السلام
عليكم ورحمة الله وبركاته،
السادة
زوار المدونة الكرام، أقدم لكم اليوم مجموعة جديدة من الندوات المهنية المتخصصة في
مجال المكتبات والمعلومات والتى يتم عقدها وبثها عبر شبكة الإنترنت مجاناً، وفيما
يلي عرضاً مفصلاً لها.
قاعة
اليسير للتعليم عن بُعد
"ورشة عمل بعنوان: الفهرسة
المقروءة آليا وإستخدام نظام المستقبل لإدارة المكتبات"
التاريخ
والوقت: يوم الثلاثاء 2 ديسمبر 2014 -
الخميس 4 ديسمبر 2014. الساعة 3 مساء بتوقيت القاهرة، 4 مساء بتوقيت مكة
المكرمة، 5 مساء بتوقيت الإمارات.
المحاضرون:
الأستاذ/
محمود الضوى، باحث ماجستير ومسئول الفهرس عن محافظة قنا
الأستاذ/
محمد عبد الله، باحث ماجستير ومسئول الفهرس عن محافظة قنا
الأستاذ/
مصطفى جنبه، مشرف عام الفهرس المدرسي
* يُقسم التدريب
اليومي إلى فقرتين فقره للشرح من الساعة 3 إلى 5 وفاصل وقت صلاة المغرب إن شاء
الله ثم وقت للمناقشة
في إطار موضوع المحاضرة من بعد الساعة 5 وحتى 6 إن شاء الله تعالى.
WebJunction Webinars
“Geek
the Library: Impact and Outcomes”
Date
& Time: 4
December 2014. 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, North
America [UTC -5]
Presenters:
-
Anne Gienapp, Affiliated Senior Associate, ORSImpact
-
Ava Ehde, Library Services Manager - Administration, Neighborhood
Services Department, Manatee County Public Library System, FL
-
Andy Schuck, Head of Youth Services, William P. Faust Public Library of
Westland, MI
-
Sara DeVries, Marketing PR Manager, Herrick District Library, MI
Description:
Geek
the Library, the public awareness campaign funded by the Gates Foundation and
managed by OCLC, is being conducted by 1,800+ public libraries across 48 states
through June 2015. In this webinar, we will hear from the evaluation team at
ORS Impact, who have been conducting assessments of the program and compiled
some remarkable data and stories from libraries who have completed their Geek
the Library campaigns. These mostly rural
libraries, serving very small to medium-sized communities, report improvements
in staff marketing and advocacy skills, have seen an increase in public support
for their libraries, as well as positive changes in funding resources. Geek the
Library has shifted how people think about their local library, has changed how
libraries interact with their community, and has been a game changer in a
number of local funding situations. We will also hear directly from some of
your library colleagues who have finished their Geek campaigns and who can talk
about how their library's relationship with the community has irrevocably
changed for the better. Whether or not you are a Geek library, we know you will
be inspired by these results!
“Rural Resources and Funding: The Rural
Information Center”
Date
& Time: 10
December 2014. 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Eastern
Standard Time, North America [UTC -5]
Presenter: Mary Louise Reynnells, Technical
Information Specialist, USDA, Rural Information Center, Sustainable Systems
& Communities Program, National Agricultural Library
Description: Established in 1987, by the USDA as a service of the National
Agricultural Library, the Rural
Information Center (RIC) assists rural communities by
providing information and referral services to local, tribal, state, and
federal government officials; community organizations; libraries; businesses;
and citizens working to maintain the vitality of America's rural areas. RIC
provides information and tools to support our nation’s rural communities. Join
us for this webinar to learn more about RIC services for rural libraries
including connecting to resources for funding, the number one information
request handled by the librarians and information specialists who staff the
center.
“Scoping and Funding Crowdsourcing
Projects”
Date & Time: 11 December 2014. 12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
Eastern Standard Time, North America [UTC -5]
Presenters:
Sharon
Leon, Director of Public Projects at the Center for
History and New Media and Associate Professor in the History and Art History; Robert
Horton, IMLS Associate Deputy Director for Library
Services and Brett
Bobley, Director and Chief Information Officer for the
National Endowment for the Humanities.
