Welcome to our new PGDE students who start this week. I hope this blog will be useful to those of you studying Primary Education or Secondary English. We have a good collection of picture books, children's and teenage novels and poetry which you can find on the library gallery. You'll also find there a collection of leaflets and booklists (e.g. Books for Boys, Recent Children's Book Awards, Teenage Poetry) - these can be downloaded too from our Children's Literature Webpages. Other pages on the site include Poetry, Children's Literature in Scotland and Reluctant Readers.
Find out which new books have been added to stock by checking out LibraryThing and find their locations through our catalogue search service, SUPrimo - NB, to help you find fiction on particular topics we have added themes to the catalogue records, so that if you search for a subject such as "bullies" and use the limits on the left hand side to restrict your results to Children's books you will find suitable fiction and poetry as well as non-fiction.
Also on our webpages is a list of children's literature internet sites. These are many and varied, for example (a random selection):
Author Hotline Exclusive author, illustrator and poet profiles enabling young readers to connect with published professionals.
Cool Reads Books for 10-15 year old readers by 10-15 year old reviewers.
Smories Original stories for kids, read by kids. 50 added every month.
Four times a year we publish Children's Literature Update. This is an index to articles on children's literature available in Jordanhill Library or online. You can pick it up from the children's gallery or have it emailed to you - leave a comment on this post if you would like to be added to the mailing list.
Finally, news about the Library, including about children's books, appears regularly on our Twitter feed. Please follow us! we are @JordanhillLib. And don't forget - for more information about the above or any other library matter, just come and ask. We're here to help.
Monday, 30 August 2010
Monday, 16 August 2010
David Almond's prequel to Skellig
Earlier this year, David Almond won the Hans Christian Andersen Award (for a living author whose complete works have made a lasting contribution to children's literature.) He's written many books, but is perhaps best known for Skellig (which is also a film) about Michael, a boy who finds a strange creature, part angel, part man, in his garden shed. Almond has now written a prequel to Skellig which concentrates on Mina, Michael's spirited neighbour and friend. Almond is a great writer - find his books in our catalogue here if you want to find out why. My name is Mina is published by Hodder on 2nd September - there's an interview with Almond in Saturday's Herald in which he talks about the new book and his writing in general. Unfortunately there's no electronic link, but you can find it in the library. Ask at the desk for cuttings file number 1225.
Poetry competition
Scottish schools are back now - time to get the children working on some new poems?
Old Possum's Children's Poetry Competiton 2010: Roger McGough is to chair the judging panel for a worldwide poetry competition for 7-11 year olds. The Competition is organised by the Children's Poetry Bookshelf, a poetry book club for young people run by the Poetry Book Society. To link with National Poetry Day on Thursday 7 October, children will be asked to write a poem in English on the theme of 'Home'. The competiton opens on 10th September.
Old Possum's Children's Poetry Competiton 2010: Roger McGough is to chair the judging panel for a worldwide poetry competition for 7-11 year olds. The Competition is organised by the Children's Poetry Bookshelf, a poetry book club for young people run by the Poetry Book Society. To link with National Poetry Day on Thursday 7 October, children will be asked to write a poem in English on the theme of 'Home'. The competiton opens on 10th September.
Sunday, 1 August 2010
Library Day in the Life 5
This is the second time I have taken part in Library Day in the Life so I'll leave the explanation of what it is and details of my job to the introduction of my previous post on the subject. This time was rather different - in January, we were in the full swing of term, but at the end of July we were in the middle of the summer vacation and, as there were several library assistants on holiday, I spent large chunks of each day covering the counter (although there were very few students about so I'm afraid this didn't yield anything interesting to write about.) We're also much further down the road of "reshaping" the University which I touched on last time. The Faculty of Education, served by our campus, ceases to exist tomorrow and becomes subsumed into the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. The Information Services Directorate is also in the throes of restructuring - the Senior Management Team is now in place, but the rest of us still await our fate. Part of the reshaping involves an extensive Early Retirement / Voluntary Severance scheme and by the end of September Jordanhill Library will have lost 6 staff to ERVS, a quarter of our total. Maintaining service levels will therefore be a challenge next session.
So how was my week? I tweeted my activities (@anabelmarsh) with decreasing regularity as the week wore on and have used those tweets as the basis for this post which picks out the main theme of each day.
Monday
Monday morning's first task is always to deal with the timesheets for the weekend staff. This week, I also had a contract to sort out. One of our Sunday staff who was due to start work again next term phoned me on Friday afternoon to say she no longer wished to take up her contract. I immediately thought of the volunteer we had earlier in the year who was looking for experience before going on to do an ILS qualification, got clearance from HR to approach her and had her signed up by Monday afternoon. I'm ridiculously pleased with myself because I think it must be a university record for appointing someone - and for anyone thinking of working in libraries, it certainly shows the value of being proactive and getting your foot on the ladder early.
