Thursday, May 6, 2010

Wrap up

I didn't know anything about CAMIO or the ArchiveGrid so those were my biggest discovery.  The others I had used, some more than others.  But I learn a little more about each one.  This exercise gives me the incentive to explore each a little more than trying to learn while doing a search with the patron looking over my shoulder.

Promoting is always a challenge.  We've written up various resources in our newsletter and handed out info at back to school nights, but usage is still low.  One on one at the circ desk is the best way.  When someone is checking out a GED/ACT etc book, suggest the learning express.  We did that with a guy wanting to get a CDL and he was thrilled.

Like everything in the library, promoting them is always something that should be in every interaction.

Thanks for the opportunity to learn.  Keep up the good work!

Heritage quest and Sanborn maps

I looked for several places in Kansas where I grew up.  Numerous hits for LaCrosse and most of those actually had something to do with the town.  I also tried Otis which is my home town.  There were a number of hits, but most of them were because someone in Kansas had been named Otis.  I did find one hit that referred to my high school history teacher. I hadn't realized he and his wife had a son.

On the whole I find Ancestry much easier to use when doing straight (census, death records) genealogy, but all those books are likely very helpful to the dyed in the wool genealogist.


In the Sanborn MAPS I looked up Brookings in 1916 and 1928.  Found the Carnegie Library and the spot the library is on now.  Discovered a couple sections of the map are turned with north being to the left instead of up.  Threw me for a loop for awhile trying to figure out why the Presbyterian Church was located where it was.  I enjoy looking at these.  A little clunky to move around in but great to look at historically.

Ancestry Plus

I looked up myself in Ancestry and found 6 links.  Four were to obituaries of my parents in several different newspapers.  The other two were from US Public Records.  One had my birthdate wrong, both listed addresses that I haven't lived at for more than 10 years.  I didn't find my marriage license.  I don't have a copy of it either.  Maybe I haven't been legally married for the past 37 years.

I looked up my grandfather, Adolph Demel, and found his WW I draft card.  It listed him as short and stout and that would describe him well.  He was also in several census, among them in the Kansas State Census 1855-1925.  The census taker spelled things phonetically.  My grandmother is listed as Kerey (Carrie), my mother as Evelin (Evelyn), and her sister as Ellenora (Eleanor).

The photos of South Dakota were very interesting. I'm particularly interested in the Dust Bowl era and WW II.  There was one of a very nice 1940 home in Aberdeen that was captioned "One of the few towns in South Dakota".  It was taken by the War Dept so who knows what they were looking for.  I did look up Brookings with the South Dakota pictures.  There were yearbook references and some harvest scenes.

I shall return with more on genealogy.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Learning express

I chose to do the Spelling/Vocabulary practice test at the college level and did very well which I should have done, having an English degree.  So I tried something I didn't know much about and tried the Police Officer Judgement and Problem solving #1.  I did well. If I ever chose to stop being a librarian I could be a police officer! 

The process seemed easy, but didn't try any math which is my downfall.

There were a variety of ebooks.  I looked at Just in time algebra (which was Greek to me) and Parents' guide to homeschooling.  After looking at the ebooks on NetLibrary, these were pretty bland looking.  You could bookmark, search, print, etc. so the practical stuff was there, but not quite as interactive.

There are so many good tests and practice info in this website.  I wish we could get the word out better about it.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

ArchiveGrid and Camio

ArchiveGrid is new to me.

Searched for Setting Bull.  Interesting info, but nothing I didn't know except that there were such things as autograph cards in that era.

My second search was "iron range", the area in MN called that.  I found 191 items, including a letter requesting funds to defend miners arrested in a mine uprising in 1916.  I also followed a short history of the Iron Range by Macey to the Minnesota Historical Society where I searched their catalog and found even more.  This would be great for research requiring original sources, such as the History Day presentations done recently at SDSU.

I took a look at the contributor list and it's quite impressive.

CAMIO  is also new to me.

I jumped in before I read the lesson and searched for pieced quilts in Textiles. I found a postage stamp quilt that is made up of 69,649 pieces and took the quilter over 1000 hours to do.  She must have had really good eyes!

Paul Revere made beautiful silver work such as spoons, bowls, urns, salvers (which I had to look up to discover it was a tray) and at least a few engraved prints.

