Today at the Illinois Library Association’s annual conference, WebJunction Illinois was publicly unveiled at a ribbon cutting ceremony. Community Partner team leads Dawne and Lisa were joined by our very own Rachel, Lisa, and Kevin – giving WJ-IL a great kick off!
The WJ-IL home page looks great (check out the video and the toolbar -first WJers to do these!). We’re excited about all the ways the IL State Library has customized their WJ service for library staff there, and we really look forward to working with them to build out our online communities for library staff development. We expect our work with IL to not only push us forward with new tools and formats, but also provide a model for delivering online community services through a single spot for the whole state.
Congrats to the state library and especially to Dawne and Lisa – you’ve worked hard and it shows!! Welcome to WebJunction – we’re glad you’re here!
Our partnering course providers are delivering exceptional facilitated programs on library specific topics. Check out their schedules on Social Software in Libraries, RSS and Other Internet Feeds in the Library; and Developing and Managing Digital Programs. Typically offered by AMIGOS, PALINET and OCLC Western, WebJunction makes it easy to access these courses from anywhere. We hope you enjoy them!
I think that what Wyoming is doing to market their libraries is very cool. This particular image is sure to raise a few eyebrows, but I think it’s great!! Be sure to take a look at the whole campaign. They’ve done a great job.
One of the best things about my job is that I have my own librarian. Ok, she’s not ‘my’ librarian. Her name is Tam and she’s more OCLC’s librarian. But it still feels like I have my own personal librarian because I email her questions and she just, like, answers them. Rright away. It’s amazing! I’m such a happy patron right now.
Anyway, one of the projects I’m working on (with my colleagues here at the WJ, including ‘my’ librarian) is gathering some basic info about librarians in the US. Who are we? What do we do? Where do we work? How many of us are there? Frankly, though I don’t often come right out and say it, I’m generally not all that interested in numbers, but this project proved to be pretty interesting and so I thought I’d share some of our findings:
Two ideas emerge from these stats. First, if the bulk of retiring librarians is at the director level, who will the profession promote to those positions? Even if the post-MLIS force keeps up with retirees, will they be ready for the positions they’re asked to fill? Second, if MLIS students are increasingly moving into non-traditional environments instead of taking traditional positions in public, school, academic or other types of libraries, where does that leave us institutionally?
I’d like to append to these facts and figures with an impression that has developed for me through conversation with colleagues over the last several years. Some of my friends in LibraryLand, many of whom are extremely innovative, ambitious, and eager to contribute to the profession, are often struggling in their library jobs. They seem unsupported by their institutions, sometimes specifically by their library directors and senior colleagues. Age, along with tech savvy or advocacy and a shift towards community-based authority or expertise layers in additional divisive factors, sometimes widening the gap between ‘us’ and ‘them’. I have personally benefited from relationships and mentoring with elders in our field – I won’t call them traditionalists! – as well as from very strong institutional support from my employer for my work. But I’m wondering if there’s a way to shift our culture as a profession so that my experiences along these lines are more of a norm, rather than an exception.
And so, how can we bridge these gaps in our daily work? Can we create inter-generational or inter-experiential dialog and (two-way) mentoring so that the library profession, and our institutions, can thrive (not just survive) in the midst of this particular change?
I’ve been thinking a lot about how to approach this. At least two projects in the works so far! Stay tuned…
Hey, this is neat, it’s OneWebDay, the mission of which is to “create, maintain, advance and promote a global day to celebrate online life: September 22.”
Their about us page provides a list of project ideas for celebrating the web and its usefulness to our daily working and personal lives.
We certainly have a bunch of stories to tell around here about how WJ has changed working lives for library staff. Should we collect them and contribute to the OneWebDay project?
