados, and a man in colonial clothing. The best thing to see is the gallery, they have new exhibits from Ilonggo artists every few months.

Sunday, September 1, 2013

So u wanna be a librarian? Thoughts from librarians in the city.

librarianship, why librarian, library and information science, college courses to take, LIS, MLIS, BLIS, library science, information science, why take up LIS, librarian interviews, librarian surveys, librarians, librarianship in iloilo city, iloilo city librarians, research, survey
I was typing the results of our survey for Research, on career personality types and job satisfaction among librarians in Iloilo City. Actually, there are only around 60 professional, licensed librarians in the city and most are working in universities. It is not a popular course, and few people are aware it exists except those already working in libraries. Thanks to the librarians who have taken the time to answer, and most of their answers are eloquent and well-written. It is good to know that the majority enjoy their jobs, it makes me think I made the right choice. Here are my top 5 favorite answers:

1. This was the longest. I liked it, the respondent even typed and printed it! Such a generous and nice answer. (Also, I can relate, I shifted from another course and this person shifted to another career.)

"YES, I am very satisfied with my current job and I am pretty sure that I made the right career choice. Shifting from Research Assistant in the field of Fisheries to a College Librarian of a prestigious university was one of the major decisions I made in my life. Before jumping in the field of Librarianship, I was in a great dilemma on whether to disregard all the time, effort, and energy I spent in building a career in the field of fisheries and start again from scratch with a new career. However, after a few years of working in the field of fisheries, I have learned and realized that the career was not really meant for me. I was no longer happy with what I’m doing and I could not imagine myself working outdoor my whole life, so I decided to look for something that would suit my personality and lifestyle. Timely enough, I was hired by UPV Library to organize their fisheries materials that came from Diliman Library. This opportunity helped me finally decide to change my career path.
          What I like most about being a Librarian is the nature of the work itself. Unlike fisheries where I have to spend most of my time working outdoor, in library science I have to work mostly indoor. I am able to interact with different kinds of clients – from students, faculty, administrators, and researchers both outside and inside the university campus. I could act as a teacher to them or a friend that could help them in their information needs, but at the same time making this opportunity in enhancing my skills in librarianship.
          For every questions answered or needs addressed, a different sense of fulfilment is felt. Self satisfaction is achieved every time I see the smiling faces and hear the gratefulness of the clients I served. This also serves as a measure of my work performance and an assurance to me that I’m doing my work well and that I’m on the right track on becoming an effective and efficient librarian of the organization where I belong." (UPV)

2. Librarianship can be a health hazard...
"Yes, I enjoy my work. However, my health has been affected because of the environment and stress in the technical section. We have been provided with a small air conditioned working area where books are being processed, including re-cataloging of our DDC to LC classification. So dust is accumulated and circulating in the office. I acquired allergy, asthma, and pneumonia." (USA)

3. It is fun!
"Yes! Absolutely satisfied. Being a librarian means I have the freedom to be interested in anything and everything. For me, being a librarian is never boring. It’s a social profession. I realized that the work of a librarian is a very interesting one, but every now and then I have to remind myself that librarianship is a noble profession and a lot of fun." (JBLU)

4. Everyday is a learning experience when we deal with knowledge and information
"I may have accidentally discovered librarianship as a profession, for it has not reached popularity the time I studied it. But at this point, in my more than ten years in the profession, I can say that I am satisfied with my current job and choice of career. This profession/career may not bring you a flowing material wealth, but as a librarian/information specialist, who wouldn't grow professionally and intellectually when you constantly deal with knowledge, information, research, etc.?" (USA)

5. Challenging!
"Yes, I am happy with my career choice. There are many challenges but if you face these challenges and look at it positively, you will be able to handle them and eventually give the best solutions. I experienced difficulties especially when we are under-staffed, but because I love my profession and enjoyed serving my students, the faculty, etc., you don’t count the extra hours. What is important is at the end of the day, you are happy and contented because you have made your customers happy, too. It is also one way of encouraging them to visit the library more often and use the resources independently." (USA)

That's it! I enjoyed working on this. For the first time, I look forward to writing the rest of the paper.

