In my current course in Library School, Special Topics in Digital Reference, one of our assignments is creating Pathfinders for the Internet Public Library. Pathfinder is another word for subject guides which help the user find information or resources related to a particular subject.
I have chosen to update one pathfinder on Celtic Culture and develop two new ones: Choosing a cat or kitten and Finding Mystery Novels. I think that the current Celtic Culture pathfinder is well-organized by needs to be updated because many of the links are currently broken or the website has not been updated in the last few years.
The research for "Choosing a cat or kitten" has been pretty straightforward--there are so many good and active organizations that have published guidelines for choosing a cat. I even found one that includes a strategy for choosing a cat from a shelter with pretty specific guidelines for identifying the cat with the personality that you seek.
The mystery pathfinder is great fun to research but organizing it is another issue. There are so many types of mysteries and some many sites to choose from. Right now, I am listing them and annotating the websites but it will be interesting to go back and figure out the best method for organizing it.
Showing posts with label International mysteries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International mysteries. Show all posts
Sunday, May 18, 2008
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Collection Development
I just finished Collection Development, my 7th course in Library School. The lectures and the readings were excellent, but the overall experience was somewhat marred because the professor was not able to remove files from the courseware interface that were no longer relevant so she had to add her own files on top of that. This led to quite a bit of confusion for example, there were two assignment files; one from the previous course and the one that she wanted us to us. The administration needs to work with her to fix this, I got the impression that she tried, and they were not helpful. The professor was very responsive to questions which was terrific because of the confusion of files.
The content was interesting but not really all that surprising particularly for someone with my background. I found what made the course most worthwhile were the assignments, especially the group assignments. We were divided into groups based on our interests (academic libraries, school libraries and public libraries) and I was placed in the Public Library group with 7 other people.
Our first assignment was individual and it was to critique a library collection policy. The second assignment (a selection and deselection paper) was a group project and the third, a journal article drafted for either the Acquisitions Librarian or Collection Management could be either individual or group.
The group assignments were most challenging, not because of the content, but because it was a group project done completely online. For me, it was an opportunity to re-practice my project management skills. As was the case in many of the previous classes I took, classmates did not want to seem to take charge (this was true even when there were leaders assigned to a project) but given the size of the group and the scope of the project we needed someone to focus attention on the project as well as identify what pieces needed to be written, what decisions needed to be made first in order to start and identify ways to make the final edit easier (since the paper, of course, needed to be written in one voice). The central part of the paper were the title selections that we were proposing, and to make things easier I developed a template, really an example and got approval from the professor. It certainly made the title selections look as though they were written by one person even though everyone contributed to that section.
There were problems, of course: Some people did not contribute at all even though I emailed them several times--I called that to the professor's attention and she excluded them from our project--we assumed that they were doing individual projects and as is often true in group projects, there were some who did everything but the thing that they had signed up for.
I was appointed group leader by acclamation and I must say that I was pleased with the final project (the professor said it was one of the best projects that she had seen and was doubly impressed because it was done with such a large group) but I found the process somewhat daunting in that too many files were flying around and mistakes that had been fixed in earlier versions kept showing up.
For the third assignment, I participated with a subset of the group. Our topic was "Acquiring and Publicizing Scandinavian Mysteries" and I tried to improve on the previous process by maintaining the file myself from the beginning and early in the process merging the sections that other classmates wrote. Then, we critiqed the draft (with all of the sections included) and I made the final edit based on the comments.
In this course, while I certainly learned about Collection Development, what most stayed with me was the experience of working collaboratively online with peers--as difficult as it was sometimes, it was highly satisfying.
The content was interesting but not really all that surprising particularly for someone with my background. I found what made the course most worthwhile were the assignments, especially the group assignments. We were divided into groups based on our interests (academic libraries, school libraries and public libraries) and I was placed in the Public Library group with 7 other people.
Our first assignment was individual and it was to critique a library collection policy. The second assignment (a selection and deselection paper) was a group project and the third, a journal article drafted for either the Acquisitions Librarian or Collection Management could be either individual or group.
