As a public librarian, all my training was on the job.  I don't remember any 
media collection courses at Dominican when I was working on my degree.  Also, 
the people on this list have been a gold mine.  I don't think the value of the 
people here can be overestimated, whether they are academic, public, or school 
librarians, or represent the vendors.  Other areas to consider - specific 
collection development - how to choose, where to get, - the logistics of 
starting or maintaining a collection. What do you want your collection to do? 
Review sources - first, at least for public libraries - Video Librarian!  As 
well as Booklist, LJ and SLJ.  Some of this might seem like, well, duh, but so 
many people don't understand that AV is a different animal from print 
materials.  There's probably more, but if I add it, I'll confuse everyone, 
including myself!

Becky Tatar
Periodicals/Audiovisuals
Aurora Public Library
1 E. Benton Street
Aurora, IL   60505
Phone: 630-264-4100
FAX: 630-896-3209
blt...@aurora.lib.il.us
www.aurorapubliclibrary.org

From: videolib-boun...@lists.berkeley.edu 
[mailto:videolib-boun...@lists.berkeley.edu] On Behalf Of Anthony Anderson
Sent: Monday, October 14, 2013 3:27 PM
To: videolib@lists.berkeley.edu
Subject: [Videolib] Training for media librarians (and for those who do media 
work as part of their jobs but are not "media librains")

Colleagues! As a matter of curiosity, I was wondering just how much formal 
training did you receive in assuming your roles as media librarians? I ask the 
same question also for those who are not media librarians (like myself), but 
still do a fair amount of media work as part of their jobs. I assume many of 
you probably have degrees in film (or communications) studies, but did you ever 
take any media classes at library school. I know that many library schools 
offer courses in government documents, but does anyone know of any library 
schools offering video librarianship courses? Might there be any relatively 
recent books on the subject of video librarianship?

Or did many of you learn video librarianship from what you picked (or are 
picking up now) on the job?

I pose these questions because the Video Round Table is considering the idea 
(among other proposals) of possibly holding at next summer's ALA a program 
entitled Video Librarianship 101:
"a workshop for librarians just getting into video librarianship or for those 
librarians who are not exclusively 'media librarians' but have positions which 
entail  having a fair amount of video responsibilities. Topics might include:

*         PPR/institutional rates

*         Tracking down PPR for a single campus or community showing

*         Working with faculty, other librarians, students, and public library 
users in building up and publicizing video collections

*         Streaming: opportunities and challenges. Hoopla?

*         Allowing video collections to fully circulate and displaying them 
"openly" (as opposed to keeping them behind the circulation desk)."


Would any of you out there find such a program to be of any interest?


Cheers!
Anthony

*******************************
Anthony E. Anderson
Assistant Director, Doheny Memorial Library
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0182
(213) 740-1190   antho...@usc.edu<mailto:antho...@usc.edu>
"Wind, regen, zon, of kou,
Albert Cuyp ik hou van jou."
********************************

VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.

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