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In July 2024, Cindy Hohl was inaugurated as the next President of the American Library Association (ALA). As a member of the Santee Sioux Nation in Nebraska, she is the second Native American woman to serve as ALA President. During her term, she plans to focus on four main pillars of librarianship: intellectual freedom, literacy, learning, and leadership. "There has never been a better time to serve our communities within the roles of librarianship and we stand united in our mission to ensure equal access to information for all," said Hohl.rnrnHohl also plans to lead the creation of an informational toolkit to address Missing, Murdered, Indigenous Women and People in the United States when communities need information to conduct searches for their missing loved ones, or to share information outside of the community.rnrnIn partnership with Cleveland Public Library, and in honor of Indigenous Peoples' Day, the City Club's Cynthia Connolly will sit down with Cindy Hohl to discuss the crucial role of libraries in fostering a sense of civic responsibility through diverse representation and community engagement.
Send us a Text Message.Episode Summary:Hannah Kimber, associate editor at Andrews McMeel Publishing, shares insights on making book submissions stand out and the detailed acquisitions process. She emphasizes the importance of sensitivity readers, understanding market trends, and open communication between authors and editors.Guest Bio:Hannah Kimber is an associate editor of children's books at Andrews McMeel Publishing. She acquires middle grade graphic novels and prose, as well as some young adult literature, with a special interest in light fantasy, light horror, and slice of life friendship stories. When not working, she enjoys reading, rock climbing, hiking, and running.Key Discussion Points:ALA Conference: Discussion about missing the American Library Association (ALA) conference and the emotional experiences associated with it.Book Submissions: Advice on making book submissions stand out, including having a concise, attention-grabbing synopsis and a well-organized proposal document.Acquisitions Process: Overview of the acquisitions process, from initial submission review to the final deal, highlighting the importance of research, comparative titles, and strategy.Sensitivity and Authenticity: Emphasis on the importance of sensitivity readers and authentic representation in children's books.Trends in Publishing: Observations on identifying upcoming trends and the importance of understanding what engages children today.Practical Advice: Encouragement for authors to trust the process and communicate their strong feelings about their work.Conclusion:Hannah Kimber provided valuable insights into the editorial and acquisitions process at Andrews McMeel Publishing, highlighting the importance of well-prepared submissions and understanding market trends. She emphasized the role of sensitivity and authenticity in children's literature and encouraged authors to trust the publishing process while maintaining open communication with their editors.Mentioned Links:Writers with Wrinkles Blog Support the Show.Subscribe for updates, cheat sheets, newsVisit the WebsiteTwitter: @BethandLisaPodInsta: @WritersWithWrinklesWriters with Wrinkles Link Tree for more!
In this episode of, we delve into the powerful and often controversial world of book censorship, examining its deep roots in history and its persistent presence in modern society. "Banned and Burned" takes listeners on a journey through time, exploring pivotal moments when books were targeted for their content, and discussing the reasons behind these acts of censorship. Join us as we uncover the complex dynamics of book banning, its impact on education and culture, and the ongoing fight for intellectual freedom. Whether you're an avid reader, an educator, or someone passionate about free speech, this episode will provide a comprehensive look at one of the most pressing issues in the literary world today. For more information and resources on book bans, visit the American Library Association (ALA) and PEN America https://catcaveco.com/?rfsn=7905245.a94ce74 https://linktr.ee/greenarrowmedia?utm_source=linktree_admin_share https://www.tkqlhce.com/click-101131964-5598124 https://www.jdoqocy.com/click-101131964-11145908 https://www.adameve.com/t-03_22_21-sem-brand-landing-page.aspx?&cm_mmc=GGL-_-Brand_US_Brand_Google_Exact-_-Adam_Eve_HV_Exact-_-adameve&sc=SEMGLBRA&medium=tsa&gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAjwte-vBhBFEiwAQSv_xfygncJPohDmXGepyekG_STjPZ__9m32imUI576nfF0-pRMKFvHjpBoCgYEQAvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds https://www.newrulefx.com//?rfsn=7905258.08b4eb&utm_source=refersion&utm_medium=influencers&utm_campaign=7905258.08b4
We're sharing an episode from our friends at the Adult ISH podcast. In light of the latest number of attempted book bans as tracked by the American Library Association (ALA), Adult ISH hosts Nyge Turner and Dominique “Dom” French speak to Traci Thomas, host of “The Stacks” podcast, and Scott Stuart, author of “My Shadow is Purple,” about how removing access to books can cause harm. Want more great ideas about teaching and learning? Subscribe to the MindShift newsletter https://www.kqed.org/newsletters/mindshift
We are so excited for today's episode of the TTD podcast. We have a special guest joining us to explore a thought-provoking topic: Christian Book Month and reclaiming our public libraries. Have you ever wondered how our public library system reached its current state? More importantly, what can Christians do to make a meaningful impact within these community institutions? Joining us today is Korrie Johnson, the founder of Good Book Mom. Since 2019, Korrie has been on a mission to discover books that resonate with both adults and children, all through the lens of a Biblical Christian worldview. Today, we delve into how we can engage with Christian Book Month and take back our public libraries, shaping them into spaces that align with our faith and values. Takeaways:Christian Book Month promotes good books written by Christians and encourages believers to engage with public libraries. Public libraries face challenges due to the liberal bias of the American Library Association (ALA) and the lack of Christian librarians. Building relationships with librarians and requesting Christian books can help promote the presence of Christian literature in libraries. Checking out books and engaging with libraries beyond April is essential to support Christian literature and be a positive influence in the community. Meet the Guest:Korrie Johnson started Good Book Mom in 2019 with the goal of finding books that both you and the children in your life will love, filtering everything through a Biblical Chrisitan Worldview.Additional Resources:Find out more about Christian Book Month and Good Book Mom HERE We hope that through today's episode you will find the great benefit for you and your family to attend a Teach Them Diligently Convention. The work that God does at each convention cannot be fully explained and we hope that your family will be a part of the story He continues to write. Follow the link HERE to secure your ticket to the Teach Them Diligently Convention!
Tune in LIVE weekly to the upbeat, positive lifestyle broadcast where producer and host Cynthia Brian showcases strategies for success on StarStyle®-Be the Star You Are!®. Available wherever you listen to your favorite programs! We have much work to do now that spring has sprung. It is time to get our hands in the dirt. Goddess Gardener, Cynthia Brian, outlines what we need to do in our landscapes now. We also have to beware of ticks and other bothersome pests. It's time for horticultural action. What is happiness and how do we enjoy it? Is money the answer? Is it love, security, or location? For the 7th consecutive year, Finland is rated the happiest country in the world and America dropped out of the top 20. Find out what America's founders envisioned and how Americans have exercised their right to the pursuit of happiness. The Authors Guild joined the American Library Association (ALA) in its dismay over the record number of book bans in 2023. The number of titles targeted for censorship surged 65 percent in 2023 compared to 2022 with more than 4,240 unique book titles in schools and libraries removed. How do we combat this? Follow StarStyle®: https://www.StarStyleRadio.com https://www.instagram.com/starstyleproductions/ https://twitter.com/cynthiabrian https://thestarlady.wordpress.com
For this BCR program, we talked about that age-old American tradition – book burning – or more precisely – thought control. Our guests were two brave librarians – practicing a profession that is at the core of any effective democracy. Emily Drabinski heads-up the American Library Association [ALA] and Lauren Comito leads Urban Librarians Unite [ULU]. According to ALA findings efforts to ban books in this country are growing at a high rate and the groups engaged in this activity probably do not have children. Librarians and authors fight back, but it is an exhausting struggle. Lauren Comito talked about how the ULU keeps parents and children and the performers safe at Drag Story Hour -- popular among parents -- but potentially dangerous as groups -- such as The Proud Boys -- protest violently near and in our libraries.This conversation was recorded at Gebhard's Beer Culture Bar.Alan Winson -- barcrawlradio@gmail.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Mark interviews John Chrastka, the executive director of EveryLibrary, the first nationwide political action committee for libraries, and the EveryLibrary Institute, a nonprofit research and training organization focused on the future of library funding. Prior to the interview, Mark shares a personal update, reads comments from recent episodes, and says a word about this episode's sponsor. This episode is sponsored by An Author's Guide to Working with Libraries and Bookstores. You can get the book online, order it through your local bookstore, or ask for it as your local library. Universal Book Link Smashwords Link (Coupon Discount for Feb/March 2024) In the interview, Mark and John talk about: John starting off his career in publishing as a bookseller in a small neighborhood Chicago community bookstore, and how that led to becoming a publishing sales rep Migrating over to the Ed-Tech realm as the internet came around Moving on over to The American Library Association from there What EveryLibrary is: a 501(c)(4) organization that is a political action committee for libraries How it's more of a network than a membership that is about 330,000 people strong Telling stories about how libraries are solutions to problems for people and librarians as enactors of those solutions In about 37 states, public libraries actually have to go to election days to get their funding secured The four different ways that voters stratify: Believers - People who love the library and have a relationship with their library (25%) Questioners Suspicious Voters Never Gonna Vote for you Never (22 to 25%) The answer for people who question the value of a local library because they "don't do books" How the library as a source for reading grew from 19% to 24% during the pandemic and the way that percentage is continue to hold in 2024 The way that the isolating of society is not just a library issue but a public health issue The popularity of book banning in the United States in recent years and the fact that it's easier to censor a book than it is to attack a person or a population How this censorship and book banning isn't merely a matter of freedom of speech issue, but a matter of human rights The pernicious nature of using the term "obscenity" and "obscene" to criminalize particular pupulations and to help skirt around First Amendment rights