Thursday, July 4, 2013

News, school issues, & others

When the semester started, huge billboard-like tarpaulins were posted in every entrance of the university. It contained pictures of clothing not allowed by the school according to the dress code. Then, the dress code issue exploded in the school's Facebook pages with everyone giving their opinions. Fashionistas complained about their freedom of expression, most said it was exaggerated. Most agreed in one thing, though: the way it was presented in the tarp was just bad and tasteless. I agree. Just look at it (picture from the Facebook page of CPU's Central Echo: In the Dumps):

The "underwear not allowed" is just a joke photoshopped in there.
I don't have anything against the dress code itself, but when I see the tarp I always laugh. I mean, who would wear fish-slippers? Or this ugly shoe?
It still makes me giggle.  It's scary, like a shoe made by a serial killer from severed feet.






Good news that the admin have cleared things up and the ugly billboards will be gone by August.
------
Other news:
Our teacher in IT in Libraries was recognized as the country's most Outstanding Librarian by the PLAI. Sir Alayon is one of my role models and a favorite teacher, not only because he's funny but also because he always bought pizza for the whole class during our weekend classes. Well-deserved, I say!
-----
Link to an article: 20 heroic librarians who save the world. Those are about fictional characters, but I read it if I don't feel like studying and I feel motivated again.

Thursday, November 1, 2012

"Some cool libraries around the world" slide presentation

If last post was about college libraries in Cebu, here's a slideshow I made a semester ago about libraries around the world. Pictures and information ganked from the net, of course, mostly buildings which I like the architecture and interior design. I recently added the library of University of San Carlos-Talamban, Cebu as it only opened this year and is now the largest library in the Philippines. Included of course is Henry Luce III LIbrary of Central Philippine University, where I spend 90% of my time in school as our classes for the major subjects are also held there (also largest library in Western Visayas in terms of collections).

Thursday, October 25, 2012

5 Cool Academic Libraries in Cebu, Philippines

We had a tour on university libraries on Cebu last month. This is for the class LIS 315: Management of Libraries and Information Centers, where we are required to apply the management skills discussed in class by organizing this tour and the seminar. It sounds easy, but this subject gave us the most challenges. There we first experienced conflict within us classmates and with teachers. Here we realized the importance of INITIATIVE (that word is funny to us now, that's what a teacher repeated endlessly on her sermon about our laziness ). So, here are the cool libraries we visited:

5. University of Cebu library
The library looks like any normal library, but its strength is on their in-house software to manage their own databases, made by their IT librarians.
Cool Thing: Friendly work students, accessible and user-friendly computer systems.
academic libraries, university of cebu, library, books, cebu city, educational tour, library tour, IT in libraries

4. Cebu Normal University library
I like the university's 'revamped old school' design. Most books can be taken out of the library and borrowed for a week (because the Reference, Filipiniana, and other special collections are mostly for room-use only in most libraries). They also have a museum, as the school was once a torture camp of the invading Japanese during World War 2. Another thing to be fascinated about is its grisly, sad history, and how they started all over again.
Cool Thing: Cool, pro-active, helpful Librarians.
academic libraries, cebu normal university, library, books, cebu city, educational tour, library tour, IT in libraries, green library, plants in libraries
academic libraries, cebu normal university, library, books, cebu city, educational tour, library tour, IT in libraries, green library, plants in libraries, kempeitai, world war 2, japan, torture, history, war

3. Cebu Doctors University library
We weren't overwhelmed so much with the library, but with the school's enormous building. (Daw mall lang...)
Cool Thing: A sound-proof 'chat room' for those who want to talk to their phones while inside the library. Book Drop electronic boxes are available throughout the university, so students returning books will simply leave them there without going in the library.
academic libraries, cebu doctor's university, library, books, cebu city, educational tour, library tour, IT in libraries, medicine, nursing, special library

2. University of San Jose-Recoletos library
We admired this library's excellent and save-spacing interior design.
Cool Thing: A new touchscreen self-service kiosk that allows the borrower to scan out the books for borrowing, the device will simply print a receipt of transaction, including the due date.
academic libraries, university of san jose recoletos, library, books, cebu city, educational tour, library tour, IT in libraries, self-service, self check out, save spacing library, steel winding stairs, jesuits, catholic school