Description: Description: Crowdsourcing
techniques are increasingly utilized by organizations and
institutions—including libraries and museums—seeking to gather vast amounts of
new knowledge and participation from online contributors. In this fast-paced,
hour-long session with funders, you'll learn how to pitch your crowdsourcing
project ideas to funding agencies. You’ll also hear a short recap of our
groups’ first webinar Crowdsourcing 101 by
CCLA Research Fellow, Christina Manzo. Our speakers include program officers
from the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the Institute of
Museum and Library Services (IMLS). Learn which funders could be right for your
project, what kinds of topics and questions interest these agencies, and how to
build on existing crowdsourcing resources.
This
webinar is part of the newly formed Crowdsourcing Consortium for Libraries
and Archives (CCLA). Funded by the Institute of
Museum and Library Services (IMLS), the goal of CCLA is to forge
national/international partnerships to advance the use of crowdsourcing
technologies, tools, user experiences, and platforms to help libraries,
museums, archives, and more.
Infopeople
Webinars
“Youth Development in Action”
Date
& Time: December
3rd, 2014. Start Time: Pacific - 12 Noon, Mountain - 1
PM, Central - 2 PM, Eastern - 3 PM
Description:
-
Do your staff ever roll their eyes whenever young people come into the
building?
-
How do we enable our library institutions to move from the mindset of serving
youth to that of working with youth?
Take
a journey with Yolo County Librarian Patty Wong as she shares her work with
staff in three institutions using youth development as a model. Learn how
groups have transformed themselves into organizations that consider safety,
support and opportunities for youth and also include youth voice in their
service development.
At
the end of this one-hour webinar, participants will:
-
Understand the framework of youth development as a strategic and
strengths-based set of actions to provide positive opportunities for youth to
develop and enhance their interests, skills and abilities
-
Learn how libraries have incorporated youth development in their operations at
high levels and low levels
-
Identify other youth development
organizations as potential partners
This
webinar will be of interest to library staff working with teens and interesting
in partnering with other local agencies.
Webinars
are free of charge; you can pre-register by clicking on the Register Now button
(at the top and bottom of this page). If registering with less than 30
MINUTES from the start of the webinar you can join directly from the thank you
page by clicking the Join Now button. If you
pre-registered you will receive an email with login link and a reminder email
the day before the event.
“Value-Added Facilitation”
Date & Time: December 10th,
2014. Start
Time: Pacific - 12 Noon,
Mountain - 1 PM, Central - 2 PM, Eastern - 3 PM
Description:
As
library work becomes more team oriented and community focused, we find
ourselves participating in more meetings. The accepted wisdom is that
designating a facilitator will ensure that meeting time is well spent. Is that
true for your library? Even when someone is facilitating,
-
Do meetings tend to be all talk and no action?
-
Can a few outspoken participants dominate the conversation?
-
Does the group sometimes have trouble moving from brainstorming to
decision-making?
-
Does lack of information or disagreement about the facts impede progress?
-
Do the people with the ideas lack the authority to implement them?
-
Do long standing conflicts resurface so that nothing gets resolved?
Sound
familiar? It may be time to rethink your approach to meeting facilitation. In
this lively webinar, we will explore ways to reinvigorate the facilitator role
to add more value to the meeting process. You will learn skills that can
elevate facilitation beyond simply calling on meeting participants and
recording their comments. Our focus will be on active facilitation tips and
techniques, including how to:
-
Stay neutral on content while exerting leadership on process,
-
Frame questions and set expectations,
-
Analyze comments in real time and sort them for ease of comparison,
-
Identify and address gaps in the discussion,
-
Resolve conflicts and reach consensus, and
-
Create work products that allow ideas to move forward.
If
you are a member of the library community who is already – or might someday be
– called upon to act as a facilitator, this webinar will help you improve your
effectiveness, increase your value to your organization, and make more
productive use of meeting time.