How libraries are an affordable way to put tax dollars to good use in the way they provide so much to their local communities The multiple pathways they have to help people move from "aware" to "active" And more . . . After the interview Mark reflects on how books are being banned and censored as an underhanded way to strike at specific demographics and populations, and the value in focusing on the "Suspicious Voters" as a brilliant strategy. Links of Interest: EveryLibrary fightforthefirst.org Canadian Federation of Library Associations Canadian Library Association Ontario Library Association Canadian Urban Libraries Council Superstars Writing Seminars Author, Author (Indie Bookseller - Laura Hayden) EP 167 - Author, Author, Give Me The News: Bookseller Insights with Laura Hayden Fantasy Island (TV Show) An Author's Guide to Working With Bookstores and Libraries Smashwords Link (eBook 57% Off until end of Feb 2024) Mark's YouTube Channel Buy Mark a Coffee Patreon for Stark Reflections How to Access Patreon RSS Feeds Superstars Writing Seminars How to Write a Howling Good Story Smashwords link Patron Coupon for 75% off The Relaxed Author Buy eBook Direct Buy Audiobook Direct Publishing Pitfalls for Authors An Author's Guide to Working with Libraries & Bookstores Wide for the Win Mark's Canadian Werewolf Books This Time Around (Short Story) A Canadian Werewolf in New York Stowe Away (Novella) Fear and Longing in Los Angeles Fright Nights, Big City Lover's Moon Hex and the City The Canadian Mounted: A Trivia Guide to Planes, Trains and Automobiles Yippee Ki-Yay Motherf*cker: A Trivia Guide to Die Hard John Chrastka is the executive director of EveryLibrary, the first nationwide political action committee for libraries, and the EveryLibrary Institute, a nonprofit research and training organization focused on the future of library funding. Since 2012, EveryLibrary has helped 133 library communities with ballot measures for funding, operations and buildings, winning over 80% and securing over $2.8 billion in funding on Election Days. Through its digital platforms, EveryLibrary provides advocacy support to state library associations for legislative issues and direct actions in support of school library program budgets. The EveryLibrary Institute supports the library funding ecosystem through its research, training, publishing, and programmatic agendas. Mr. Chrastka is the co-author of Winning Elections and Influencing Politicians for Library Funding and Before the Ballot: Building Political Support for Library Funding with Patrick “PC” Sweeney (ALA / Neal Schuman). He has contributed chapters to Planning our future libraries: Blueprints for 2025 (2014), and Re-envisioning the MLS: Perspectives on the Future of Library and Information Science Education (2018). In 2015, he delivered the McKusker Memorial Lecture, “The Accidental Candidate: Updating Voter Nostalgia about Librarians and Libraries on the Campaign Trail” for Dominican University and has written for numerous trade publications and journals, including Library Journal and Library Quarterly. In 2018 he delivered the keynote “Advocacy and Activism” for CILIP, the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals, in Brighton, England, and in 2020 he was invited by EKZ Group in Hamburg, Germany to present a colloquy on advocacy for their members and the profession. He is a frequent keynoter and speaker at state and national library conferences in the United States and abroad, is a sought-after trainer for state libraries, and is a regular guest lecturer for MLS / MLIS programs where he speaks on the topic of "political literacy". Prior to his work on EveryLibrary, Mr. Chrastka was a partner in AssociaDirect, a Chicago-based consultancy focused on supporting associations in membership recruitment, conference, and governance activities. He was Director for Membership Development at the American Library Association (ALA), was a principal in the education technology start-up ClassMap, and was the founder of the virtual publishers' sales rep group ReviewCopy, which focused on textbook adoption in the higher education market. In 2014 he was named a Mover & Shaker by Library Journal for his work with EveryLibrary. He was recognized by the Chicago Tribune in 2022 as a Chicagoan of the Year and by Publishers Weekly in 2023 as a Notable for his work opposing book bans and censorship. The introductory, end, and bumper music for this podcast (“Laser Groove”) was composed and produced by Kevin MacLeod of www.incompetech.com and is Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
CTL Script/ Top Stories of February 13th Publish Date: February 12th From the Ingles Studio Welcome to the Award-Winning Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast Today is Tuesday, February 13th, and Happy 73rd Birthday to musician Peter Gabriel. ***02.13.24 – BIRTHDAY – PETER GABRIEL*** I'm Keith Ippolito and here are the stories Cherokee is talking about, presented by Credit Union of Georgia. Superintendent's Key Scholars Honored by Cherokee Schools State Withdrawal from American Library Association Accreditation Sparks Debate Among Georgia Senators Commitment to Nonpartisanship Announced by New Georgia Senate Committee Investigating Fani Willis Plus, Bruce Jenkins sits down with Leah McGrath from Ingles Markets to discuss microwave meals. We'll have all this and more coming up on the Cherokee Tribune-Ledger Podcast, and if you're looking for Community news, we encourage you to listen and subscribe! Commercial: CU of GA STORY 1: Cherokee Schools Recognizes Superintendent's Key Scholars The Cherokee County School District honored 279 outstanding high school students as 2024 Superintendent's Key Scholars during the 19th Annual Superintendent's Key Scholar Recognition Ceremony at Cherokee High School. These students were recognized for scoring in the top 10% nationwide on the PSAT. Each scholar received an embroidered “Key Scholar” letter-jacket patch, pen, and keychain. Additionally, students who scored at the 95th percentile or higher received a special cord for graduation. The program costs were sponsored by Cobb EMC and LGE Community Credit Union. The names of the scholars and group photos by school are available on the CCSD website. STORY 2: Georgia Senators Debate State Pullout From Accrediting American Library Association Conservative state senators in Georgia are advocating for the state's withdrawal from the American Library Association (ALA), a nonprofit organization. The debate arises from disagreements over the ALA's position on diversity in library materials. This matter was discussed in the Senate Government Oversight Committee, with some senators expressing concerns about the ALA's stances. Interestingly, State Librarian Julie Walker pointed out that Georgia's Public Library Service is not currently affiliated with the ALA, suggesting that disconnection might be feasible. However, the proposed bill, referred to as Senate Bill 390, aims to prevent state and local entities from spending funds on the ALA. The bill also proposes to relax requirements for public library directors. Critics of the bill, including the dean of Valdosta State University's library studies program, warn that this could lead to accreditation issues and financial repercussions. In addition to SB 390, another bill known as SB 394 is under consideration. This bill seeks to regulate the materials available in school libraries, sparking debates over potential censorship and the role of educators. STORY 3: New Georgia Senate Committee Investigating Fani Willis Vows Nonpartisan Approach The Special Committee on Investigations in the Georgia Senate, under the leadership of Sen. Bill Cowsert, has assembled to scrutinize allegations surrounding Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and her management of a case involving former President Donald Trump. Cowsert stressed the committee's dedication to unbiased and comprehensive examination of the allegations, which include claims of inappropriate relationships influencing the case. Willis, however, has firmly denied any misconduct. The procedural rules of the committee ensure bipartisan representation, providing Democrats with the opportunity to partake in depositions and questioning. Cowsert underscored the gravity of the investigation, aiming to circumvent political bias and media exaggeration. To facilitate this, the committee intends to promptly employ staff and initiate its work, prioritizing fact-finding, and transparency. We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.874.3200 for more info. Back in a moment. Break: DRAKE STORY 4: Woodstock Accepting Vendor Applications for 2024 Farm Fresh Market Vendor applications for the 16th season of Woodstock's Farm Fresh Market are now open and will continue to be accepted throughout February12. The market, which will run from mid-April to December, mandates that vendors grow at least 85% of their products. This rule ensures that the produce sold at the market is fresh and locally sourced. Applications will be evaluated in March not based on order of submission, but on the quality of the goods and their fit for the market. The goal of the market is to support local growers, emphasize the significance of locally sourced products, and create opportunities for education about agriculture and food preparation. Potential vendors can submit their applications either online or in person. Over 50 applicants are anticipated to be approved for participation in this year's market. STORY 5: Cherokee District Attorney Susan Treadaway Appointed to Georgia Board of Public Safety Cherokee County District Attorney Susan Treadaway has been appointed by Gov. Brian Kemp to the Georgia Board of Public Safety, with the swearing-in ceremony held at the Capitol. The board oversees law enforcement and transportation safety, including agencies like the Georgia State Patrol and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. It ensures adherence to high standards of law enforcement, oversees training, and implements initiatives for public safety. Treadaway expressed gratitude for the appointment, highlighting the opportunity to contribute to overseeing state agencies and working with fellow board members and state leaders. Commercial: INGLES 9 STORY 6: INGLES - LEAH And now here is Bruce Jenkins' conversation with Leah McGrath from Ingles Markets on microwave meals. STORY 7: LEAH INTERVIEW We'll have closing comments after this. COMMERCIAL: CHEROKEE CHAMBER SIGN OFF – Thanks again for listening to today's Cherokee Tribune Ledger podcast. . If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Marietta Daily Journal Podcast, the Gwinnett Daily Post, the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties, or the Paulding County News Podcast. Get more on these stories and other great content at tribune ledger news.com. Giving you important information about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Produced by the BG Podcast Network Show Sponsors: ingles-markets.com drakerealty.com org com #NewsPodcast #CurrentEvents #TopHeadlines #BreakingNews #PodcastDiscussion #PodcastNews #InDepthAnalysis #NewsAnalysis #PodcastTrending #WorldNews #LocalNews #GlobalNews #PodcastInsights #NewsBrief #PodcastUpdate #NewsRoundup #WeeklyNews #DailyNews #PodcastInterviews #HotTopics #PodcastOpinions #InvestigativeJournalism #BehindTheHeadlines #PodcastMedia #NewsStories #PodcastReports #JournalismMatters #PodcastPerspectives #NewsCommentary #PodcastListeners #NewsPodcastCommunity #NewsSource #PodcastCuration #WorldAffairs #PodcastUpdates #AudioNews #PodcastJournalism #EmergingStories #NewsFlash #PodcastConversationsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