1. University of San Carlos-Talamban library
This is now the largest library in the country with 16,000 square meters of floor space.  It was launched this year, so the elevator wasn't working yet when we went there, and walking up and down that building was damn tiring. We thought that the building was exaggerated, but cool. We were overwhelmed with its sheer size: its nearly the size of SM City Iloilo.
university of san carlos talamban library plan, biggest library, largest library, philippines, floor plan

book conveyor, elevator, deliver, books, library elevatorCool Thing:  The building itself. There is a special elevator for books to be delivered within the floors. They have comprehensive and well-preserved collection of rare books, archives, and manuscripts dating from the 1800s. Their energy-saving design maximizes natural light with glass walls/windows and high ceilings.

academic libraries, cebu normal university, library, books, cebu city, educational tour, library tour, IT in libraries, green library, plants in libraries, catholic school

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Overloadead

I'm in that period in college life that I'm swamped with a lot of work, but I enjoy them. I even like studying, researching, and reporting. My mind, all the ways I think of the world and deal with people, has significantly changed from what I was around the same time as last year.

I recently stumbled upon the comic strip Unshelved, about the cute little culture of libraries and librarians.

I'm an LIS student, and since there's less than 10 of us in class for every major subject, class doesn't feel like class, its more like a round-table discussion. Some subjects, we have a few from the Masteral degree still taking some undergraduate courses as a requirement and they're a lot older and more experienced about jobs and life in general... so it isn't a usual class. The major subjects for Library & Info. Science seem informal and comfortable, and it suits me.

OK, subjects this sem:
LIS 311: Information Technology in Libraries
LIS 315: Management of Libraries and Information Centers
LIS 317: Information Processing and Handling
LIS 318: Filipiniana Resources Management
LIS 419: Introduction to Archives and Records Management
Minors: Philippine Literature, Retorikang Filipino, Earth Science

Scott Douglas's tips for aspiring librarians from of Dispatches from a Public Librarian:
> Avoid cataloging classes; they will be pointless.
> Take an internship or practicum.
> Ninety percent of what your teachers teach you is theory that does you no good in the workplace; do your best to forget it after you leave school.
> Ask your teacher why a public library uses the Dewey cataloging system as opposed to LOC, then doodle for the next three hours while they explain it.
> Buy a laptop and play FreeCell during lectures.
> Libraries don't do, librarians do.
> Two weeks working in a library will give you more experience than two years in graduate school.
> Gain as much computer knowledge as humanly possible-- this will put you ahead of so many other librarians.
> Letters to the editor do not count as professional publications and will not impress the instructor.
> I am sorry to say that you may find your stay in graduate school to be not very stimulating and quite a yawn, but the job that follows is quite the contrary.

LIS isn't a very popular course, and there's still the outdated stereotypes about librarians and what they do, but we're evolving fast. Tell graduating high school students you know that there's currently, and will be, a demand for this job.

Well, this entry is a bit disjointed as my head since most major exams and two reports are due next week, and I don't want to leave this blog empty. OK...

Thursday, April 19, 2012

The Fantastic Flying Books of Mr. Morris Lessmore (2011)


A nice short film about books, with a Wizard of Oz hurricane. If only books could fly like that to their proper call number arrangement, so we won't have to reshelve.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

My dream library, a suggestion

I know there's this stereotype of librarians that all they do is stamp due dates on books and keep the students quiet. That was my presentation during our college day. That's another post for later.

I want to just be a Cataloger that hides in the Technical Section of any academic library... encoding stuff for your OPAC, fixing glitches, and selecting books for purchase...

In my dream library, each chair will be equipped with a headphone that can be set to your choice of music. Choose from Dead Quiet, White Noise, Chanting Monks, or whatever. If you're doing a group study, you can all talk with the headphone (with a mic that absorbs sound) without disturbing others. No more ominous "OBSERVE SILENCE" signs. You can't make people not talk when they're studying.

Friday, March 9, 2012

[ 49. ]

The second semester is ending, a week left then its finals. "Nakatagal ako ng isang school year!" without burn out. These countdowns ... I'm running out of ideas of what to post here...

Anyway, here's a couple of cool infographics (click to enlarge) about libraries and librarians:


Sunday, February 19, 2012

Library memes

I should've thought of this last semester when we were required to do a bulletin board. Anyway, I doubt that the teacher will get it. Keep these in mind when inside your school's library. (Promotional posters of Rizal Library- Ateneo de Manila)