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1-carter-tiffani

June 2, 2019 199 × 300 Carter, Tiffani
Tiffani Carter

Latest Library Links

  • 4h

    From the Executive Director by Dan MontgomeryDan Montgomery writes: “While the commemoration of ALA’s 150th anniversary kicked off in January, ALA staff and member leaders have been building momentum toward its largest in-person celebration, the 2026 Annual Conference and Exhibition in our hometown of Chicago. I feel honored and privileged to be here in this moment as we celebrate this Magnificent Milestone! (Did you catch my Chicago pun?) I invite you to join your colleagues at Annual to observe our past, reflect on our present, and envision our future.”

    American Libraries column, May

  • 8h

    A Seat at the TableAnne Ford writes: “For 150 years, ALA has shaped the landscape of libraries and the profession itself—but its leadership has often reflected the racial and gender biases of society at large. For this special anniversary issue, American Libraries spoke with eight barrier-busting Association leaders about their struggles, triumphs, breakdowns, and breakthroughs. The stories and lessons they share reveal how diversity fuels and transforms the power of libraries everywhere.”

    American Libraries feature, May

  • 3d

    Mural outside Columbus State University's Simon Schwob Memorial Library Thomas W. Ganzevoort writes: “Columbus (Ga.) State University’s Simon Schwob Memorial Library is home to one obsolete feature: the library’s loading dock, an original part of the 1975 structure. Rarely used after the library basement was renovated in 2012, the loading dock was repurposed as a patio deck. A 2019 renovation added safety gate and railing, a fresh coat of paint and some picnic tables. However, something was still missing. During Spring Break 2026, what has become known as the Library Mural Project reached its fruition, when an army of volunteers descended on the loading dock to make the mural a reality.”

    Georgia Library Quarterly, vol. 63, no. 2, May 1

  • 3d

    Origami boatAdrienne De Luna writes: “Passive programming gets a bad reputation. But in the right environment—especially in youth services—passive programming isn’t just helpful. It’s essential. Not all passive programming works. And when it doesn’t, it’s usually not because of the idea—it’s because of the execution. Most passive programs fall flat when they are too complicated, not immediately visible, overexplained, not relevant to the age group, or left out too long.”

    Youth Services Playbook, May 1

  • 4d

    Historic family photosMars Brint writes: “In honor of Preservation Week, I’d like to discuss the importance and enjoyment of digging through old records. People want to know their history, understand their roots, and create a connection with the past, and it is such a pleasure to be able to help bridge that information and share resources. So I’ve decided to include some of my own basic tips, tricks, and resources that can help others find genealogical information in a pinch.”

    NMRT Notes, May 1

  • 4d

    Paper with decision-making matrix on itAaron Tay writes: “Evaluation frameworks are a serious thread in information literacy, collection assessment, and procurement. The demand for them is real. My worry is that many evaluation matrices try to do too much at once. They aim to be universal. They give every criterion a score. They weight too many things equally. They also rely heavily on qualitative impressions, including for the thing that matters most when evaluating search tools: Whether the tool can retrieve and rank useful material.”

    Aaron Tay’s Musings about Librarianship, Apr. 29

  • 4d

    Huntington Beach Central LibraryClaire Wang writes: “Huntington Beach, California, must foot roughly $1 million in legal bills for restricting minors’ access to certain books at the city’s library, an Orange County judge ordered. In a tentative ruling April 27, Orange County Judge Lindsey Martinez said the city needs to pay $960,000 to attorneys from four legal organizations, who billed more than 1,300 hours of work on the high-profile lawsuit against the city’s book restriction policy. Martinez had ruled in September that the city’s book restriction policy violated the state’s Freedom to Read Act and cannot be enforced,” although an appeal is pending.

    Orange County (Calif.) Register, Apr. 30; Sept. 5, 2025

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