GDP Script/ Top Stories for Feb 9th Publish Date: Feb 8th From the Drake Realty Studio Welcome to the Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast. Today is Friday, February 9th, and Happy 81st Birthday to singer Carole King. ***02.09.24 – BIRTHDAY – CAROLE KING*** I'm Bruce Jenkins and here are your top stories presented by Credit Union of Georgia. Bill for Mulberry Cityhood Gets Green Light from Georgia House Committee Black Gwinnett Event to Spotlight County's African-American Businesses Want to Showcase Your Voice at a Gwinnett Stripers Game? Here's Your Guide to Applying for National Anthem Performance All of this and more is coming up on the Gwinnett Daily Post podcast, and if you are looking for community news, we encourage you to listen daily and subscribe! Break 1: GCPS LIVE READ ***GCPS READ*** Hey, Gwinnett County! Don't forget to mark your calendar for the GCPS Teacher Job Fair tomorrow! Join us on February 10th at 8am at the Gas South Convention Center. This is a golden opportunity to be a part of Gwinnett County Public Schools - Georgia's largest school district and a top employer recognized by Forbes. Whether you're kick-starting your career or seeking a change, your passion for education could find its perfect home with us. Say 'yes' to GCPS, where passion meets opportunity! STORY 1: Georgia House Committee OKs Mulberry Cityhood Bill. Here's What's Next A proposal for Mulberry cityhood in Gwinnett County advances in the Georgia House of Representatives, with the Intragovernmental Coordination Committee approving Senate Bill 333 for a referendum on the May 21 general election primary ballot. Despite Democratic opposition, Mulberry's creation, following a "city lite" model, aims to provide limited services such as planning and zoning without implementing city property taxes. Concerns over the proposal's constitutionality and its impact on Gwinnett County's service delivery agreement arise during legislative debate. Proponents argue for local control and address potential impacts on the county budget, while Democrats express reservations about taxation and legal implications. STORY 2: Taste of Black Gwinnett Will Highlight County's African-American Businesses The Gwinnett County Black Chamber of Commerce is organizing the Taste of Black Gwinnett event in Norcross on Feb. 16, showcasing Black-owned restaurants and businesses. The event, held at the Norcross Cultural Arts and Community Center, offers free registration for attendees, with vendors selling food samples from the Black/African diaspora at varying prices. Meals range from $6 to $12, covering entrees, sides, soups, salads, and desserts. Vendor booth prices vary for chamber members, nonmembers, and Black "Youthpreners." Activities include Black History Month facts, games, a documentary screening, music, and a tribute to journalist Joe Madison. Registration is available online. STORY 3: Here's How You Can Apply To Sing The National Anthem At A Gwinnett Stripers Game The Gwinnett Stripers are seeking National Anthem performers through a virtual audition process. Interested singers and vocal groups can submit digital performances to info@gostripers.com by Feb. 23. Submissions will be judged based on tone, pace (90 seconds or less), and clarity. Top candidates will participate in virtual auditions starting in March, with no in-person auditions planned. Selected performers will be contacted to schedule a performance during the 2024 season. The Gwinnett Stripers' Opening Night at Coolray Field is scheduled for Tuesday, April 2, against Louisville. We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.874.3200 for more info. We'll be right back. Break 2: TOM WAGES STORY 4: ECI Group Breaks Ground On The Averly Collins Hill Apartments In Lawrenceville ECI Group has commenced construction on The Averly Collins Hill, a $76 million apartment development spanning 22 acres on Collins Rd. in Lawrenceville. The project, in collaboration with The Griffin Fund, will feature 300 units of Class A apartments across eight buildings. Synovus provided construction financing for the three-story garden-style residences, which will complement planned 55+ active adult housing and commercial components in the Lawrenceville Gateway development. The project aligns with the nearby 15-story Northside Hospital Gwinnett tower, expected to bring 3,000-5,000 jobs. Amenities at The Averly Collins Hill include a clubhouse, fitness center, pool, dog play area, and coffee bar. The apartments boast upscale features like wood-style flooring, quartz countertops, and stainless steel appliances. The development, located at 700 Collins Hill Rd., aims to offer convenient and quality housing in a mixed-use neighborhood. STORY 5: Georgia senators debate state pullout from accrediting American Library Association Conservative state senators in Georgia are proposing Senate Bill 390 to sever ties with the American Library Association (ALA), citing objections to the ALA's support for library materials on LGBTQ topics. The bill would prohibit state and local entities from spending on the ALA and remove requirements for public library directors to hold degrees accredited by the ALA. Despite concerns about potential impacts on library programs, the bill has garnered support in light of recent controversies. Another bill, SB 394, seeks restrictions on materials in school libraries, while SB 154 could hold librarians accountable for distributing materials deemed harmful to minors. Discussions are ongoing, balancing concerns about funding and accreditation with objections to certain library content. STORY 6: Georgia state Supreme Court chief tells lawmakers justice system needs better pay to move cases Georgia Supreme Court Chief Justice Michael P. Boggs addressed state legislators, highlighting the staffing shortages and financial challenges facing Georgia's judicial system. Despite progress in reducing case backlogs, staffing shortages of court reporters, prosecutors, public defenders, and other court personnel hinder efficient case processing. Boggs emphasized the need for competitive pay to attract and retain experienced professionals. High turnover rates and unfilled vacancies across all levels of the judicial system were cited, along with shortages of court reporters and interpreters. Innovative use of grant funds helped reduce backlogs, but additional state funding is required to address staffing needs adequately. Public defender and prosecutor officials also discussed budgetary concerns, with proposals to increase salaries to attract more attorneys. Boggs underscored the importance of competitive compensation to prevent further depletion of legal talent and maintain efficient judicial operations. STORY 7: Jono Davis Excited For Opportunity With Aurora Theatre, Lawrenceville Arts Center Jono Davis, with extensive experience in theater, has been appointed as the Lawrenceville-based Aurora Theatre's complex general manager, transitioning from his role at Cobb PARKS' Jennie T. Anderson Theatre. Davis, a seasoned professional in various theater roles, including actor, director, and artistic director, brings a wealth of expertise to his new position. He aims to leverage his background to oversee the Lawrenceville Arts Center, collaborate with Aurora Theatre leadership, and enhance community engagement. Excited about the opportunity, Davis looks forward to contributing to Aurora Theatre's mission and potentially returning to the stage himself, while remaining committed to his new responsibilities. We'll have final thoughts after this. Break 4: INGLES 6 Signoff – Thanks again for hanging out with us on today's Gwinnett Daily Post podcast. If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast, the Marietta Daily Journal, the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties, or the Paulding County News Podcast. Read more about all our stories and get other great content at Gwinnettdailypost.com. Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Giving you important news about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Produced by the BG Podcast Network Show Sponsors: ingles-markets.com wagesfuneralhome.com gcpsk12.org/jobs #NewsPodcast #CurrentEvents #TopHeadlines #BreakingNews #PodcastDiscussion #PodcastNews #InDepthAnalysis #NewsAnalysis #PodcastTrending #WorldNews #LocalNews #GlobalNews #PodcastInsights #NewsBrief #PodcastUpdate #NewsRoundup #WeeklyNews #DailyNews #PodcastInterviews #HotTopics #PodcastOpinions #InvestigativeJournalism #BehindTheHeadlines #PodcastMedia #NewsStories #PodcastReports #JournalismMatters #PodcastPerspectives #NewsCommentary #PodcastListeners #NewsPodcastCommunity #NewsSource #PodcastCuration #WorldAffairs #PodcastUpdates #AudioNews #PodcastJournalism #EmergingStories #NewsFlash #PodcastConversationsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The American Library Association (ALA) has reported a surge in book bannings and attempted bans, with the trend now impacting both school-based and public library books, Knewz.com has learned.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Are you hoping to sell your books to libraries? If so, trade reviews are a vital component to enticing libraries to buy your books, and librarians especially value Booklistreviews—the official trade publication of the American Library Association. So IBPA invited Booklist Editor and Publisher George Kendall as a guest on “Inside Independent Publishing (with IBPA)” to discuss how publishers can land a Booklist review; how they can best leverage their review; and much more.PARTICIPANTSGeorge Kendall began as Booklist's Editor & Publisher in 2019 and is now continuing in that role as well as serving as Interim Director of Publishing & Media at the American Library Association (ALA). When not overseeing Booklist business and editorial matters and managing ALA publishing, George might be reading the latest dark but enthralling apocalyptic or dystopian nail-biter, or, on a brighter side, he might be found hanging out with his young daughter, or enjoying his local library, perusing books, toys, and Playaways, or attending story time or “messy art” and “little learners” programs. George received his MA in Literary Studies from the University of Cape Town in South Africa and studied with J.M. Coetzee, who later when on to win the Nobel Prize in Literature (2003). George began his publishing career in scientific, technical, and medical publishing before moving on to his current role. Prior to publishing, George was a professional classical musician. He will sometimes, though very rarely, dust off his French horn and play a few notes.Independent Book Publishers Association is the largest trade association for independent publishers in the United States. As the IBPA Director of Membership & Member Services, Christopher Locke helps guide the 4,000+ members as they travel along their publishing journeys. As one of his major projects, he oversees the IBPA NetGalley program, which generates buzz and garners reviews for indie publishers' titles. He's also passionate about indie publishing, because he's an author publisher himself, having published two novels so far in his YA trilogy, The Enlightenment Adventures.LINKSTo learn more about the many benefits of becoming a member of Independent Book Publishers Association, visit here https://www.ibpa-online.org/page/membershipLearn how you can submit a book to be reviewed by “Booklist” here: https://www.booklistonline.com/get-reviewedFollow IBPA on:Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/IBPAonlineTwitter – https://twitter.com/ibpaInstagram - https://www.instagram.com/ibpalovesindies/
The American Library Association (ALA) is a powerful and well-funded organization that promotes far-left Marxist policies in public and K–12 libraries. The promoted content includes graphic pornography, LGBT and transgender propaganda, and divisive racial ideology such as Critical Race Theory (CRT). The ultimate goal is to destroy nuclear family and tear people apart so they ... The post Shawn McBreairty: American Library Association Sexualizes, Corrupts Children appeared first on The New American.