"Sioux" brought up a wide variety of items such as beaded items,  war clubs,  drawings, and books.  I actually thought there would be more than 63 items listed.

I searched for Van Gogh and found many beautiful paintings and drawings with some text that allowed me to place the painting in the time frame of his life.  It also gave me an idea of which museums/galleries might be worth visiting.

Even if I would like to visit all the museums that interest me, I know I never will.  This site can show the works, many times not the most famous of the creator, to be enjoyed and learned about.  Obviously students can cite these sources and use them in papers.  I even put one of the Van Gogh's as my wallpaper. (hope that's not illegal!)  The slideshow is pretty neat, too.  I picked a few of my favorite Van Goghs.  This would be useful for presentations.

All in all, two new resources to help us learn and assist patrons.

World cat

I've used World Cat numerous times and have always found it helpful, particularly when Aleph is down.  We can still find out if we own a title and what the call number is which is very helpful.

I searched for Floor of the Sky by Joern.  We own it along with 896 others, and of course we're listed first. The call number for us is FIC.  For the rest of the world it's 813.6.  Other info includes a summary of the plot, subject headings which can be used for "read alikes", and publisher info.

I did a search in ArticleFinder for Personnel performance reviews and found 45 articles, most of which seemed relevant (better than NetLibrary!), many of which were available in SD.

I did the OAIster search, clicking on the article beginning "Hardwood tree decline . . "  I was able to took at the citation and the first page of the article from JSTOR.  This is definitely for research and as a last place to look for articles.  I thought ArticleFinder easier to use.

I also noticed the clock was ticking when I did the OAIster search.  Must get only15 minutes.
On the whole the First Search databases are good to know about and I hope I remember their availability when those really indepth research questions happen--which I might add are becoming more rare in the past five years.

Monday, May 3, 2010

NetLibrary

I did several searches in both key word and full text to find info on the Olympic games (Olympics).  Mostly found info on the mountains in Washington State or a few references to the olympics.  Must not have any books on this topic.

Then decided to brush up on performance reviews since I have a couple scheduled.  I figured by searching for keyword or subject I would be able to limit my search to a managable list.  Mostly didn't get any results, or very minimal, so I tried an advanced search of personnel, reviews, and performance and got 243 hits.  Some of the books look really good, such as Action tools for effective managers.  However, I likely will never read a book online because it really bothers my eyes, I'll have to look for this on ILL.

My fitness person deals with older people so I recommended the book Staying fit over 50. Although it didn't have alot of new exercises, it had some interesting info on stretching, running, and motivating us older exercisers.  I also suggested Exercise for older adults by Cotton as another possibility.  It also had motivational info and lots of suggested routines.  The book is also aimed at trainers which is what she wanted.

My publisher search using Nebraska came up with 56 books, many of them native american history.  Although nothing is newer than 2002, there may be some titles that this patron hasn't read.

I don't find ebooks particularly appealing due to my tendency for eye strain.  We do assist people who find these titles in SDLN with getting signed up for NetLibrary.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Gale Virtual Reference

I chose Literature as my area of interest and looked at the book "Literature and Its Times: Profiles of 300 Notable Literary Works and the Historical Events that Influenced Them."  I had to tear myself away from a great article on the Hobbit to complete this assignment!

This is a five volume set which I didn't notice right at first, until I wondered where the rest of the 300 books were.  Each essay appears to be well written, although I found the one on the Chocolate War a bit preachy.  Many links to other supporting articles in the index.

This would be a good source for literature students doing a paper or for people like me who are curious about a book they might never get around to reading.

I also looked at World War I Reference Library and learned to my surprise from the timetable available that the US didn't officially end WW I until 1921, two years after the Treaty of Versailles was signed by other combatants. 

The second part of the assignment:  When I typed in zinc I got a whole list of possibilities so decided to limit my search to zinc in foods which brought up 5 citiations.  The first one gave me the answers I needed.  I like the fact that it highlights your search terms.

The MP3 download might be helpful to some; I prefer reading text.  If I have to take notes I'd rather do it from text than listening.  I listened to info on 3M from a business source and Germany from the Cold War Reference Library.  It did take me awhile to find the link since it's not prominent.

Gale Virtual Reference is a good collection of reference materials and could be of great value in finding info for people.

