Mat Kearney Promotes Nashville Public Library in New Campaign

By , February 7, 2012 8:06 pm
Posted by on February 7, 2012 in Daily | 0 Comment

http://educationviews.org/2012/02/07/mat-kearney-promotes-nashville-public-library-in-new-campaign/

Discover NPL Campaign Shows Library’s Relevance with ebook Downloads

Nashville, TENN.- Singer-songwriter Mat Kearney loves to read and shares the message in a new public service announcement entitled Discover NPL, a Nashville Public Library campaign promoting ebook downloads. Kearney, whose song “Ships In The Night” is in the intro to the new NBC show Awake, shares his passion and support for the library, where books are only half the story.

“The library continues to change with the times and remain a relevant resource for all people of all ages,” stated Nashville Public Library spokesperson Renuka Christoph. “The Discover NPL campaign is designed to convey the importance and value of the library to millennials.”

Downloads, which also include audio and music, are convenient and free. All that is required is a membership card. In addition, Nashville Public Library offers hands on gadget training on how to download at each of its 21 branches.

Novel idea unleashes surge in Limitless Libraries usage

By , February 7, 2012 7:47 pm

The Tennessean Nov. 21, 2011

 

 

Before the school day begins, Brandon Munoz is already in the library.The Goodlettsville Middle School sixth-grader is averaging about

20 books a week. His favorites are graphic novels such as the Diary of the Wimpy Kid or Darth Paper Strikes Back.

Just last school year, he mostly visited the library out of obligation,

but an agreement between the school district and

Nashville PublicLibrary
— called Limitless Libraries — is making things a little more

interesting. Metro middle and high schoolers can use their home or school computers to check out books, DVDs and
CDs from the Nashville Public Library and have them delivered to their schools.

Library officials in New York City, Boston and St. Paul, Minn., have called Metro in recent months, interested in implementing similar initiatives.

The program also includes updating school libraries. In the past few months, 31,730 titles have been removed from middle andhigh schools — some with copyrights dating back to the 1970s, including science books with Pluto included as a planet. New books include Advanced Placement prep volumesand popular fiction titles such as The Hunger Games and the Twilight  saga.

“Its fun to read as it just takes you to another place and boosts your imagination,” said Brandon, 11. “I m raising my reading grades

since Limited Libraries has started.” The program launched as a pilot in 2009 in four Metro high schools. The program

 

expanded to all high schools in 2010 and to middle schools this year.

 

Limitless Libraries is sending more than 7,000 items a month to Metro schools, similar to the circulation at some library branches.

 

Circulation has increased in schools, some as high as 140 percent, library officials say.

 

“We are seeing overwhelming successes,” said Tricia Bengel, interim director at Nashville Public Library. “Kids are borrowing

 

more books than they have ever borrowed, and they have access to different types of materials than they have even had before. Its a

good problem to have, but we are struggling a little bit to keep up with the increase in circulation.

 

“It benefits the library because we’ve added 15,000 patrons that we didnt have before. We are building our patrons of tomorrow.”

 

 

‘A model for others’

Students use their student ID as their library card and log onto the Limitless Libraries system to request materials be delivered to their

school. They have access not only to their school collections but also to more than 1.5 million items from the Nashville Public

Library. More than 23,952 students are participating — 15,000 of them as new librarycardholders

Students new to this country or with poor English skills check out required reading in audio book format to help them learn the language.

Mayor Karl Dean was instrumental in forging the partnership between Metro Schools and the Nashville Public Library. It was at a time when only 14 of the districts 16 high schools had the volumes required per student to meet state Department of Education standards, and much of the material was outdated, he said.

 

“This takes advantage of a great library system and helps us improve the library systems that our kids in schools have access

 

to,” Dean said. “It’s a model for others in how we should be organizing … libraries.

 

“It’s a compliment to our libraries and schools that other cities want to adopt this program.”

 

For the 2012 fiscal year, $1.196 million have been placed in the budget for the Limitless Libraries program. Library officials hope to expand it to elementary schools next year.