We are in the midst of one of the most radical revolutions in American history. It is as far-reaching and dangerous as the turbulent years of the 1850s and 1860s or the 1930s. Every aspect of American life and culture is under assault, including the very processes by which we govern ourselves, and the manner in which we live. If former President Donald Trump is the Republican nominee next year, he'll be running with a new vice president. The president of the American Library Association (ALA) is standing by her “Marxist” views as a backlash grows against the association among Republican lawmakers. A disgraced former senior FBI agent involved in the agency's investigation into the 2016 Trump campaign based on phony allegations of collusion with Russia is expected to plead guilty to illegally working for a sanctioned oligarch when his case is heard next week, a Manhattan federal court filing outlines. Los Angeles' barbecue scene is beginning to feel the effects of Proposition 12, a new measure that focuses on making meat production more humane. According to the LA Times, the goal of the initiative is to expand the confinement areas for calves raised for veal, egg-laying hens, and breeding pigs on any farm whose product is sold in California. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The New Discourses Podcast with James Lindsay, Episode 123 The American Library Association (ALA) is a fully captured institution headed by a Queer Marxist organizer named Emily Drabinski. That means it is time to do what we should have done a long time ago: break away from the American Library Association. The state of Montana has already done this at the state level, and other states should follow. Some already are. Local municipalities and districts, including school districts, should do so as well, as soon as possible. In this episode of the New Discourses Podcast, host James Lindsay makes it more clear why. He takes you through an academic paper by Drabinski titled "Queering the Catalog" from 2013 (https://newdiscourses.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/drabinski2013.pdf), showing you exactly how Drabinski intends to use her American Library Association to make libraries sites of Queer Marxist grooming. Join him and start pushing everywhere for a breakup from the American Library Association. Get James Lindsay's new book, The Marxification of Education: https://amzn.to/3RYZ0tY Support New Discourses: https://newdiscourses.com/support Follow New Discourses on other platforms: https://newdiscourses.com/subscribe Follow James Lindsay: https://linktr.ee/conceptualjames © 2023 New Discourses. All rights reserved. #NewDiscourses #JamesLindsay #library
O Autores e Livros Dose Extra dessa semana traz um bate-papo sobre censura de Livros. Segundo levantamento da American Library Association (ALA), os Estados Unidos receberam 1.269 solicitações de censura a livros em 2022, quase que o dobro do ano anterior. Um novo recorde desde que a associação, criada há 140 anos, começou a compilar esse tipo de informação, há duas décadas. Um total de 58% das denúncias foram contra livros presentes em bibliotecas de escolas e em planos de estudos escolares, o restante contra títulos em bibliotecas públicas. Entre os temas censurados estão, principalmente, os relacionados a comunidade LGBTQIA+ e sobre pessoas não brancas. Alguns dos títulos censurados em anos anteriores foram clássicos como "O Sol é Para Todos", de Harper Lee, "Ratos e Homens", de John Steinbeck, ou "O Olho Mais Azul", da vencedora do Nobel de Literatura, Toni Morrison.
How do you navigate a political topic like censorship when you have members on all sides of the debate? How do you evolve as an association when the environments that your members work in are changing so dramatically?In this episode of Associations Thrive, host Joanna Pineda interviews Tracie Hall, Executive Director of the American Library Association (ALA). Tracie introduces ALA, talks about her journey to becoming Executive Director, and the things ALA is doing to thrive, and defend our rights to read and learn. Tracie Hall discusses:The Five Truths of Library Science.The diversity of libraries and how they are changing so dramatically.As information has become more digital, we don't need the library itself to be a repository of physical books.How ALS is navigating the censorship debate in America today.ALS' commitment to the freedom to read, adult literacy and broadband for all.How Tracie looked back on ALA's history to see how the association navigated the McCarthy era and the state-sanctioned book bans and censorship campaigns.The importance of DEI to ALA, specifically because libraries serve all people, and the librarian profession is not as diverse as it should be.The ALA Annual Conference coming up on June 22, 2023 in Chicago.What it's like to be a librarian these days.References:American Library Association (ALA) websiteThe Five Laws of Library Science by RanganathanALA Annual ConferenceALA DivisionsALA's Fight Censorship pageThe ALA on DiversityUnite Against Book Bans
The American Library Association (ALA) released a new report Thursday about book banning in the country. It found attempted book bans and information restrictions at school and public libraries continue to increase, setting a record in 2022. The report says there were 1,200 known challenges in 2022. That is almost double the number from the year before, and it had also been record setting. The ALA began collecting the data 20 years ago. “I've never seen anything like this,” says Deborah Caldwell-Stone, who directs the ALA's Office for Intellectual Freedom. She said the last two years have been frightening, tiring, and angering.美国图书馆协会 (ALA) 周四发布了一份关于该国禁书的新报告。它发现学校和公共图书馆的图书禁令和信息限制尝试继续增加,并在 2022 年创下了记录。报告称,2022 年已知的挑战有 1,200 个。这几乎是前一年的两倍,而且记录设置。 ALA 于 20 年前开始收集数据。 “我从未见过这样的事情,”负责 ALA 知识自由办公室的黛博拉考德威尔斯通说。她说过去两年令人恐惧、疲惫和愤怒。The report also says the way restrictions are requested has changed. A few years ago, challenges were usually from parents and community members concerned about an individual book, the ALA says. Now, the requests are often for several removals, and organized by national groups such as Moms for Liberty. Their goal is “unifying, educating and empowering parents to defend their parental rights at all levels of government.” Last year, more than 2,500 different books were objected to, compared to 1,858 in 2021 and just 566 in 2019. In many cases, hundreds of books were challenged in a single request. The ALA bases its findings on media accounts and voluntary reporting from libraries. It says the numbers might be far higher.该报告还说,请求限制的方式已经改变。 ALA 表示,几年前,挑战通常来自家长和社区成员对某本书的关注。现在,这些请求通常是多次移除,并由 Moms for Liberty 等全国性团体组织。他们的目标是“统一、教育和授权父母在各级政府捍卫他们为人父母的权利。”去年,有 2,500 多本不同的书籍遭到反对,而 2021 年有 1,858 本书,而 2019 年只有 566 本书。在许多情况下,数百本书在一次请求中受到质疑。 ALA 的调查结果基于媒体报道和图书馆的自愿报告。它说这个数字可能要高得多。Librarians around the country have told of being harassed and threatened with violence or legal action. Caldwell-Stone says that some books have been targeted because of racist language. But she says the majority of requests for removal are for works with LGBTIQA+ or racial themes. Bills easing the restriction of books have been proposed or passed in Arizona, Iowa, Texas, Missouri, and Oklahoma, among other states. In Florida, Governor Ron DeSantis has approved laws to review reading materials and limit classroom discussion of gender identity and race. Books removed in Florida include John Green's Looking for Alaska, Colleen Hoover's Hopeless, and Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale.全国各地的图书馆员都曾受到骚扰,并受到暴力或法律诉讼的威胁。考德威尔-斯通说,有些书因为种族主义语言而成为攻击目标。但她说,大多数删除请求都是针对具有 LGBTIQA+ 或种族主题的作品。亚利桑那州、爱荷华州、得克萨斯州、密苏里州和俄克拉荷马州等州已经提出或通过了放宽书籍限制的法案。在佛罗里达州,州长罗恩·德桑蒂斯 (Ron DeSantis) 已批准审查阅读材料并限制课堂讨论性别认同和种族的法律。在佛罗里达州下架的书籍包括约翰·格林的《寻找阿拉斯加》、科琳·胡佛的《绝望》和玛格丽特·阿特伍德的《使女的故事》。DeSantis has called reports of mass bannings a “hoax.” He said earlier this month that some people “are attempting to use our schools for indoctrination.” Some books do come back. Officials at Florida's Duval County Public Schools were widely criticized after they removed Roberto Clemente: The Pride of the Pittsburgh Pirates. It is a children's book about of the late baseball star from Puerto Rico. In February, they announced the book would again be available, explaining they had needed to examine it and make sure it did not violate any state laws.德桑蒂斯称有关大规模禁令的报道是“骗局”。他本月早些时候表示,有些人“正试图利用我们的学校进行洗脑”。有些书确实回来了。佛罗里达州杜瓦尔县公立学校的官员在删除罗伯托克莱门特:匹兹堡海盗的骄傲后受到广泛批评。这是一本关于已故波多黎各棒球明星的儿童读物。 2 月,他们宣布这本书将再次上市,并解释说他们需要对其进行检查并确保它没有违反任何州法律。
In this episode we are talking about the Cultural Proficiencies for Racial Equity Framework, which was approved by the boards of directors of the four partner organizations, the American Library Association (ALA), Association of College & Research Libraries (ACRL), Association of Research Libraries (ARL), and Public Library Association (PLA), during summer of 2022. Our guests for this episode are Christina Fuller Gregory, Assistant Director of Libraries South Carolina Governor's School for the Arts & Humanities and Kristin Lahurd, Deputy Director, Conference Content and Engagement. American Library Association.
For years the far-left American Library Association (ALA) has been working closely with national LGBT groups to train library officials how to thwart and demonize parents and public officials opposed to the obscene and pornographic books for children being placed in public libraries and schools. We investigate.