This
webinar will be of interest to library staff at all levels, as well as library
friends, trustees, and commissioners.
Webinars
are free of charge; you can pre-register by clicking on the Register Now button
(at the top and bottom of this page). If registering with less than 30
MINUTES from the start of the webinar you can join directly from the thank you
page by clicking the Join Now button. If you
pre-registered you will receive an email with login link and a reminder email
the day before the event.
“The California Digital Newspaper
Collection: an introduction”
Date & Time: December 17th,
2014. Start Time: Pacific
- 12 Noon, Mountain - 1 PM, Central - 2 PM, Eastern - 3 PM.
Description:
-
Is your California library considering a newspaper digitization project?
If
so, the California Digital Newspaper Collection (CDNC) is a very import
resource for you.
Join
Brian Geiger, Director of the Center for Bibliographic Studies and Research at
the University of California, Riverside and manager of a number of digitization
and digital humanities projects, including the CDNC, for this introduction and
explanation of the project.
In
this one-hour webinar, you will know about:
-
The CDNC and its high value for researchers and library practitioners
-
The free professional consultation services that the CDNC offers to California
libraries and other “memory” institutions
-
How you can collaborate with the CDNC to digitize and make your newspapers
available online.
This
webinar will be of interest to staff in all types of California libraries
involved in research and digitization projects.
Webinars
are free of charge; you can pre-register by clicking on the Register Now button
(at the top and bottom of this page). If registering with less than 30 MINUTES
from the start of the webinar you can join directly from the thank you page by
clicking the Join Now button. If you pre-registered you will
receive an email with login link and a reminder email the day before the event.
Carterette
Series Webinar
(Georgia Library
Association and the Georgia Public Library Service)
“Jumping into the Digital Humanities”
Date & Time: December 3, 2014 from
2:00pm - 3:00pm Eastern Standard Time
Presenter: Sarah V.
Melton, In addition to being heavily involved in open access advocacy,
Sarah V. Melton is creating a set of tools to make open access publishing
easier and worked with over 20 librarians from historically black colleges and
universities to host a summer institute for digital scholarship. While rapidly
becoming a digital humanities guru, Sarah is also completing her PhD in
American Studies. Her research focuses on the public memory of human rights
struggle.
Description: Sarah V. Melton,
Digital Projects Coordinator at the Emory Center for Digital Humanities, will
introduce digital humanities (DH) newbies to some of the concepts, tools, and
conversations in DH. How are researchers using digital tools in their
classrooms and scholarship? What are the possibilities for student research in
the digital humanities? How can libraries and librarians support this work?
Oclc Webinars
“WorldShare Management Services Online
Chat”
Date & Time: 2 December 2014.
2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, North America [UTC -5]
Description: Join the WorldShare
Management Services (WMS) product team and librarians using
WMS in this online chat. Get answers to your questions and talk about your
current workflows and the challenges they create for your library staff and
library users.
“Managing your print collection life cycle: A WorldShare
Management Services overview demonstration”
Date
& Time: 4
December 2014. 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, North America
[UTC -5]
Description: During this one-hour
overview demonstration of WorldShare Management Services, you will:
-
See how the services help you to simplify your library management workflows
-
Learn how the services improve discovery and access of your library’s physical
collections, including print monographs, serials and multi-volume works
-
Understand how WorldShare Management Services free libraries from the
restrictions of local hardware and software to provide more time to focus on
serving users and their community.
“Simplifying circulation and course
reserves - A detailed demonstration in WorldShare Circulation”
Date & Time: 9 December 2014.
2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, North America [UTC -5]
Description: During this one-hour
detailed demonstration of WorldShare Management Services, you will learn how
you can streamline all of your circulation tasks through a single, Web-based
interface. You’ll also learn how your library operations can be performed on
any tablet, laptop, smartphone or device with a Web browser. The portability of
these devices means you can more easily complete tasks, such as inventory,
because you carry out the tasks in your library’s stacks.
