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Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts

Friday, November 23, 2012

Vacancy of Specialist Library Cataloguer at Australia

  • Looking for a specialist cataloguer
  • Tertiary qualification in library or information studies
  • Large library project

Sydney
Looking for a specialist cataloguer to do cataloguing work on a large backlog of local studies and published materials. The role focuses on uncatalogued backlog comprising an estimated 1,500 bibliographic items.
Required skills and experience:
Must have a tertiary qualification in library or information studies.
Extensive experience cataloguing local studies reference materials.
Ability to work productively and achieve excellent results.
Experience using the 'Aurora' catalogue system would be an advantage
Role will be on going till June 2013
To express an interest please contact Brett at or call 02 9263 0000

Profession: Records and Information Management

Sector: 
Public
Role: LibrariesWork Type: Contract
Reference Number: SYDUSC_BG4011060_1352671649
Contact Details:Brett Griggs or call 02 9263 0000

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

eBooks in libraries


By Michael Wiebrands 

Image via Digital Trends (source).
There has been a major shift in popular reading formats in the last three years from the paperback book to the eBook. Many people now buy from the Amazon Kindle store and the Apple iBook store. What many people may not know is that public and university libraries provide access to eBooks as well. Curtin Library itself has a catalogue of over 70,000 eBooks. As a result you no longer have to come in to the library to borrow books, you can now access books from the library wherever you are.
Academic libraries have been providing eBooks for about a decade, with them being traditionally designed for access from your computer. To truly enjoy the books though it pays to have a modern mobile device that you can read with on the couch or on public transport. There are two main types of mobile devices you can use to read books from libraries, these are tablets such as the Apple iPad and the Google Nexus 7, and dedicated eReaders such as the Kobo and Sony Reader.

Image by uncafelitoalasonce (source).
eReaders are dedicated book reading devices that use e-ink to display text. eReaders are great because they can go for over a month without a battery recharge. Unlike tablets they also work very well in direct sunlight so they’re great for when you want to travel. Unfortunately newer eReaders only work well with modern eBook formats and not so well with all library eBooks. Curtin Library has some specialist collections that you can use with eReaders. Look here for more information.
Tablets let you do much more than read books. With this added power though comes downsides with the need to recharge your device more often and reduced visibility in sunlight. On the other hand you can more easily read both modern book formats as well as more traditional formats. To find out more about how you an access Curtin Library eBooks on your tablet look here for more information.

Image by Jay L. Clendenin (source).
Over the last year I have been reading almost all my eBooks on my iPhone, although most of the books I read are fiction and easily available from eBook stores. It tends to be the device I have all the time and I tend to read lots on public transport. Library materials for phones still have a way to go but progress is being made. All the eBooks usable on eReaders (above) work on mobile phones. Also many of the general library eBooks work adequately on phones with improvements being made every day. If you’re interested in investigating library resources for your phone you might like to check out Curtin Library’s recently redeveloped mobile website at m.library.curtin.edu.au.
About the AuthorMichael Wiebrands is the manager of the Access Team in the Robertson Library. Find out more about him here

Monday, July 2, 2012

Digital age takes libraries off the shelf

June 30, 2012
Ryan Stokes, the new chairman of National Library of Australia pictured in ACE Equity, The Villa, Woolloomooloo, Sydney. 27th June 2012. Photo by Tamara Dean
Ryan Stokes ... new technology can enable more people to enjoy collections. Photo: Tamara Dean