This week's episode comes from the Steamship Historical Society of America located in Warwick, RI. Hear about what resources they have to help you track down your ancestors who may have travelled to America on a steamship, and some tricks their staff use when they run into some difficult genealogy situations. Some links from today's episode: Immigration and genealogy: https://shiphistory.org/immigration-by-passenger-ship-research-guide Italian Immigration to Providence: https://shiphistory.org/2017/07/10/immigration-to-providence/ Steamship Historical Society of America: www.sshsa.org Join SSHSA: https://www.sshsa.org/join/join_form.html This episode was made possible by an American Rescue Plan: Humanities Grants for Libraries, which is an initiative of the American Library Association (ALA) made possible with funding from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rhodyradio/message
Welcome to Plano Library Speaks, the podcast of Plano Public Library! In this episode, your hosts, Rachel and Bob chat about financial literacy, and everything the library offers to work on your money smart skills from little kids through adults. From July 13-August 24, Plano Public Library is hosting the Thinking Money for Kids exhibit at Haggard Library. Thinking Money for Kids strives to teach children ages 7 to 11 and their parents, caregivers and educators about financial literacy topics — like saving, spending and budgeting — in a way that is not only understandable, but fun. Join us for a grand opening and ribbon cutting on July 14 at 4pm. Thinking Money for Kids is a museum-quality exhibition traveling to 50 U.S. public libraries between 2019 and 2022. Through a bustling community market-themed storyline, digital interactive content and other fun, hands-on activities, the exhibition explores topics like earning money, saving and spending, and making responsible financial decisions. Thinking Money for Kids is brought to communities nationwide by the FINRA Investor Education Foundation and the American Library Association (ALA) Public Programs Office. In an interview with Kristin Linscott, Development Coordinator, and Robert Ganem, FINRA Investor Education Foundation, we discuss what the Thinking Money for Kids exhibit is and what resources are available from FINRA. FINRA tools available through their website include: Personal Finance education, including information on setting financial goals, controlling spending and managing debt Tools and calculators, including market data and retirement estimator Investing education, including courses, choosing an investment professional and young adults and investing BrokerCheck, a free tool to research the background and experience of financial brokers, advisors and firms - Librarian Sarah O'Pella talks on the podcast about library programs that target money smart skills. You can see the schedule in the library's Engage brochure or on the Money Smart page of our website. Here are a few upcoming financial literacy programs: Art Shop (All Ages) What can you create with $5.00? Browse our art shop for supplies to make your masterpiece! With play money received at the store entrance, purchase paper, markers, glue and scissors, and specialty supplies to make your work of art spectacular. Haggard Wed Jul 13 6pm Haggard Wed Aug 24 6pm Counting Coins (Grades K-5) Explore hands-on activities that strengthen your child's knowledge of counting and money Schimelpfenig Wed Aug 10 6pm Art of Money (All Ages) Get ready for money making mania as we explore what money looks like around the world and then create your own currency designs. Who will you put on your currency? Schimelpfenig Sat Jun 25 2pm Davis Sat Aug 20 3pm FIT (JR) Financial Intelligence Training for Teens (Teen) College students from the University of North Texas show teens how to set goals, make spending plans, manage credit and debt and plan for the future. Receive a Financial Intelligence Training (JR) certificate upon completion Haggard Fri Jul 22 2pm Building Wealth - Beginner's Guide to Securing Your Financial Future (Adult, Teen) You can create personal wealth and meet your financial goals by using basic concepts and taking control of your financial choices to launch you towards the future you want Virtual Tue Jul 26 7-8:30pm – Register here - Library Manager Cecily Ponce de Leon talks about the many ways in which Plano Public Library has shared the program and reading resources library staff have created back to the library profession. Art Shop, one of the many financial literacy program the library offers, was part of the reason why the City of Plano won the 2019 City Livability Award from the U.S. Conference of Mayors. Information about this program was included in Rainy Day Ready: Financial Literacy Programs and Tools, which is a ready-to-use guide for offering financial literacy initiatives at a library, published by ALA. In April 2022, the American Library Association (ALA), in collaboration with the FINRA Investor Education Foundation (FINRA Foundation), released Thinking Money for All Kids: Diverse and Inclusive Reads to Teach Young People about Money, a free resource for library workers. Cecily was one of many library staff who contributed to this title, which you can read more about and download from the ALA website. - The last interview is with Kristin Linscott and Lyn Haralson, a Financial Education Program Analyst with Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (cfpb). cfpb has a variety of resources available for consumers. Here are some useful pages on their website, especially for kids learning about money: Learn about the building blocks of financial capability Financial literacy activities for kids of all ages Money As You Grow resources Tools and Resources on a variety of topics Financial Well-being Assessment
National Library Week is a time to celebrate our nation's libraries, library workers' contributions and promote library use and support. Since 1958, National Library Week's been sponsored by the American Library Association (ALA) and observed in libraries across the country each April. All types of libraries - school, public, academic and special - participate, and you can learn more at the American Library Association website, ALA.org
The American Library Association (ALA) reported an “unprecedented spike” in book removal requests last fall, tallying 330 from September 1 to December 1. The ALA noted "a focus on books that address the voices and lived experiences of Black, Indigenous, and people of color and LGBTQIA+ individuals." How are local librarians responding to these challenges? Hear from school and public librarians in Connecticut. Plus, the ALA and the Connecticut Library Association's Intellectual Freedom Office discuss the resources they offer local librarians. GUESTS: Samantha Lee - Chair, Connecticut Library Association's Intellectual Freedom Committee; Head of Reference Services at Enfield Public Library Deborah Caldwell Stone - Director, American Library Association Office for Intellectual Freedom Barbara Johnson - Library Media Specialist, Jack Jackter Intermediate School; Member, American Association of School Librarians; Former President, Connecticut Association of School Librarians Mary Richardson - Teen Librarian, Simsbury Public Library; Co-Host "Book Jam" Podcast Support the show: http://wnpr.org/donate See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
For more than a year, educators, school librarians, and administrators have been responding and adapting to the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. Last spring, Gale, a Cengage Company, and the American Library Association (ALA) partnered to rejuvenate Gale's guide to best practices for school librarians. For this Agents of Change 2.0 paper, ALA spoke with educators and administrators working through the crisis and surveyed more than 500 school librarians about their processes and perspectives. On this bonus episode of Call Number with American Libraries, sponsored by Gale, Maggie Reagan, senior editor of books for youth at Booklist, talks with Jessica Klinker, head librarian at Franklin Heights High School in Columbus, Ohio—one of the librarians whose feedback helped shape the Agents of Change 2.0 paper. They discuss Klinker's experiences working during the pandemic, the pandemic's effects on students, the importance of social-emotional learning, and more.
Welcome to the Yadkin History Spotlight, where we'll be taking a brief look at the history of various topics, events, persons, or locations connected to the Yadkin Valley. We'll tackle common genealogy or research requests, or cool “did you know?” moments. This week, in honor of the upcoming National Library Week, we'll be looking at national library organizations on down to our own location, starting with the American Library Association (ALA), State Library of North Carolina (administering NC Cardinal, NC Live, and many other programs), Northwestern Regional Library System (NWRL), and Yadkin County Public Library (YCPL). Phone: 336-679-8792 Email: ydk@nwrl.org nwrlibrary.org/yadkin www.facebook.com/yadkincountypubliclibrary www.pinterest.com/yadkinlibrary twitter.com/Yadkin www.instagram.com/yadkincountypubliclibrary
Thérèse Plummer is an actor and award-winning audiobook narrator working in New York City. She has recorded over 350 audio books for various publishers. She won the 2019 Audie Award for her work on the multicast, Sadie by Courtney Summers for Macmillan Audio, was nominated for the Mutlicast Any Man by Amber Tamblyn for Harper Audio and her solo narration for The Rogue Planets Shaken by Lee W. Brainard for Podium Publishing. The American Library Association (ALA) awarded her work on Sourdough by Robin Sloan as part of the 2018 Listen List: Outstanding Audiobook Narration for Adult Listeners. Thérèse is the voice of Maya Hansen in the Marvel Graphic Motion Comic Ironman Extremis, Dr. Fennel in Pokemon and for various Yu-Gi-Oh characters. Television Guest Star Roles on The Good Wife, Law and Order SVU and the upcoming series Virgin River for Netflix. Follow Nishant: Friday Newsletter: https://garnishant-91f4a.gr8.com/ Website: https://nishantgarg.me/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nishant-garg-b7a20339/ https://www.facebook.com/NishantMindfulnessMatters/ https://twitter.com/nishantgar
Poet and writer Kate Camp returns to discuss another classic work of literature. Now seems like the perfect time for a deep dive into a dystopian sci-fi world so she's chosen English author Aldous Huxley's 1932 novel Brave New World. It is set in a futuristic World State, where citizens are genetically bred into a strict intelligence based caste system and happily drugged out of their minds. The novel was once illegal in Ireland and features on an American Library Association (ALA) list of the 10 books Americans tried hardest to ban. A TV series based on the book has recently been released.
In 2019, the American Library Association (ALA) added sustainability as one of the core values of librarianship, and libraries across the US are working to reduce their environmental footprint and raise awareness about resilience, climate change, and a sustainable future. In Episode 52, Dewey Decibel talks with librarians who are implementing sustainable practices in both their libraries and their lives. First American Libraries Associate Editor Sallyann Price speaks with Gabrielle Griffis, assistant youth services librarian at Brewster (Mass.) Ladies Library, about the Blue Marble Librarians, a group that helped promote Climate Prep Week across the state last year. Next, ALA Editions Acquisitions Editor Jamie Santoro speaks with René Tanner, associate liaison librarian for the humanities division at Arizona State University (ASU) and Susan Norton, program manager for ASU's University Sustainability Practices, about sustainability programs they implemented at the university. Finally, American Libraries Editorial and Advertising Associate Carrie Smith speaks with three library workers from Queens (N.Y.) Public Library—Library Manager Kacper Jarecki, Youth and Family Counselor Desmond Bonhomme, and Assistant Community Library Manager Sarah Gluck—who biked from New York City to the 2020 ALA Midwinter Meeting in Philadelphia last winter to raise awareness about sustainability.
En esta ocasión nos acompaña una gran profesional, amiga y colega puertoriqueña Loida Garcia-Febo. Con ella comentamos sobre su labor en dos de las asociaciones de profesionales de la información más grandes del mundo American Library Association (ALA) e International Federation Library Association (IFLA) Loida nos comento sobre sus retos y experiencias como Presidenta de ALA, la estrategia Bibliotecas = Comunidades Fuertes (Libraries = Strong Communities) además de su perspectiva sobre el papel de las bibliotecas, bibliotecarios y asociaciones en la coyuntura actual. De igual modo nos compartió recomendaciones de lectura (Graphic Novel) y practicas saludables (Wellness) en estos días de confinamiento. Participan en esta edición los locos del Podcast: Santiago Villegas @medejean, Antonio Espinosa @aespinosarivas y Saúl Equihua @equihua_sm
Episode 28: On this episode, Cathy + remus discuss public libraries in the United States. remus presents the history of libraries, their purpose for the public + the American Library Association (ALA). Cathy discusses the current services libraries offer the public, including family support, youth services + addressing poverty + homelessness. Cathy also introduces a new segment to Drawing a Dialogue called “Schools Are The Community,” to discuss the current state takeover of Providence Public Schools. For episode citation: https://comicarted.com/blog/2020/2/14/drawing-a-dialogue-episode-28
Therese is an actor and award-winning audiobook narrator working in New York City. She has recorded over 400 audio books for various publishers. She won the 2019 Audie Award for her work on the multicast, Sadie by Courtney Summers for Macmillan Audio, and was nominated for the Multicast, Any Man, by Amber Tamblyn for Harper Audio and her solo narration for The Rogue: Planets Shaken by Lee W. Brainard for Podium Publishing. The American Library Association (ALA) awarded her work on Sourdough by Robin Sloan as part of the 2018 Listen List: Outstanding Audiobook Narration for Adult Listeners. Thérèse has been nominated for 5 Audie Awards in 2018. She was named AudioFile's Best Voices of the Year in 2015 for her work on Robyn Carr's A New Hope. Thérèse is the voice of Maya Hansen in the Marvel Graphic Motion Comic Ironman Extremis, Dr. Fennel in Pokemon and for various Yu-Gi-Oh characters. Television Guest Star Roles on The Good Wife,Law and Order SVU and Virgin River for Netflix. You can imagine how intimidating this was. She told me how she broke in – it was a series of preparation meeting miracles, and she spoke about what everyone wants to know – how do you voice those sex scenes?