The group assignments were most challenging, not because of the content, but because it was a group project done completely online. For me, it was an opportunity to re-practice my project management skills. As was the case in many of the previous classes I took, classmates did not want to seem to take charge (this was true even when there were leaders assigned to a project) but given the size of the group and the scope of the project we needed someone to focus attention on the project as well as identify what pieces needed to be written, what decisions needed to be made first in order to start and identify ways to make the final edit easier (since the paper, of course, needed to be written in one voice). The central part of the paper were the title selections that we were proposing, and to make things easier I developed a template, really an example and got approval from the professor. It certainly made the title selections look as though they were written by one person even though everyone contributed to that section.
There were problems, of course: Some people did not contribute at all even though I emailed them several times--I called that to the professor's attention and she excluded them from our project--we assumed that they were doing individual projects and as is often true in group projects, there were some who did everything but the thing that they had signed up for.
I was appointed group leader by acclamation and I must say that I was pleased with the final project (the professor said it was one of the best projects that she had seen and was doubly impressed because it was done with such a large group) but I found the process somewhat daunting in that too many files were flying around and mistakes that had been fixed in earlier versions kept showing up.
For the third assignment, I participated with a subset of the group. Our topic was "Acquiring and Publicizing Scandinavian Mysteries" and I tried to improve on the previous process by maintaining the file myself from the beginning and early in the process merging the sections that other classmates wrote. Then, we critiqed the draft (with all of the sections included) and I made the final edit based on the comments.
In this course, while I certainly learned about Collection Development, what most stayed with me was the experience of working collaboratively online with peers--as difficult as it was sometimes, it was highly satisfying.
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Bloody Harvests by Richard Kunzmann
One place where love of books and love of anthropology come together is in international mysteries. This particular sub-genre of mysteries is one of my favorites and I plan to write about international mysteries that I have read and enjoyed.
Bloody Harvests takes place in South Africa and features two detectives, Jacob Tshabalala, and Harry Mason. Tshabalala is a Christian who is from a family of tribal priests and healers and Harry Mason his partner was born in England and came to South Africa as a youngster. Both have secrets from each other and those secrets influence their behavior through this case.
Kunzmann shows us a South Africa in which history and old wounds piercethe present. The characters are credible and they fight a criminal who is mythic and uses his knowledge of tribal religion and healing and his own unusual appearance to construct a persona that frightens and controls the local population.
Kunzmann has a new book, Salamander Cotton, coming out which features Harry Mason again. It is being published in the U in mid-November.
Another South African author to explore is Deon Meyer who has had 3 books translated into English and published in the US. They include: Heart of the Hunter, Dead before Dying and Dead at Daybreak. Heart of the Hunter is particularly interesting because it touchesthe history of South Africa in the Cold War. Tiny, the lead character, the nickname for Thobela Mpayipheli, is a former anti-apartheid operative trained by the KGB. He races across the country to honor a promise he had made to an old friend. He is a wonderful character, a now-peaceful man who has to reach back into his old life and old skills to survive to fulfill his promise.
Both of these authors are worth reading--they have much to author as thriller writers but also as guides to an unfamiliar place and history.
Bloody Harvests takes place in South Africa and features two detectives, Jacob Tshabalala, and Harry Mason. Tshabalala is a Christian who is from a family of tribal priests and healers and Harry Mason his partner was born in England and came to South Africa as a youngster. Both have secrets from each other and those secrets influence their behavior through this case.
Kunzmann shows us a South Africa in which history and old wounds piercethe present. The characters are credible and they fight a criminal who is mythic and uses his knowledge of tribal religion and healing and his own unusual appearance to construct a persona that frightens and controls the local population.
Kunzmann has a new book, Salamander Cotton, coming out which features Harry Mason again. It is being published in the U in mid-November.
Another South African author to explore is Deon Meyer who has had 3 books translated into English and published in the US. They include: Heart of the Hunter, Dead before Dying and Dead at Daybreak. Heart of the Hunter is particularly interesting because it touchesthe history of South Africa in the Cold War. Tiny, the lead character, the nickname for Thobela Mpayipheli, is a former anti-apartheid operative trained by the KGB. He races across the country to honor a promise he had made to an old friend. He is a wonderful character, a now-peaceful man who has to reach back into his old life and old skills to survive to fulfill his promise.
Both of these authors are worth reading--they have much to author as thriller writers but also as guides to an unfamiliar place and history.
Labels:
books,
International mysteries,
South Africa
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