 

 

 

Obstacle overcome

Allison Barney, librarian at Wright Middle School, said the program helps eliminate one of the main barriers students have in accessingitems from the public library — transportation. Since the program started at Goodlettsville Middle School in September, an average of 60 kids use the library daily, outside of time required by their teachers. Alison Maliszewski, the schools first-year librarian, is bombarded daily with kids asking the same question: “Are my books here yet?” She says she can get new releases as quickly as the public library can.

Popular titles are always the first to go, along with Playaways, preloaded mini mp3 audio books.

 

“For a new librarian, I feel like I have so much more to offer them,” said Maliszewski, who previously taught fifth grade at the school.

 

“Ive seen a lot of kids that were not typical readers that are now coming in here. Anytime they are reading, its going to increase their scores. Our collection has expanded one hundredfold.”

Many of her students are checking books out for siblings and parents.

“Im now the librarian in my house,” Brandon said. “Every time I get a chance to get on the computer , my little brothers keep asking me

to get on Limitless Libraries.”

Contact Nancy DeVille at 615-259-8304 or

ndeville@tennessean.com

Detroit Public Library has plan to capitalize on e-book age

By , February 7, 2012 7:25 pm

The Detroit Regional News Hub

January 19, 2012

Contrary to popular opinion the internet and cell phones have not relegated libraries to “relic” status. Instead, this modern technology can give them a new lease on life … a new mission for those who choose to accept it, if you will. Jo Anne MondowneyYes it’s true. Thanks to Detroit’s strapped financial condition a number of neighborhood libraries are closing but Jo Anne Mondowney, executive director of the Detroit Public Library, has a plan. She wants to take the library to the neighborhoods … virtually. Thanks to the modern technology so many thought would render libraries insignificant she has the means to create an electronic book mobile. She just needs funding to get it done. “Our neighborhoods have a passion for the libraries,” she says, emphasizing that no one wanted to close the libraries and that the Detroit Public Library is doing all in its power to fill the gap. Here’s how the program would work. If you’re old enough to remember ordering books from the Scholastic Magazine and then waiting excitedly for a few weeks to get them her plan will ring a bell. Students will be able use the computers at their schools to borrow books from the Detroit Public Library.

 

The library will send the books to the schools and the schools will send them back. Or, if the student has an iPad, iPhone or Kindle, the books could be downloaded. Books can be checked out for three weeks. Yes, Virginia, there will be still fines if the books are late. “Kids want to learn,” Mondowney says. “They get excited when a new book arrives. They have a basic desire and excitement to learn.” The Detroit Public Library has a lot to choose from. It is the 20th largest library in the nation with just under 7.3 million volumes. There is a catch. They have to work out how many licenses the library has for each book before the program could into effect. Mondowney is on it and is working with organizations such as Random House to find a solution. “We need to work it out like Apple did with streaming music … or like Amazon did,” she says” Amazon was an early adapter for books on line. “We can promote reading like never before,” she says.”We cannot do things the old way. We must look at how things are packaged for this generation.” The idea comes from a similar program called Limitless Libraries in Nashville. When the program was fully implemented in all district high schools there circulation increased by 125 percent during the 2010-2011 school year, making an extensive collection of 1.5 million items and all the resources of the Nashville Public Library available to faculty and students. “As a child, if the library by me would have closed my life would be been diminished. I was introduced to such heroines as Anne Frank,” she says. “The library is the biggest treasure we have. It is like winning the lottery.” As Lady Bird Johnson once said “Perhaps no place in any community is so totally democratic as the town library. The only entrance requirement is interest.” Detroit’s neighborhoods have that interest. p align=”center”>New Labs Will Serve as National Prototypes

Nashville Library Delivery Service Boosts Literacy

By , February 6, 2012 3:01 pm

Instead of waiting for students to go to the library, which can be difficult since most aren’t of driving age, Nashville Public Library is bringing the books to them.

http://www.governing.com/Nashville-Library-Delivery-Service-Boosts-Literacy.html

As of this year, all middle and high school students in the Nashville metro area can be bookworms without ever setting foot in a public library. With a few clicks, high school and middle students can check out books, DVDs and CDs online from Nashville Public Library and pick them up at their school. The online delivery service, called Limitless Libraries, has not only inspired more students to get library cards but also increased the library’s circulation so much that its employees are having trouble keeping up with the demand. “It’s a good problem to have [though],” the library’s interim director, Tricia Bengel, told the Tennessean. And it’s a problem that other school districts want. New York City started a similar program last month, and Boston and St. Paul, Minn., have also expressed interest in bringing it to their schools. Limitless Libraries started as a pilot in 2009 and its leaders hope to expand it to elementary schools next year.