*The best writing happens when you forget that you're a person. *-Elana K. Arnold On the second episode of this season, Nina shares an experience of self-doubt. Later on, she and fellow author Elana K. Arnold answer a listener question about facing self-doubt during the process of writing a novel. Elana and Nina talk about how self-doubt can be useful for a writer and how it can be channeled into characters for the work to be more authentic and resonant. Elana K. Arnold Sign up for the Slow Novel Lab! The American Library Association (ALA)
In our 40th Episode, Greg and Marlene interview Erin Levine, an attorney and founder/CEO of Hello Divorce, a service that makes divorce more human and accessible by offering legal help and wellness support throughout the process of dissolving a marriage. Offered in California, Hello Divorce offers access to resources and tools and different service levels, from basic to concierge to a la carte access to independent fixed fee attorneys. Erin highlights that the legal process can be confusing, dis-empowering and expensive and that Hello Divorce is a necessary guide to help people navigate the system in a way that doesn't destroy them financially and emotionally. While divorce representation is a consistent legal need, Erin highlights that there are many other parts of the process that are also necessary which don't require attorney skills. She leverages various forms of process improvement including outsourcing, automation, smart contracts to make the service application scalable. Part of what is interesting about the discussion (and there are lots of interesting parts) is that Erin stands the idea of aggressive and hostile divorce action on its head. While Erin has critics, she maintains the benefit of taking down level of tension and fear between the parties. In fact, 92% of divorces started with hello Divorce have concluded without having to refer out to full rep attorneys. (10:17 mark) Information Inspirations According to Aliqae Geraci from Cornell and Shannon L. Farrell from University of Minnesota wrote an article entitled “Normalize Negotiations!" we teach librarians a lot about management skills, but we've lacked in teaching them basic skills like salary and promotion negotiation skills. There is a place for the American Library Association (ALA) and the American Association of Law Libraries (AALL) to teach their members these skills. (4:05 mark) For the small price of a European vacation for a family of four (AKA expensive), you can own your very own AI powered robot who cleans your house for you while you sleep… and can remember to bring you your favorite beer, hopefully when you're awake. (5:59 mark) From MIT, we get " Every Leader's Guide to the Ethics of AI." Ep. 31's guest, Vishal Agnihotri suggested we look at this, and it ties in with our last episode on algorithmic governance. As AI becomes more and more integrated into business activities, the authors suggest that we treat it, as well as our employees, customers, and the public, with the respect we all deserve. An "AI Mishap" can destroy a company or its reputation. (side note: AI Mishap is the name of Marlene's new Country Band.) (6:56 mark) With all the talk about mental health in the legal industry, the NPR report on Where's Masculinity headed? is perfectly timed. (8:51 mark) Listen, Subscribe, download Jerry's music, and Send Us Tweets and Voicemails, Too!! Don't forget to subscribe, rate, and comment. You can tweet @gebauerm and/or @glambert to reach out. Call us at 713-487-7270 with suggestions. And, thanks to Jerry David DiCicca for the music!
Welcome to The Book Love Foundation Podcast! And thank you for joining us in this celebration of teaching and the joy of learning. In this episode, Penny's conversation with Sam Graham-Felsen, author of Green, a novel. Subscribe in iTunes Donate to the Book Love Foundation Season 3 Ep 2 Show notes Sam Graham-Felsen s debut novel Green was recently selected as one of 10 adult books with special appeal to teen readers to receive the 2019 Alex Awards by the Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) division of the American Library Association (ALA). It was also recognized as a New York Times Editor s Pick, an Indie Next selection, one of Amazon s Best Books of the Month, one of Six Debuts to Watch for in 2018 by Barnes and Noble, and one of the New Yorker s Books We Loved in 2018. His nonfiction writing has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, the Washington Post, The Nation, and elsewhere. From, 2007-2008, he worked as the chief blogger on Barack Obama s presidential campaign. Sam is currently at work on more fiction and serves as an adjunct assistant professor of creative writing at Columbia University. You can connect with him on Facebook or contact him through his website. Thank you for listening to this episode of the Book Love Foundation podcast. The Book Love Foundation is a non-profit 501 3(c) dedicated to putting books in the hands of teachers dedicated to nurturing the individual reading lives of their middle and high school students. If you can help us in our mission, visit booklovefoundation.org and make a donation. 100% of what you give goes to books. – Penny The post The Book Love Foundation Podcast: Sam Graham-Felsen appeared first on Teacher Learning Sessions. ★ Support this podcast ★
September 23-29 is the ominously and inaccurately named Banned Books Week (this is my font choice) established by the “book-banning” American Library Association (ALA) to suggest that book banning is prevalent in America and very scary. Although the ALA named it Banned Books Week, it was forced to acknowledge in the “about” section of the Banned Books Week website that it’s not really about books that have been banned à la Fahrenheit 451 or even asked to be banned. It’s centrally about books that have been challenged, which is a horse of an entirely different and …
The Caldecott is the most prestigious award a children’s book illustrator can receive, and it’s an award that, once received, changes each recipient’s life. We will discuss what the award is, how it is chosen, some patterns with books that have received this honor, and some tips on what you can do to try and become a more Caldecott-worthy illustrator. What are you working on? [01:17] Will Terry: Bonnaparte Falls Apart Part 2, and a new board game in his digital painting style. Not the best pay, but he has complete creative freedom and so it’s worth it. Lee White: Just moved to Nashville, Tennessee from Portland Oregon. Still working on two books, one that he is writing and illustrating himself, and still working out the deal for illustrating someone else's story. “Cain’t never could do nothing.”- Southern Saying We might be doing a live workshop later on in Nashville, but don’t quote us on that, all 3 of us would be there. Keep your ears peeled. Jake Parker: Has been crazy busy and gone a lot. He did a Comic Con in Denver, a workshop up in Boise, and a workshop here in Provo, and did a bunch of work for Snowplow 2; and, Skyheart is at the printer in China! There has been some translation issues that have slowed the process down, so we’ll see if the books get here in color or black and white! Today, we want to dive in and see if what sort of a role awards play in the life of an illustrator or comic book artist, and does it play a role in developing your art. If you are an illustrator, new or old, we hope that we can shed light on some of the illustration awards and what impact receiving different awards can have on a creatives life.. What are the Awards? [11:00] There are specific awards that we want to dive into on this podcast. The Caldecott Award, conceived in 1937 by Robert Caldecott. The Newbery Award, given to Young Adult Fiction, it’s an award for writers. The Eisner, given for creative achievement in comic books. Eisner Award: the Academy Awards of Comic. Given to different categories, i.e. Best Publication, Best Writing, Best Art, Best Short Story, etc. It’s an award and the publishers love it because they get to put the special award sticker, and whoever won the award has a prestigious bargaining chips for future projects. It’s important to understand the audience for each of these awards and oddly enough the for the Caldecott, they are librarians. Will hated school growing up and the last place he would imagine being is a library convention. But as fate would have it, he ended up going to one, and he has now been to three of them. American Library Association (ALA) hosts a conference where illustrators and librarians collide. Librarians matter because they are the ones who will be recommending your books! The Caldecott [15:00] The Caldecott is the biggest most prestigious award for children’s books. The Caldecott is determined by a committee of 15 people and 8 of those people are appointed by the ALA. These people are composed of librarians and school teachers. They are supposed to primarily focus on the artwork, but there aren’t any poor stories that win the Caldecott. Art is a component but other components like story are a factor that enhance the children's book. Look for patterns. Think about the patterns of the wards winners. Lee likes to look for systems and commonalities to help inform success. There is often strategy to most things we do. Even when playing Monopoly! Since 2000, only 4 Caldecott winners have different writer and illustrator. It means that more Caldecott winners not only illustrate but also write their book. Is this a coincidence? Committee members like to promote and celebrate 1 person. If you win this award you are the “Miss America” of illustration for the next year. Can winning one of these awards change your life? [22:06] There are over 200 children’s books awards but they are not life changing like the Caldecott. Almost every state has one award and they are sometimes narrow and specific. Will won the North Carolina book award one year. In Utah there is an award for Best Mormon Illustrator. Any award is great to receive but are not on the level of receiving a Caldecott. These awards are great but the Caldecott is different. You will be known and introduced as a Caldecott award winner, and the book will be in print for the rest of their life, which translates to a lot of money. There are over 200,000 libraries across the US and stock Caldecott winners. Sometimes one library could buy 10 copies of 1 Caldecott winners book, and restock every year. There are also people that collect Caldecotts. It is a fail safe for the libraries and bookstores because these books have a stamp of approval and popularity built into them. There are Caldecott honorable mentions that also