There is much more to Ryan Stokes's new role than books, writes Catherine Armitage.
In 2012, it is possible to interview the incoming chairman of the National Library of Australia about his new role with no mention of the word "books".
I realise this as, in vain, I scour my notebook pages headed "Ryan Stokes" for the two simple shorthand strokes denoting those familiar bound paper objects which, after all, still comprise more than half the library's collection of 6.24 million items.
No luck. Everywhere, though, are the words "digital", "digitised" and "digitalisation".
The 36-year-old scion of his father Kerry's diversified media and mining services empire, with a Bachelor of Commerce from Perth's Curtin University, makes no claims as a scholar or a lover of books even when invited to do so. Instead what he brings to the position, according to the federal Arts Minister, Simon Crean, is "a wealth of business, media and entrepreneurial expertise", not to mention connections.
In particular, Crean said in announcing the appointment, Stokes had "shown leadership in driving digital content and developing the digital economy". This presumably refers to his stewardship of the wireless broadband provider Vividwireless, which Seven Group Holdings recently sold to Optus for $230 million.
In his own words, Stokes brings a "great interest" and ''passion'' for the "treasures that are in the library, the uniqueness of that material and its meaning to Australia". He is also an admirer of the world-leading work the library has done in digitising the physical collections and archiving material that originates in digital form, such as websites.
Our interview takes place in a meeting room at his Sydney office where the walls are thick with 19th-century Australian landscapes by famous named artists. It is a reminder that his father has one of Australia's most highly regarded collections of art and historical objects. Some of these have been lent for National Library exhibitions, which is just one way Stokes came into the orbit of both the NLA and the Arts Minister. (He was also the chairman for three years of the federal government's National Youth Mental Health Foundation, or headspace, until 2008 and is on the board of the Perth International Arts Festival.)
Ships in stormy seas are also heavily represented on the walls. But Stokes, whose carefully articulated sentences punctuated by hand movements suggest media training more than assurance, indicates he will seek plenty of counsel to run the ship steady when he officially replaces the former chief justice of the NSW Supreme Court Jim Spigelman as the NLA chairman from tomorrow.
He is impressed by the strength of the organisation and its executive team. The council he heads "brings a great wealth of experience", he says. Its role is "to assist the executive team" and to "help set the direction as we look at some of the longer term questions around digitisation and other collection issues".
The goals for his three-year term as chairman are to broaden the collections and extend the use of technology as a "wonderful enabler" to "broaden the reach and relevance" of the collections for both their information and cultural heritage value.
On the face of it, the digital revolution that has pundits sounding the death knell for the printed word sounds like bad news for libraries. So it's a surprise that the nation's two most senior librarians argue that Google is great for business.
Google is the library's friend because it has "turned people on to information", Dr Alex Byrne, the state librarian of NSW, says. Where once only highly educated people looked things up, "now you see it across the population", Byrne says.
The library's director-general, Anne-Marie Schwirtlich, says the work of libraries and the skills they embody will be more important than ever as people face the task of navigating masses of information and finding the relevant and authoritative bits so they can make good decisions. Reading, she says, is the "building block of digital literacy".
As libraries work feverishly to digitise their physical collections, the interactive nature of digital learning is transforming libraries from studious environments to social ones.
They are no longer places where people go to be sequestered in silent solitude with a book, although that is still catered for. Libraries are instead being remade as safe communal spaces with comfortable furniture in which to loll, "where people come to relax, educate their kids, study for school or university, look up information for careers or business or pursue interests in retirement", Byrne says. In NSW, they also provide electronic access to government services such as car registration and taxation.
This week, it was revealed the City of Sydney is planning a new $40 million library, including an arts and craft space, commercial kitchen, community meeting rooms and a customer service centre. The library is envisaged as the heart of the Green Square urban renewal project just south of Sydney's central business district.
Libraries are "physically much less warehouses of books and now very much the work rooms and the living rooms", Byrne says.
He is all for the idea that the State Library of NSW might open 24 hours a day as part of the City of Sydney's plan to boost its late-night economy. ''It's good use of public infrastructure and provides a stimulating but safe community space in which people can interact, imagine, relax at all hours.'' But security and staffing issues would need careful attention, he says.
So far, visitor numbers are solid. In NSW, more than 3.3 million people, or 46 per cent of the population, were public library members in 2010. In the five years to 2010, the number of library visits rose 15 per cent and the number of books borrowed rose 7 per cent. In 2010, members of the public logged more than 2.4 million internet hours in libraries.
The ability to interact with libraries via the internet means log-ins will be no less important than in-person visits as a measure of the reach of libraries, especially when the national broadband network is in operation.
"We are only at the beginning of conceiving how we can use that capacity," Schwirtlich says. The amount of data the library can supply and the way people interact with it will be transformed. Curatorial experts physically visible to community groups or classes on the other side of the country will be able to conduct virtual tours of collections.
Stokes says "continuing to enrich the experiences available for free" remains a core objective for the NLA under his stewardship.
Schwirtlich reminds that, powerful as it is, Google does not pay for and provide access to the mass of information resources in libraries, which have always played a vital social role in giving people access to information regardless of their wealth.
The ''purposeful, long-term, methodical, expert work of collecting, cataloguing and archiving'' remains vital to the nation, she says. "The future is tethered, shaped, informed and nourished by the past."