Tuesday, January 24, 2012

[KMDG-L] REMINDER: Call for papers for Helsinki 2012: IFLA Knowledge Management Section


Call for papers for Knowledge Management Open Session

WLIC, Helsinki, August 2012

IFLA Knowledge Management (KM) Section provides an international platform for professional communication and understanding of the significance of KM for libraries. It gives a voice to KM on a global scale and follows the developments in KM, promoting its practical implementation within the global library community.

The 2012 WLIC Conference 

The annual IFLA World Library and Information Congress (WLIC) provides an opportunity to present innovative models, case studies and research.  Delegates and speakers from all parts of the world come together to discuss new developments and successful practice in libraries. The conference motto for the 2012 Conference in Helsinki, Finland is:

"Libraries Now! - Inspiring, Surprising, Empowering"

The IFLA Knowledge Management Section invites librarians and knowledge managers to submit proposals for papers in a 2-hour session at WLIC Helsinki, 11-17 August 2012.

The KM Conference Programme

"Potential of Knowledge Management in Public Libraries" is the KM Section’s theme for its 2012 Open Programme during the conference.  We are looking for speakers who can highlight use of KM, from a global and theoretical perspective but also with a practical aspect.  The focus should be on using KM in the public library setting, including reports from agencies whose tools support these KM initiatives.

We invite presentations that showcase:

-           Knowledge creation and knowledge sharing in public libraries particularly across boundaries of language, culture and technology

-           Innovative use of technology to support knowledge sharing, joint research and learning (workplace learning, e-learning)

-           Case studies in application of Knowledge Management tools that support the success of the library

Important Dates and Timelines

Submission: 

Please send an abstract of approximately 500 words, in English, no later than January 31, 2012 to: Agnes Hajdu Barat, Programme Chair (hajdu@jgypk.u-szeged.hu). Both abstracts and full papers should be submitted as a MS Word file by e-mail.  The abstracts will be reviewed by Programme Committee members of the Knowledge Management Section.

Please also attach a summary of the proposed paper, curriculum vitae of the author(s), contact details, professional affiliation(s), and a brief statement on their career(s). Also, a digital photograph(s) would be useful.

Proposed papers must be original and not have been published elsewhere.   Please attach a declaration about originality of the proposed paper and verify that it has not been published anywhere.


Selection:

Successful applicants will be notified by the end of February, 2012.


The selected presenters for the program at the
Helsinki conference will be asked to submit a formal paper (for inclusion on the IFLA conference website) no later than May 1, 2012. Papers can be submitted in one of the official IFLA working languages: Arabic, Chinese, English, French, German, Russian, Spanish.  Papers should be submitted with a one-page abstract in English. Papers should not be longer than 20 pages.  Papers must be original and not have been published elsewhere.  Selected papers may be nominated by the Section for inclusion in an IFLA publication.

Presentation at the Conference:

A maximum of 20 minutes will be allowed for the presentation of each paper during the Section's session in Helsinki. Please note, although every effort will be made to provide simultaneous interpretation into other IFLA languages, interpretation may not be available. Therefore presenters are encouraged to use a PowerPoint in English to facilitate understanding of the ideas presented.  The PowerPoint for the presentation should be submitted to the Program Chair by 1 July, 2012.

At least one of the authors of the paper must present the paper. Please send a promissory note with your signature verifying intent to attend the IFLA Conference in Helsinki to the Program Chair.

Unfortunately, the Programme Committee has no funds to assist prospective authors: abstracts should only be submitted on the understanding that the expenses of attending the IFLA conference (including travel, expenses and conference fee) will be the responsibility of the author(s)/presenter(s) of accepted papers.  Some national professional associations may be able to help fund certain expenses, and a small number of grants for conference.

 

 

 

 

 

Thursday, January 12, 2012

[KMDG-L] 2

Library Services for Multicultural Patrons to Encourage Library Use

Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press

Co-editor: Carol Smallwood, Tips for Librarians Running Libraries Alone, and Preserving Local Writers, Genealogy, Photographs, Newspapers and Related Materials (both forthcoming from Scarecrow Press)

Co-editor: Dr. Kim Becnel, Assistant Professor of Library Science, Appalachian State University. Contributor, Library Management Tips That Work, ALA Editions, 2011, and many other publications.

Chapters sought for an anthology by practicing academic, public, school, special librarians, LIS faculty in the United States and Canada sharing practical how-to chapters on reaching out to multicultural patrons to lessen cultural and language barriers. Practical ways to encourage library use to a wider range of patrons in the library community. Creative methods are sought that work in various types of libraries and job titles.

Concise, how-to chapters words based on experience to help colleagues. Your article should total 3000-3500 words; or two articles each 1500-1750 words to equal 3000-3500. No previously published or simultaneously submitted material. One or two authors per chapter; if two chapters both written by the same co-authors; complimentary copy as compensation, discount on more.

Please paste in an e-mail titles of 2-4 topics each fully described in 2 sentences by Feblruary 15, 2012 with brief biography sketch(s); place MULTICULTURAL/Last Name on the subject line to: smallwood@tm.net

Time Organization for Librarians: Beating Budget and Staff Cuts

Book Publisher: Scarecrow Press

Co-editor: Carol Smallwood, Tips for Librarians Running Libraries Alone and Preserving Local Writers, Genealogy, Photographs, Newspapers and Related Materials (both forthcoming from Scarecrow Press)

Co-editor: Jason Kuhl, Library Operations Director, Arlington Heights Memorial Library, Arlington Heights, Illinois; contributor, The Frugal Librarian: Thriving in Tough Economic Times (ALA Editions, 2011)

Co-editor: Lisa Fraser, Public Services Librarian, Bellevue Library, King County Library System, Bellevue, Washington; Guest Lecturer, Information School, University of Washington

Chapters sought for an anthology by practicing academic, public, school, special librarians, LIS faculty in the United States and Canada sharing practical how-to chapters on ways to organize time the most effectively especially with budget and staff cuts: Administration, Daily Operations, Maximizing Technology, Personal Life, Goal Setting. Creative methods are sought that work in various types of libraries and job titles.

Concise, how-to chapters words based on experience to help colleagues. Your article should total 3000-3500 words; or two articles each 1500-1750 words to equal 3000-3500. No previously published or simultaneously submitted material. One or two authors per chapter; complimentary copy as compensation, discount on more.

Please e-mail titles of 2-4 topics each fully described in 2 sentences by February 15, 2012 with brief biography sketch(s). Please place TIME/Last Name on the subject line to: jkuhl@ahml.info

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

[KMDG-L] Web Syndicated Archiving Tools / RSS Mashups

Greetings Folks,

Is there a way to archive RSS subscribed content into a web page permanently and automatically without much manual efforts? I trust, RSS readers can only keep the content for a limited period of time at the RSS client.

Here, the purpose of archiving is to have the content permanently even if the original content/URL gets expired/removed at the source.The mechanism I suppose could be, RSS should publish the content to a dedicated page via auxiliary apps.

To give you a better understanding of the query, I am quoting following cases,
  • I would like to archive all the blog posts published over web on the topic titled "automated taxonomy" at a web page.
  • I would like to archive all the job descriptions on "Knowledge management" published over WEB for the next 5 years and also last 5 years at a web page.

Please share your ideas/solutions/tools.Thanks in advance.



Praveen Veeramalla

M:+91 9052345223