reap the reward of this honor and Lee has a friend that recieve $75,000 in royalties. Jon Klassen is an illustrator/writer that has been raking in the Caldecott. (Jon Klassen)[http://jonklassen.tumblr.com/] (This Is Not My Hat)[https://www.amazon.com/This-Not-Hat-Jon-Klassen/dp/0763655996] If you were to win a Caldecott, publishers try to lock you into your next book deal. You become known for this award and it makes you a distinguished illustrator. There are Caldecott terms to book deals that stipulate how payment changes if you were to win a Caldecott. Should you change your art to win? [31:40] Will feels as if you need to change your art style to win a Caldecott but Lee sees that Caldecott winners of the past have very different styles and are really all over the place. There are books that are Caldecott material and there are other books that aren’t but are still wildly successful. Why is I Want My Hat Back distinguished and Fancy Nancy not? Fancy nancy is extremely commercial and sells well but not as literary. (Fancy Nancy)[https://www.amazon.com/Fancy-Nancy-Jane-OConnor/dp/0060542098] There are books that have a balance of the two like Olivia. Olivia won a Caldecott and also became very commercial. (Olivia)[https://www.amazon.com/Olivia-Caldecott-Honor-Book-Falconer/product-reviews/B0018SYWI4] There are many things that precede winning a Caldecott. There is networking and knowing someone that can get you in the right circles and in the right places. Being connected and known is very important. Dan Santat is a great example of a person that has been around the block before winning the Caldecott. He spoke at conferences for years and was really well known along with producing great work. (The Adventures of Beekle)[https://www.amazon.com/Caldecott-Medal-Dan-Santat/s?ie=UTF8&page=1&rh=n%3A6288856011%2Cp_lbr_one_browse-bin%3ADan%20Santat] It’s true that winning a Caldecott seems as likely as being hit by lightning. Step One: Write your own stuff Step Two: Be Jon Klassen Step Three: Speak at SCWI Actionable item [41:29] Here are some actionable things that might not get you a Caldecott but moves you in the right direction. Believe in your work and keep moving forward with it. Think about what is the type of creator you want to be and what best fits your personality. You don’t need to be award winning to be successful. If you are just trying to mimic other people you will always be a few years behind, of course you can learn from others but really do what you love and develop your own unique style and voice. Do the thing that you love to do and that you are good at and eventually the world will catch up. Nuances of a Caldecott [50:04] There are so many books that are great and when it comes down to choosing a winner the committee starts considering the nitty gritty. They start to think what doesn’t work about the books- does the book’s cover have room for the sticker, what is the paper quality like, what is the font, what is in the end paper etc. Things to consider [53: 56] Be like Jon Klassen in the sense that he was trying to be himself. If you are trying to copy someone that has won you will be always be behind. Create the thing that only you can create. Also consider that design matters and having a good sense of graphic design is important for the whole package. Chris Van Allsburg is a great example of this. He combines his art with design to create a great book. His pieces are beautiful and leave room for type. Great artists have a great graphic design sense and some create their own fonts for their books, i.e. Jon Klassen. The Caldecott can be a motivator, and can push yourself to create on a higher level. You can ask yourself, “Is this Caldecott worthy?” Chris Van Allsburg Summary [01:07:00] Consider writing Be unique Consider the details Drive yourself to create something good and worthwhile! LINKS Svslearn.com Jake Parker: mrjakeparker.com Instagram: @jakeparker, Youtube: JakeParker44 Will Terry: willterry.com. Instagram: @willterryart, Youtube: WillTerryArt Lee White: leewhiteillustration.comInstagram: @leewhiteillo If you like this episode, please share it, subscribe, and we’d love it if you left a review! These podcasts live and die on reviews. If you want to join in on this discussion log onto forum.svslearn.com, there is a forum for this episode you can comment on. LINKS Svslearn.com Jake Parker: mrjakeparker.com. Instagram: @jakeparker, Youtube: JakeParker44 Will Terry: willterry.com. Instagram: @willterryart, Youtube: WillTerryArt Lee White: leewhiteillustration.comInstagram: @leewhiteillo If you like this episode, please share it, subscribe, and we’d love it if you left a review! These podcasts live and die on reviews. If you want to join in on this discussion log onto forum.svslearn.com, there is a forum for this episode you can comment on.
The American Library Association (ALA) has revealed that it has not yet reached the nadir of ethical corruption. Through its Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC) division, the Intellectual Freedom Committee, which promotes “continuing education programs” for children just wrote this (you better be sitting down): Interested in bringing Drag Queen Storytime to your library? ALSC Committee Members received tips for optimizing success from library pioneers who have already done it. We also had the chance to meet a Drag Queen who talked about the value of offering this program, including fostering empathy, tolerance, creativity, imagination and fun. I …
Cody is joined by youtuber and activist Jackson Bird to get to the bottom of the world’s largest and most obvious library pornography crime ring. You can find your copy of the book online and at your local library… OR CAN YOU. ‘Shut Up!: The Bizarre War that One Public Library Waged Against the First Amendment' by Megan Fox and Kevin DuJan What bad things could possibly be happening in your local public library? In SHUT UP! The Bizarre War that One Public Library Waged Against the First Amendment, citizen sleuths Megan Fox and Kevin DuJan expose the pattern of censorship, intimidation, harassment, bullying, and retaliation that the Orland Park Public Library engaged in (with help from the American Library Association (ALA), the Orland Park Police, and the Village of Orland Park) to chill free speech, trample civil rights, destroy a safe space, stifle debate, and frighten away critics. This one wayward public library in the affluent Chicago suburbs had for years willfully covered up dangers to children and unreported crimes…and its staff and library board trustees used every dirty trick they could think of (including weaponizing the police and engaging in lawfare with a SLAPP suit) to silence parents and patrons who complained about sexual activity, a hostile work environment, and rampant spending waste in a spare-no-expense public building with all the bells and whistles (but little accountability for public employees who blatantly ignored Illinois state library and transparency laws). The library committed itself to shutting up Fox & DuJan at all costs, in what became a war of proxy between the lobbyists of the ALA's Office for Intellectual Freedom and the rights of citizens to petition government bodies for change and redress of grievances. A public library that insisted men have a First Amendment right to sexually arouse themselves in a building full of children became obsessed with eradicating the public’s First Amendment right to address and correct dangers to children in the one place that everyone always assumed was safe for kids: the local public library. This is the story of how a suburban Chicago scandal became so outrageous that it made national headlines (and even ended up on Saturday Night Live). Show Notes: Previous Episode: 71. 'Managing a Dental Practice: The Genghis Khan Way' w/ Jackson Bird & Mara Wilson Currently Reading: ‘Transgender History (2nd Edition)’ by Susan Stryker ‘My Life in Orange’ by Tim Guest Topics: Civil servants, Gay Republicans, men’s rights activism, Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln, empathy, projection, memory, leaping to conclusions, flat-earther mentality, librarians who rock, humanity, p0rnspiracy! Follow TOMEFOOLERY for information about upcoming episodes & books: @Tomefoolery and Facebook.com/Tomefoolery. Please rate and review on iTunes! WEBSITE: http://Tomefoolery.com STORE: http://squareup.com/market/CodyMelcherEsq PATREON: http://patreon.com/CodyMelcherEsq FAN GROUP: http://www.facebook.com/groups/Tomefoolery
Maureen Sullivan provides insights on the American Library Association’s Emerging Leaders Program, designed to empower up-and-coming leaders through project planning, peer networking, and gaining inside perspectives into the American Library Association (ALA). In this episode, Maureen shares thoughts from her time as President of the ALA in 2012-2013 and from her work with librarians across the country as she designs and implements numerous leadership development programs. You won’t want to miss her thoughts on some of the valuable resources that will benefit everyone in the information profession, along with the personal reasons why this work means so much to her.
RAILS Executive Director Deirdre Brennan talks with Keith Michael Fiels, recently retired Executive Director of the American Library Association (ALA), about his 15 years of service at ALA, including accomplishments, favorite moments, challenges, and other stories from the road. Relevant links: http://www.ala.org Intro/Outro music by Julie Jurgens, https://himissjulie.com
สัปดาห์หนังสือต้องห้าม (Banned Books Week) เป็นงานรณรงค์ที่จัดขึ้นเป็นประจำทุกปีในสหรัฐอเมริกาตั้งแต่ปี 1982 ในช่วง 2 สัปดาห์สุดท้ายของเดือนกันยายน ริเริ่มโดยสมาคมห้องสมุดอเมริกัน (American Library Association - ALA) และองค์การนิรโทษกรรมสากล (Amnesty International) เพื่อแสดงจุดยืนด้านเสรีภาพในการอ่าน เนื่องมาจากมองเห็นความสำคัญของการปกป้องหนังสือที่มีเนื้อหาขัดกับมุมมองแบบอนุรักษ์นิยมของสังคมหรือทัศนะที่คนทั่วไปไม่ยอมรับ และมีการเก็บรักษาหนังสือเหล่านั้นเพื่อให้ผู้ที่ต้องการอ่านสามารถเข้าถึงได้
In the new episode of the Dewey Decibel podcast, American Libraries goes looking for love ... and finds it in the most unexpected places Dewey Decibel senior love correspondent Terra Dankowski talks to three librarian couples—Elizabeth Westenburg and Evan Williamson; Amy Call and Ellen MacInnis; and Annie and Dan Bostrom—who found each other thanks to the American Library Association (ALA). Dewey Decibel host Phil Morehart looks at ALA's I Love My Librarian Award, with interviews with Sari Feldman, ALA immediate past president and chair of this year's award selection committee, and Andrea Bernard, one of the 2016 award winners.