In spite of the push, the crash, the new to-do list, and the need to prioritize, I left conference, as I often do, feeling like there had been a major shift in the pulse around WebJunction. It’s quick, and strong, and more pervasive. A few highlights:
Our member reception on Friday hosted more members and visitors (over 400!) than ever before. We thought WJ PEZ were gonna be the life of this party, and although they were extremely popular, it was the people that really made the evening.
The room was ABUZZ with all kinds of networking, fresh ideas, and new connections and it was a great way to start the conference festivities. Cindi Hickey, Kathy Graybeal, and Brenda Hough were all honored by the community (your picks!) for their outstanding work helping library staff use WJ and make it a better place for everyone. Cindy told me later that it was one of the best things that had ever happened to her and it made me proud to be a part of her accomplishments, and proud to be a part of the community she and others have helped us build over these last five years!
Community Partners gathered for a full day on Tuesday to meet – many of them – for the first time face to face after working together for four years on our Community Partner program. We talked in detail about the learning and content management needs for our communities, and talked about how to balance all the things we’d like to do with all the things we’re actually able to do within our restraints. We also spent a lot of time talking about the experiences our members have on the site, and how we can improve that and make it even more useful and engaging for them. Only one of our partners (IL) was not able to join – we missed you Dawne and Lisa!
BlogSalon, as always, was a great opportunity to connect face to face with our colleagues in the biblioblogosphere, and we were also honored to be represented by Michael at the BIGWIG social networking showcase (most popular session at ALA they say!). Add to that WJ appearances at CLENE, a number of focus groups, our 150 Rural librarians as honored guests, the Spanish/REFORMA reception, and the multiple programs and sessions, and … I swear … we’ve only scratched the surface. I’m going to stop myself from recounting it all.
In true WJ fashion, I’m happy to report that some of the energy and excitement we tapped into at ALA is back here in the office as we begin to follow round to how ALA has changed things for us. I’m even more excited to report that it has already turned over into longer lasting and more useful to more people – content and community on the site, especially in our Rural Libraries area (check it out!).
My own contribution to getting this work online? Well, it’s still in the works, but I’m working with a few colleagues (Michael Sauers, Cindi Trainor, and Michael Porter) to create a series (likely in podcast) of interviews with library/technology pioneers – the library luminaries as we like to call them – to help us tell the stories and the successes on which we’re building our current work in social networking, community building, and the participatory web.
The critics say we’re amateurs, but … I’m increasingly very convinced that (at least in our profession) we are very connected to and inspired by the library/technology pioneers who made the way for us to do this work. We’re interested in telling and broadcasting their stories – perhaps so that more of us can connect to and learn from them – but also so that we can make the case that we’re not a bunch of crazy kids trying to turn the world upside down. That, and we’re not the first people to think of or try this stuff. It’s simply iterative, and evolving, and dependent on the successes and even failures of those who tried and experimented with technology to make connections and improve library service a long time ago. Yes, even before I was born! Stay tuned…
I met Juliann in 2005 when she worked with Mala in the AZLA booth to help promote WebJunction Arizona right after they launched. Arizona actually had a most excellent booth backdrop, with the “webjunction girl” twirling around in front of the WJ – Arizona logo and a big backdrop of the state behind her. It rocked.
When I met Juliann, she was an MLIS student – helping Mala out on the WJ launch as part of a school project. While we were at the booth, she told me she loved the WJ Girl (the twirly one) and then I snapped her picture doing the “Sound of WebJunction” twirl herself at the booth.


I was very, very surprised and pleased to run into Juliann again at last night’s blog salon – put on every year by the folks over at It’s All Good. I knew I recognized her … and had actually run into her a few times around the conference … but last night when I realized that she was the AZLA twirly WJ girl, I was //so// excited! Partly because I was reconnected with someone who shares my affinity and appreciation for this image that captures the spirit and fun of the WJ, but also because it reminded me that we’re likely always on the verge of a reconnection — we just have to show up!
Very nice to see you Juliann – you were part of the reason that the blogsalon was extra super fun for me this year.