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Our electronic future: key issues & developments for ICT in Public Libraries and their impact on children

UKOLN is supported by:. Our electronic future: key issues & developments for ICT in Public Libraries and their impact on children. Penny Garrod UKOLN University of Bath Bath, BA2 7AY. Email p.garrod@ukoln.ac.uk URL http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/. UKOLN.

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Our electronic future: key issues & developments for ICT in Public Libraries and their impact on children

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  1. UKOLN is supported by: Our electronic future: key issues & developments for ICT in Public Libraries and their impact on children Penny Garrod UKOLN University of Bath Bath, BA2 7AY Email p.garrod@ukoln.ac.uk URL http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/

  2. UKOLN • national focus of expertise in digital information management • based at the University of Bath • funded by: • JISC (Joint Information Systems Committee: Higher & Further Education sector); • Resource: The Council for Museums, Archives and Libraries • plus project funding (e.g. EU and JISC) • around 27 staff • carries out applied research (e.g. in metadata), software development and provides policy and advisory services

  3. ICT in UK public libraries: focusing on young users • Key Questions for librarians • What do today’s children and young people want from libraries? • What are their expectations? • What sort of services should libraries be providing? • What do they actually need? • How can libraries link in with schools, social services and all the other agencies dealing with children? • How can libraries attract and retain children and young people? • Can/should public libraries collaborate with private sector: ethical issues; money needed to sustain and develop services; public libraries offer free services.

  4. UK children: creating library services to meet their needs and expectations • Children are increasingly consumer oriented and materialistic • Their worlds revolve around popular culture: TV; pop and football stars; films, computer games etc. • They like and use modern technology: it’s “cool” (82% of 14-16 year olds own mobile phones); use games computers • They like the Internet and interactive media • Many have poor literacy skills and find reading difficult and books ‘boring’

  5. What do children need? • Help with literacy, numeracy and ICT skills • develop information literacy/ research skills; foster inquiring minds • encourage reading and promote books as relevant to their lives; libraries as places to ‘hang out’ with friends and use ICT • develop the creative imagination & thinking skills • motivate them to learn and to experiment with books, the Internet and multimedia ?Can ICT in libraries help with these?

  6. Learning from the best: examples of good practice Library Websites:Portal approach: developed & designed specifically for children & young people links to quality assured educational resources & pre-selected sites* Interactive features Quizzes and games Submit book reviews Links to other library materials: videos, DVDs, CDs etc .. Publicise homework clubs; out of school activities *filtering software has limitations

  7. Examples of good practice • Web-based services • Treasure IslandUKOLN 1997 pilot for Stories from the Web • Stories from the WebBirmingham Libraries:(website +clubs) • Library web sites • Suffolk County Council – children’s Book Zone; ‘fun sites’; links and activities; • Hillingdon - links include National Grid for Learning approved site e.g. ‘Dot’s Den’ • Nottinghamshire Libraries – builds on young children’s interests

  8. Treasure Island – the website http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/services/treasure /

  9. One of three Treasure Island activities

  10. Stories from the Web http://www.storiesfromtheweb.org/index.htm

  11. Suffolk County Council - Cyberlibrary for children

  12. London Borough of Hillingdon

  13. Nottingham: children’s page http://www.nottscc.gov.uk/libraries/

  14. ICT in Libraries: possible future scenarios? • 3rd generation mobile phones & PDAs: converged technologies • Ebooks: graphic books; key school texts • Virtual libraries: focus on websites and e-learning - less on buildings and bookstock • Web sites: increasingly adopt commercial models e.g. Amazon • Shared Information Environment: schools, museums, libraries, colleges, health & social services + retail & media: share resources & work in partnership. (public sector ethos versus consumerism?)

  15. Conclusions • ICT represents opportunity to capture hearts and minds of young people and make libraries relevant to their lives • Reading and literacy – harness interactive capability of the Internet to encourage children to read and improve literacy and information skills • 21st century children have high expectations based on consumer models and are happy using modern technology • Examples of good practice but not widespread – invest in children- they are the future • Any Questions?

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