Skip to main content
American Libraries Magazine Menu
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Issue Archive
    • Features
    • Trends
    • Columns
    • Newsmakers
    • Spotlights
    • By the Numbers
    • Bookend
    • People
    • Library Systems Report
    • Design Showcase
  • Trending
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion
    • Intellectual Freedom
    • Sustainability
    • Advocacy
    • Inside ALA
    • Jobs
    • Library Systems Report
  • AL Direct
  • The Scoop blog
  • Podcast
  • JobLIST
  • AL Live webinars
  • #alaac25

carello-anna

April 6, 2018 120 × 165 Notable Dissertations 2018
Anna Carello

Anna Carello

Anna Carello

Previous Image
Next Image

Latest Library Links

  • 8h

    Icon of two human figures in front of a homeAn ALA report released July 23, Investing in Prison Libraries: A Cost-Effective Path to Safer Communities and Second Chances, explores the essential role of prison libraries in lowering recidivism by better preparing incarcerated people for their release. According to the report, full funding of prison libraries leads to safer and healthier communities and reduced prison costs. Co-authors Erin Boyington, Amelia Bryne, and Emily Durkin will discuss their findings at ALA’s Annual Conference in Philadelphia in “The Work of Prison Libraries and Why Further Investment is Needed” on Saturday, June 28, at 9 a.m.

    ALA Public Policy and Advocacy Office, June 23

  • 12h

    Two students studying at a library tableKeith Curry Lance and Caitlin Gerrity write: “This study found that students were more likely to meet or exceed English Language Arts and Literacy (ELA) standards when their schools had credentialed teacher librarians (TLs), TLs serving a single school, and school library staff who engaged in certain specific activities, including managing their library collections and supporting literacy teaching. With rare exceptions, relationships between library staffing levels and staff activities and ELA performance levels persisted regardless of the gender, race/ethnicity, or socio-economic status of students.”

    Learning Hub, June 13

  • 15h

    Three photos depicting students cooking at Edible Alphabet, a program of Free Library of Philadelphia's Culinary Literacy Center.Terra Dankowski writes: “It’s Thursday morning, and the fourth floor of Parkway Central Library is alive with bubbling jollof rice, crisping empanadas, and stir-frying japchae. Welcome to Edible Alphabet, the flagship series of Free Library of Philadelphia’s Culinary Literacy Center. Since 2015, the program has convened those learning English as a second language—many from the Caribbean, Central America, the Middle East, North Africa, and Southeast Asia—to practice conversation and cook a recipe under the direction of an ESL teacher and chef instructor.

    American Libraries Trend, June

  • 1d

    On My Mind by David Quick and Benjamin StokesDavid Quick and Benjamin Stokes write: “Public art that ‘talks’ to passersby. Scavenger hunts that scamper through community landmarks. Through the power of play—and mobile media—programs like these can help public libraries connect with patrons and share local stories. Over the past five years, DC Public Library has partnered with Playful City Lab, a game design initiative from American University in Washington, D.C. Together, we developed a project called Engaging Beyond Our Walls, which has yielded a budget-friendly platform and toolkit that facilitates storytelling through text messages and audio.”

    American Libraries column, June

  • 2d

    A young presenter shares slides about the history of basketball at Vestavia Hills (Ala.) Library’s summer 2024 PowerPoint Party.Rosie Newmark writes: “At Hewitt (Tex.) Public Library, teens enthusiastically shared slideshows on the history of roads and the comparative merits of doors and wheels. None of this was schoolwork. PowerPoint is finding new life among young people as a tool to share humorous, creative, and niche slideshows with friends on TikTok and other social media platforms. Now libraries across the country are hosting their own PowerPoint Parties, using the events to engage a younger crowd.”

    American Libraries Trend, June

  • 2d

    Steak with onions at Pat's Kings of SteaksReid Bramblett writes: “Philadelphians knew we had good food, but we figured the rest of the country had long since written us off as the land of soft pretzels, cheesesteaks, and some mystery meat disturbingly known as scrapple. As an Annual Conference attendee, you’re doubly lucky to be stationed at the convention center. Across the street to the south is the Reading Terminal Market with its three-dozen food stands. And across the street to the east is Philly’s Chinatown, home to loads of inexpensive eateries serving great dim sum and other Asian delectables. Here are the best of Philadelphia’s best.”

    American Libraries feature, June

  • 5d

    Hacking computerEmanuel Maiberg writes: “AI bots that scrape the internet for training data are hammering the servers of libraries, archives, museums, and galleries, and are in some cases knocking their collections offline, according to a new survey from the GLAM-E Lab. The survey is the first attempt at measuring the problem, which in the worst cases can make valuable, public resources unavailable to humans because the servers they’re hosted on are being swamped by bots scraping the internet for AI training data.” The University of North Carolina Libraries in Chapel Hill recently shared its experience with AI bots attempting to scrape its catalog.

    404 Media, June 17; GLAM-E Lab, June 17; University of North Carolina Libraries, June 9

View more Latest Library Links

AL Live

al-live-logo@2x

AL Live screenshot with laptop










American Libraries Magazine

A publication of the American Library Association

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • BlueSky
  • RSS
  • Advertising
  • About
  • Comment Policy
  • Contact
  • Subscriptions
  • Submissions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright/Terms of Use Statement
  • Site Help
American Library Association
  • ALA Home
  • JobLIST
  • ALA News
  • ALA Store
  • Strategic Directions

225 N. Michigan Ave., Suite 1300, Chicago, IL 60601

1.800.545.2433

© 2009–2025 American Library Association