Taylor Swift Donates 14,000 Books to Nashville Public Library

By , February 2, 2012 10:45 pm
CMT news Feb 1

Taylor Swift has donated 14,000 Scholastic books to the Nashville Public Library. The book donation is one of the largest received by the local library. Books may be checked out at each of the city’s 21 branches. In addition, some of the books will be donated to low-income children, preschools and daycare centers while others will be used as prizes for completing the summer reading program. Each book will have a donation plate on the inside cover that will read: “A Gift to the Children of Nashville from Taylor Swift and Scholastic Inc.”

 2/5/2012 10:00 PM ET
(RTTNews)

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Bulger’s Beat: Cartoonist’s sharp mind keeps audience laughing

By , February 2, 2012 9:55 pm

WSMV-TV

updated 1/30/2012

A cartoonist whose work appears in 400 newspapers across the country every day is demonstrating the challenge that comes with a one-panel illustration.

A Sharpie and a sharp mind are the only tools Leigh Rubin needs to make people laugh day after day.

His often-warped, but funny, takes on the world of animals and vegetables have made him a familiar fix in the funny pages for 28 years now.

And now, Rubin is visiting town for an appearance Tuesday night at the Nashville Library.

“Where do I want to go from here?” Rubin says, is the question he faces every day.

He is curious how his mind will take his cartoon to anywhere but the obvious.

“It has got to have a twist to it, not necessarily twisted in a demented way. People may have thought of it but never told anyone else,” he said.

 

His one-panel cartoons are designed to make readers think.

“Laugh if they’re not laughing. I don’t mind if they say they don’t get it, then a few seconds later it pops in. That’s my favorite part, that delayed reaction,” Rubin said.

With a cow painted guitar, Rubin and his 16-year-old son Andrew will liven up the Nashville Library lecture series Tuesday night.

It’s a real family affair, and his only barometer of the bizarre is his wife.

“If I show it to my wife and she says it’s sick, it gets published,” Rubin said. “If she says it’s cute then I feel I failed. Then I have to go back to the drawing board.”

His is a career inspired by classroom doodles at the age of 9.

“Never underestimate the power of your third-grade teacher,” he said.

While he did not take the normal path to success, Rubin says he is never looking for normal.

“What a great gig, this is a lot of fun,” he said.

You can see Rubin and his cartoons Tuesday night at 7 p.m. at the Nashville Library’s main branch at 615 Church St.

The program called “A Twisted Mind is a Terrible Thing to Waste” is free to attend.

Taylor Swift Racks Up More Gold and Platinum Certifications, Makes Big Library Donation

By , February 2, 2012 5:53 pm

Taylor Swift‘s latest album, Speak Now, has reached quadruple platinum status for shipment of four million copies. Her 2007 release The Taylor Swift Holiday Collectionhas also been certified gold. As for Taylor’s singles, “You Belong with Me” has been certified quadruple platinum for four million downloads. Her latest single, “Ours,” has also been certified gold for 500,000 downloads.

Taylor’s also giving back to her community in a big way.  She’s donated 14,000 Scholastic books to the Nashville Public Library.  It’s one of the biggest book donations in the library’s history.  The books will be available for checkout at all of the library’s 21 branches and some of them will be distributed to low-income children, pre-schools and daycare centers.  Another portion of the books will be used as incentives in summer reading programs.  Each book will include the inscription: “A Gift to the Children of Nashville from Taylor Swift and Scholastic Inc.”

Copyright 2012 ABC News Radio

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