Alan S. Inouye heads public policy for the American Library Association (ALA). In this role, Alan leads ALA's technology policy portfolio ranging from telecommunications to copyright and licensing, to advance the ability of libraries to contribute to the economic, educational, cultural, and social well-being of America's communities. Alan is a recognized expert in national technology policy, published in various outlets such as The Hill, Roll Call, and the Christian Science Monitor. He serves on advisory boards or committees of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), the U.S. State Department, Library For All, and the University of Maryland. From 2004 to 2007, Dr. Inouye served as the Coordinator of the President's Information Technology Advisory Committee (PITAC) in the Executive Office of the President. At PITAC (now merged into the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology—PCAST), he oversaw the development of reports on cybersecurity, computational science, and other topics. Prior to PITAC, Alan served as a study director at the National Academy of Sciences. A number of his major studies culminated in book-length reports; three of these are LC21: A Digital Strategy for the Library of Congress, The Digital Dilemma: Intellectual Property in the Information Age, and Beyond Productivity: Information Technology, Innovation, and Creativity. Dr. Inouye began his career in the computer industry in Silicon Valley. He worked as a computer programmer for Atari, a statistician for Verbatim, and a manager of information systems for Amdahl (now Fujitsu). Alan completed his Ph.D. at the University of California at Berkeley and earned three master's degrees, in business administration (finance), systems engineering, and computer systems. In this episode, we discussed: the role of libraries in creating opportunities. library resources for entrepreneurs. how libraries and the incoming Tump administration might align on tech policy. Resources: American Library Association's Office for Information Technology Policy The Future of the Professions: How Technology will Transform the Work of Human Experts by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind NEWS ROUNDUP What a mess. The CIA has officially concluded that Russia hacked the 2016 presidential election not just to undermine voter confidence, but to get Donald Trump elected. This is according to a widely reported secret assessment conducted by the agency. The FBI on the her hand, isn't going that far. The FBI acknowledges that Russia did something--it's just saying it's not clear about Russia's motive: it thinks Russia carried out the intrusions for a mix of different reasons. The National Security Agency is due to release its own findings in the coming weeks before the election. The investigation is getting bi-partisan support from Chuck Schumer and Democrats, but it is also getting support from Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, House Speaker Paul Ryan, as well as John McCain and Lindsey Graham. Here's what we know. We know the Director of the FBI, James Comey, sent a letter to Congress 11 days before the election saying more of Hillary Clinton's emails found on Anthony Weiner's computer could lead to a new investigation. Of course, that inquiry was dropped after a few days but, by then, the damage had already been done. Outging Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid is calling for a Congressional investigation of Comey. We know Trump said many times that the election was rigged. We know that Trump called on Russia during the campaign season to leak Hillary Clinton's emails. And now, Trump wants to appoint ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson, whom the Wall Street Journal reports has close ties to Russia. We also now know that hackers got into the Republican National Committee's servers as well but, for whatever reason, only the DNC's emails were released to the public. Trump and others on his transition team called the CIA's conclusions "ridiculous". Ridiculous or not, whether those advocating to get 37 Electors to change their votes in favor of Hillary Clinton win or not, this isn't going away. The electoral system of the country that prides itself on being the greatest democracy the world has ever seen, has been, according to the CIA, hacked to favor a particular candidate. And that particular candidate, by the name of Donald J. Trump, won. He won! This is is crisis mode. --- Andrea Wong reports in Bloomberg that Apple is taking advantage of a massive tax loophole that allows it to earn free money from American taxpayers without paying any taxes. The loophole lets Apple stash its foreign earnings, untaxed, overseas, and then use the money to buy U.S. bonds. The Washington Post reports that this has yielded Apple some $600 million in payments from the U.S. Treasury over the last 5 years. -- The Wall Street Journal reported that the State of Georgia allegedly sent a letter to the Department of Homeland Security accusing the agency of attempting to hack the state's voter database. The State of Georgia opposes Federal efforts to declare election systems critical infrastructure, which would enable more robust federal monitoring for cyberattacks. -- USA Today reports that the Trump transition team has scheduled a meeting with the tech sector for Wednesday, December 14th in New York City. Should be interesting since most of the tech sector essentially opposed Donald Trump during the campaign, with the exception of Peter Thiel who now sits on President-elect Trump's transition team. Interestingly, Google has posted a job posting for a conservative outreach manager. e -- Microsoft, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube are partnering to weed on content posted by terrorists. The companies will be creating a shared database that will included "hashes" or digital encoding or fingerprints, which will enable the companies to alert each other as to the offensive content. Each company will retain the power to make decisions for themselves as to whether to take down the content. - The White House has announced further investments in science, technology, engineering and math education in 2017. The National Science Foundation will spend $20 million in addition to the $25 million it spent in 2016. Ali Breland has the story in The Hill. -- John Horrigan at Pew released survey results last week showing those who lack access to smartphones, broadband and tablets actually report more stress and lack of confidence accessing information than those who have access to the technologies. Conventionally, we tend to think of having all of these devices at our constant disposal as the contributing factor to information overload. -- Finally, the FCC set letters to Verizon and AT&T about their so-called zero-rating practices. With zero rating, multichannel video providers select which programming their customers will have access to without it counting against their data caps. Net neutrality advocates argue this is a Trojan horse against the net neutrality rules, allowing the companies to prioritize the content they choose over competing content. Colin Gibbs has the story at Fierce Wireless.
The news includes: The new season of Who You Think You Are? begins on 23 July on the TLC Network. Ancestry.com has recovered from the Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack on 16 June 2014, and Scott Sorensen, Chief Technology Officer, assures the public that no data was compromised. MyHeritage has made all of its World War I military records free to search through the end of July. They also will present their first interactive webinar highlighting their newly updated mobile app on Wednesday, 23 July 2014. RootsMagic has introduced its new Weekly Tips on their blog and, you can also see these by Liking RootsMagic on Facebook and Following them there. The British Newspaper Archive has recently added 240,000 new digitized newspaper pages to their subscription service. Blaine Bettinger has started a new website called "How-To DNA" at http://www.howtodna.com. The site will include short instructional videos for beginners as well as presentations and webcasts for the advanced genealogists, all created and produced by DNA experts. WikiTree has announced the DNA Ancestor Confirmation Aid, a tool to help genealogists confirm their ancestry. Findmypast.co.uk announced that it has bought Origins.net, the vast online subscription service with more than 156 million British, Scottish, and Irish records. Findmypast.co.uk announced that it has acquired Mocavo, the genealogy-focused Internet search engine. Drew highlights the new and updated collections from FamilySearch that have been added in the last month. The Georgia Archives, located in Morrow, Georgia, south of Atlanta, has announced that it has returned to a five-day operating week, Tuesday through Saturday. The South Carolina State Library is offering Digitization in a Box, a complete digitization solution, to the state's libraries to put their historic photos and documents online. The Library of Congress has collected more than 4,000 family records forms and registers. These are now being made available for free download, printing, and use at http://www.loc.gov/search/?q=+family+records+and+registers. The National Archives (TNA) in the UK has announced the release of digitized images for the following collections: Royal Flying Corps and Royal Air Force service records, 1899-1939; Royal Air Force combat reports, 1939-1945; Royal Air Force officers' service records, 1918-1919; Household Cavalry service records, 1799-1920. It has been announced that funding in the amount of £2.2 million is to be given to Welsh museums, libraries, and archives. Part of these funds will be used for archives to open up their collections and resources to the community. Ancestry.com and ProQuest have announced an expanded distribution agreement to deliver enhanced online solutions to and through libraries, including Ancestry Library Edition and HeritageQuest Online. The Reference and User Services Association (RUSA), a division of the American Library Association (ALA), announced that William (Bill) Forsyth of ProQuest is the recipient of the 2014 Genealogical Publishing Company award. Kirkus Reviews has named Out of Style: A Modern Perspective of How, Why and When Vintage Fashions Evolved, by Betty Kreisel Shubert as “One of the Best Books of 2013.” Gavin Laboski has shared news of a new iPad app called Timeline Builder, available at https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/timeline-builder-create-design/id733989611?mt=8. The Guys review two books of interest to genealogists: Drew discusses Mind Maps for Genealogy: Enhanced Research Planning, Correlation, and Analysis, by Ron Arons. George discusses The Family Tree Historical Maps Book: A State-by-State Atlas of U.S. History, 1790 – 1900, by Allison Dolan and the Editors of Family Tree Magazine. Listener email includes: Carole asks for advice about how to cite information about a child that only lived a few days and for whom there is neither a birth nor death certificate. Using the 1900 and 1910 censuses, she may be able to infer the child's birth, and The Guys provide some suggestions. Jenny wants to know how far out The Guys study and record collateral lines.
Speakers: Vailey Oehlke, Molly Raphael, Greg Williams and Brandon Barnett (moderator) Electronic books are changing the world in unexpected and disconcerting ways for authors, publishers, libraries and readers. In the last several years, libraries have experienced significant barriers that make it hard or even impossible to provide e-books to library users -- including barriers that have been purposely erected to shut libraries and library patrons out. Our panel of experts will explain the barriers to e-book access in libraries that exist today, and tell you what we're doing to make sure that you'll have access to e-books from your library now and in the future. Panelists: Vailey Oehlke, Multnomah County Director of Libraries, member of ALA E-Content Working Group; Molly Raphael, Immediate Past President, American Library Association (ALA) and former Multnomah County Library Director; Greg Williams, Librarian, West Linn Public Library and Vice-chair, Oregon Digital Library Consortium (Library 2Go); Bart King, local author of An Architectural Guide to Portland, The Big Book of Boy Stuff and several other non-fiction works. Recorded live at Central Library: September 30, 2012
In order to better understand the American Library Association (ALA), American Association of School Librarians (AASL) Standards for the 21st Century Learner, (the new revision or "evolution" of the Standards for Student Learning in Information Power), I interviewed Dr. Marcia Mardis, a professor at Wayne State University and one of the authors of these new standards.The Standards for the 21st Century Learner document is available through the ALA website, for convenience I have also linked directly to it here.You may listen to my interview with Dr. Mardis here.
Bernard Margolis was President of the Boston Public Library (BPL) from 1997-2008. Founded in 1848, the BPL was the first large free municipal library in the United States. Mr. Margolis has served on the Governing Council of the 63,000-member American Library Association (ALA), and has won many awards including “Colorado Librarian of the Year", two John Cotton Dana library public relations awards, and the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts' “Award of Excellence? for his library-sponsored “Imagination Celebration." He's also a master storyteller as you'll find out. We talk here about libraries as a public good, a culture of words and books designed to help everyone improve their lives, French ventriloquist and originator of the concept of the modern library Alexandre Vattemare (1796-1864), the U.S. as a leader in realizing this concept, immigration and self learning, an informed citizenry as the best defense of liberty, democratic access to information, BPL as the first to have a newspaper room, branch libraries and a separate children's room, the Red Sox and the Yankees, why the ebook hasn't replaced the paperback, Brewster Kahle versus Google and the Internet archive, and the question of whether or not information will be ‘free for all' to improve the world.