More ProQuest

The second part of the assignment was to do a search in the area of your profession.  I typed in "library" and was pleased to see that Library Technology Reports was indexed.  I've been wondering if our wireless could be improved and found that the January 2009 issue had a number of articles on wireless.  It also had a very interesting one on "Doing more with less; maximizing your hardware and your budget" which was very interesting.

I don't always remember to use ProQuest when looking for professional info, but will try to remember it as a great source.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Proquest

I've become a "Dancing with the Stars" junkie since Evan Lysacek has been on this season, so did a DWTS search, not expecting to find much. I was pleasantly surprised to find April 19 info.  Most of the articles were related to Kate Gosselin and Pamela Anderson because they're such divas.  Citation #31 talks about black holes dancing in pairs which, of course, has nothing to do with DWTS--or maybe it does since most of the DWTS articles were devoid of intellectual value.

I also did a more serious search (since I'm on library time) with the subject of carpal tunnel.  The newest article is dated May 1, 2010 which is really new!  Of the first 20, 18 were fairly technical, but later articles were more understandable.  I did change the results to magazines and got more readable info.

Sometimes Proquest works well for me and sometimes it doesn't.  Couldn't find much on rototillers a few days ago for a patron.

Have to go.  Back later.

SIRS Researcher

This is an exciting, and easy, way to write a paper.  I selected Privacy in the Workplace as my current topic and found all kinds of interesting articles, many of them from current newspapers.  The timeline was interesting in that privacy issues significantly escalated in the last 20 years.  The note taker would really help someone who needed guidance in organizing their thoughts.  Global impacts and statistics can give addition pazzaz to a report.

The curriculum pathfinders made good browsing for topics.  There were very interesting weblinks that showed me how to improve my math skills (probably a lost cause), and interesting info about famous mathematicians and other math stuff.  A person could get lost in enjoyment, wandering around there.

I definitely liked researcher better than discoverer, perhaps because it's harder to "dumb" things down for younger readers.  This is a great database for paper writers.

Friday, April 23, 2010

Sirs Discoverer

The 2010 Winter Olympics were in February, that's more than two months ago, so I was disappointed not to find any 2010 results listed.  Under the topic of Winter Olympics there were no 2010 listings.  Under a keyword search for Evan Lysacek, men's figure skating gold medalist, there was one "watch for these athletes" article.  Shaun White's info was from 2009.  The article was entitled "King of snowboarding", but the picture was of him skateboarding.  Frankly, I was disappointed.

So I went on to the database features.  I didn't find as many low lexile levels for the subjects I picked, nor did I find many pictures.  The maps were pretty good.  The option of having the country info in all reading levels was a good option.

Discoverer would be a good tool for young people to use, likely with assistance as I don't think a 2-3 grader could sit down and be completely successful

Monday, March 8, 2010

World book for kids

It's a giraffe!

Giraffes are cool animals with 21 inch tongues! Wouldn't take them long to eat an ice cream cone.

They also see and hear well, but never raise their voices. My kind of animal.

I was a little grossed out by the cud being rechewed, but I guess cows do that too.

Lives in the Africa south of the Sahara.

There is obviously more information in the Online Infofinder, although the major points that facinated me earlier were all there pretty much in the same format.

First paragraph in Arabic.  I had to remember to copy from the right side since it reads right to left.

زرافة الطويلة من كلّ حيوانات. زرافات ذكريّة يمكن نمات أكثر من 18 أقدام (5.5 عدادات) — طويلة 5 أقدام (1.5 عدادات) طويلة من ال [أفريكن لفنت], الثاني حيوان طويلة. كثير بالغ يقف زرافات ذكريّة حوالي 17 أقدام (5.2 عدادات) طويلة, وكثير أناثى [غروو تو] حوالي 14 أقدام (4.3 عدادات) في إرتفاع. يحصل الزرافة إرتفاعه عظيمة من سيقانه, أيّ يكون 6 أقدام (1.8 عدادات) طويلة, وعنق أنّ يمكن كنت حتّى طويلة. غير أنّ [إفن ثوو] زرافات يعلوون على أخرى حيوانات, كثير بالغ يزن ذكران فقط حوالي 2,600 باوندات (1,200 كيلوغرامات). [أفريكن لفنت] ذكريّة يمكن وزنت أكثر من خمسة أوقات مثل كثير.


I'll post later on the Online Reference Center.