-
Circulation: You will see how to easily use the account management functions,
including check-in, check-out and renewals, as well as integrated hold and fine
management. We will demonstrate how the services track availability and holds
in real time, enabling libraries to generate a pull list on demand.
-
Course Reserves: You will see how easy it is for anyone, including student
workers, to create and duplicate a list, and store everything electronically.
“EZproxy Support Site Update”
Date & Time: 10 December 2014.
11:00 AM – 12:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, North America [UTC -5]
Description: Join
Susan Musser, EZproxy information developer, and Don Hamparian, senior product
manager, for a preview of changes coming to the EZproxy support site.
The EZproxy support site provides EZproxy users
with documentation about the software, how to configure and use it, and how to
address problems. The new site will make the information more accessible, and
the content will be improved. In this webinar, we’ll provide a high-level
overview of the changes and preview samples of specific documentation pages to
show you what the new site will look like. After hearing about the coming changes,
you’ll have the opportunity to provide feedback to help us further improve the
site.
“Introduction to EZproxy hosted service
webinar”
Date & Time: 11 December 2014.
11:00 AM – 12:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, North America [UTC -5]
Description: Join
Don Hamparian, Senior Product Manager at OCLC, to learn about the EZproxy
hosted service: hear how your library would benefit from the hosted solution,
see how it works, and learn the steps to implement. We’ll also review upcoming
releases and service improvements.
“Putting the WorldCat in WorldCat Discovery”
Date & Time: 11 December 2014.
2:00 PM – 3:00 PM Eastern Standard Time, North America [UTC -5]
Description: WorldCat Discovery
Services enable people to discover more than 1.5 billion electronic, digital
and physical resources in your library and libraries around the world through a
single search.
In this session, you
will see the latest enhancements to WorldCat Discovery Services, available to
all current FirstSearch subscribers as part of renewed and existing
subscriptions. You'll also learn how new Google Analytics, APIs and integrated
interlibrary loan capabilities give you even more reason to transition to
WorldCat Discovery Services.
Texas State
Library and Archives Commission Webinars
“Low Vision Resources to Better Serve
Your Patrons”
Date
& Time: Thu,
Dec 4, 2014 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM SAST
Description: With both the elderly
population and those with diabetes on the rise, the number of people with
vision impairments is also increasing. In this webinar, librarians and other
professionals will learn about the different types of eye diseases, available
technology, and national, state, and local resources designed to assist people
with sight disabilities. The Disability and Information Center (DIRC), part of
the Texas Talking Book Program, can help Texas residents with information and
resources concerning disabilities and health conditions.
“E-rate Modernization Update”
Date
& Time: Tue,
Dec 9, 2014 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM SAST
Description:
Join
Henry Stokes, TSLAC Library Technology Consultant and the state's E-rate
Coordinator for libraries, as he provides an update on the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC)'s recently adopted E-rate Modernization Order,
which takes major steps to modernize and streamline the telecommunications
discount program. He will provide a brief overview of E-rate - its application
process, rules, and requirements, and summarize the new changes libraries can
expect when pursuing their discounts.
“Edge Reimbursement Program Overview”
Date & Time: Tue, Dec 16, 2014
10:00 PM - 11:00 PM SAST
Description: Sixty-nine
public libraries participated in the first round of Edge reimbursement funding
earlier this year. They purchased laptops, monitors, ereaders, adaptive
equipment, software, and more to meet the public access technology needs of
their communities. The Texas State Library is now rolling out a second round of
funding for libraries that have completed or plan to complete the online Edge
assessment. Join Jennifer Peters, Community Engagement Administrator, and Tamra
Lavin, Grants Accountant, as they provide information and answer your questions
about applying for Round 2 of the Edge Reimbursement Program. If you’re a library
director, grantwriter, or involved with technology acquisition, you may want to
learn more about how this reimbursement program works.
خالص
تحياتي وتقديري،
غدير
مجدي عبد الوهاب