Tuesday
Tuesday was a day of meetings. The first was quite informal with our Campus Librarian, who is one of the staff retiring and therefore needs to make sure he has handed over all his duties effectively. The second was in Glasgow University Library (in their cafe to be precise, coffee in a meeting can never be a bad thing) and was to plan our programme of visits and courses for library assistants in the West of Scotland next term. As I live near GUL I had originally planned to take flexitime and go home afterwards, but I had to dash back to Jordanhill to meeting 3 which was to meet the newly appointed Head of Customer Services for the Directorate. A lot of talking today!
Wednesday
I usually put Wednesdays aside for purchasing, mainly because that's when Holt Jackson updates its online list which is one of the selection tools I use for children's books. As it's the end of the Financial Year I can't order anything just now but I made some choices for later. This is one of my favourite jobs of the week. In the afternoon a lecturer hands in 3 reading lists which, astonishingly, are in good time and have all the information I need on them. This is such an unusual occurence that it prompts one of my Twitter correspondents to ask if there are four horsemen of the apocalypse at the front door - there aren't, but I am a bit shaken and decide to get on straight away with moving books to short loan and ordering extra copies - surely the least the lecturer deserves?
Thursday
Thursday was the Library Management Committee at the Main Campus and I found out a bit more about the restructuring process. It also gave me a chance to meet two staff in the main library who will be working on our campus one day a week and to discuss how this might work - one of the solutions to our loss of so many to ERVS. They both seemed keen to broaden their experience in this way so there should be mutual benefit.
Friday
As a follow-up to yesterday's Library Management Committee I fed back what I had learned about the restructuring - staff are inevitably concerned but I try to make sure people don't worry unnecessarily by keeping them as well-informed as possible. The rest of the day was an endless round of phone calls and desk duty and trying to tidy up loose ends. I wrote in January that my to-do list was much the same at the end of the week as at the beginning, and this was also true this time. The one thing I managed to cross off was proof-reading the update of our Books for Boys web page - resulting in a headache from looking at the screen too long.
Oh dear, that's a negative note to end on, can't have that. There were some lovely things that happened this week. By using the #libday5 hashtag I made some new friends on Twitter. I organised a card and present for one of our staff who has just had a new baby and two staff at the main campus got engaged - "effective networking" as the boss put it. Love and romance. A far better way to end.
So how was my week? I tweeted my activities (@anabelmarsh) with decreasing regularity as the week wore on and have used those tweets as the basis for this post which picks out the main theme of each day.
Monday
Monday morning's first task is always to deal with the timesheets for the weekend staff. This week, I also had a contract to sort out. One of our Sunday staff who was due to start work again next term phoned me on Friday afternoon to say she no longer wished to take up her contract. I immediately thought of the volunteer we had earlier in the year who was looking for experience before going on to do an ILS qualification, got clearance from HR to approach her and had her signed up by Monday afternoon. I'm ridiculously pleased with myself because I think it must be a university record for appointing someone - and for anyone thinking of working in libraries, it certainly shows the value of being proactive and getting your foot on the ladder early.
Tuesday
Tuesday was a day of meetings. The first was quite informal with our Campus Librarian, who is one of the staff retiring and therefore needs to make sure he has handed over all his duties effectively. The second was in Glasgow University Library (in their cafe to be precise, coffee in a meeting can never be a bad thing) and was to plan our programme of visits and courses for library assistants in the West of Scotland next term. As I live near GUL I had originally planned to take flexitime and go home afterwards, but I had to dash back to Jordanhill to meeting 3 which was to meet the newly appointed Head of Customer Services for the Directorate. A lot of talking today!
Wednesday
I usually put Wednesdays aside for purchasing, mainly because that's when Holt Jackson updates its online list which is one of the selection tools I use for children's books. As it's the end of the Financial Year I can't order anything just now but I made some choices for later. This is one of my favourite jobs of the week. In the afternoon a lecturer hands in 3 reading lists which, astonishingly, are in good time and have all the information I need on them. This is such an unusual occurence that it prompts one of my Twitter correspondents to ask if there are four horsemen of the apocalypse at the front door - there aren't, but I am a bit shaken and decide to get on straight away with moving books to short loan and ordering extra copies - surely the least the lecturer deserves?
Thursday
Thursday was the Library Management Committee at the Main Campus and I found out a bit more about the restructuring process. It also gave me a chance to meet two staff in the main library who will be working on our campus one day a week and to discuss how this might work - one of the solutions to our loss of so many to ERVS. They both seemed keen to broaden their experience in this way so there should be mutual benefit.
Friday
As a follow-up to yesterday's Library Management Committee I fed back what I had learned about the restructuring - staff are inevitably concerned but I try to make sure people don't worry unnecessarily by keeping them as well-informed as possible. The rest of the day was an endless round of phone calls and desk duty and trying to tidy up loose ends. I wrote in January that my to-do list was much the same at the end of the week as at the beginning, and this was also true this time. The one thing I managed to cross off was proof-reading the update of our Books for Boys web page - resulting in a headache from looking at the screen too long.
Oh dear, that's a negative note to end on, can't have that. There were some lovely things that happened this week. By using the #libday5 hashtag I made some new friends on Twitter. I organised a card and present for one of our staff who has just had a new baby and two staff at the main campus got engaged - "effective networking" as the boss put it. Love and romance. A far better way to end.
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