[Baynet] Infopeople has scheduled additional sessions of the
"Weeding for Your Library's Health" workshop
Linda Rodenspiel
assist at infopeople.org
Wed Nov 29 10:24:11 PST 2006
Since some people who may be interested in attending might not receive this
notice directly, we would appreciate it if you would print and post or
route this announcement to staff and colleagues. Thanks!
Title: Weeding for Your Library's Health
Dates and locations:
Wednesday, January 31, Buena Park Library District
Friday, February 16, Alameda County Library - Fremont
Wednesday, February 28, Los Angeles Public Library
To register for this workshop: Use the online registration form at
http://www.infopeople.org/workshop/300
Fee: There is a $75.00 fee for this workshop.
Are you looking for a great way to help people find their way through your
collections? Maybe you need to weed! Even though the prospect of weeding
can make both staff and users uncomfortable, no library should overlook the
value of well-considered pruning.
Does your library maintain a regular weeding schedule?
Have you wondered how to make weeding more politically acceptable?
Do you know where to turn for weeding guidance for various subjects and
formats?
Would you like to stay ahead of the curve so that major weeding projects
don't overwhelm you or your resources?
As long as library materials suffer physical damage, and as long as
intellectual content changes to reflect new discoveries, laws, and customs,
formerly useful library holdings will continue to become obsolete or even
dangerous. In this workshop, you will become acquainted with tools that can
help you weed regularly and intelligently. You will also learn how to
discuss the benefits of and necessity for weeding with both your staff and
your public.
Workshop Description: This all-day course will provide students with both
conceptual and practical information about weeding library collections,
including the political impact weeding may have on your community's view of
the library. Through individual and group exercises, students will learn to
prioritize weeding schedules to match their collections and staff
resources, to budget so that regular replacements allow damaged material to
be weeded without loss of intellectual content, and to articulate the
weeding message effectively for your community. You will practice your new
skills by completing a weeding plan for one part of your collection (either
a subject area or a format collection). The instructor will provide sample
plans, templates, cheat sheets, and a webliography, as well as practical,
useful tips that can be applied immediately.
Pre-workshop assignment: Before the day of the class, please familiarize
yourself with your library's current weeding plan. If there is a written
weeding policy or public information about weeding posted at your library,
please being samples of those documents with you to class for sharing. If
no such documentation exists at your library, please list five truths about
how weeding is handled at your library so that you can share this
information during class discussion.
Preliminary Course Outline
The Need to Weed
--Material and intellectual changes addressed by weeding
--Space constraints and moving projects
--Planning for change by examining use trends
--Maintaining a healthy and useful collection
Budgeting Time and Costs
--Budgeting staff time for weeding tasks
--Budgeting materials funds for ongoing replacements
--Budgeting special weeding projects
--Using data to inform weeding budgets
Weeding as a Sacred Cow
--Communicating about weeding with library staff
--Educating the public about the need to weed
--Proactive publicity
Making Weeding Part of Your Library's Life
--Normalizing consistent and ongoing weeding
--Publishing your weeding policy and practices
--Training weeding staff
Workshop Instructor: Francisca Goldsmith. Francisca is the Collection
Management and Promotion Librarian at Berkeley Public Library. She has
planned and implemented weeding projects related to ongoing maintenance as
well as to library relocation, space issues, and collection neglect, in
both public and school libraries. She has worked with school administrators
and with public library staffs who have needed appropriate training to
support local weeding projects.
Who Should Attend: Anyone from the California library community who must
respond to weeding needs, including those who work on collection planning,
materials selection, shelving, and publicity related to weeding.
Prerequisites: None
Other Logistics:
*On-site check-in is from 8:30-9:00 AM; instruction is from 9:00 AM-4:30 PM.
*Maps, directions, and parking information are available on the Infopeople
website at http://infopeople.org/workshop/location Infopeople does not
validate or pay for parking.
*Infopeople does not provide refreshments or lunch. Since some training
locations do not have in-house or convenient food service, Infopeople
recommends that participants bring a sack lunch.
To view a complete list of Infopeople workshops and for general information
about Infopeople training opportunities, go to the main Infopeople
Workshops page at http://www.infopeople.org/workshop
If you have questions about registration or scheduling of workshops, please
contact Linda Rodenspiel, the Infopeople Project Assistant, at
assist at infopeople.org or by phone at 650-578-9685.
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