Kentville, Kings County- NEW LIBRARY QUARTERS.... by Apple Blossom 2016
L’Encyclopédie de l’histoire du Québec / The Quebec History Encyclopedia
Libraries in Canada
Early History.
Canada was probably the first British colony in which libraries were established. In 1779 a subscription library of about 2,000 volumes was founded at Quebec by a group of officers and merchants, with the approval of the governorgeneral, Sir Frederick Haldimand, who hoped by this means to unify the interests of the French and English inhabitants. Previous to this there were known, in 1606, the collection of Marc Lescarbot at Port Royal ; in 1700 at New York the first public library on the continent; and about 1750 at Quebec the library of the Jesuits. Subsequently legislative collections were established in 1791 in Upper and in 1792 in Lower Canada ; and in 1796 the first public library was founded in Montreal. In 1800 libraries were established in King's College, Nova Scotia, and at Niagara, where the first public library in Upper Canada operated for twenty years, in spite of losses during the War of 1812.The first quarter of the nineteenth century saw new libraries arising in the east and an extension of the field westward, by means of the Hudson's Bay Company, until in 1833 Vancouver was included. Library development in Upper and Lower Canada at this period is closely associated with the establishment of Mechanics' Institutes, based upon the English model and serving in the dual capacity of providing lectures and reading matter in an organized attempt to develop adult education. In 1857 there were 58 of these institutes in Upper Canada. In 1895 the Public Libraries Act changed the institutes to public libraries, and a new impetus was given to library development. In 1936 Ontario led the Dominion in the number of public libraries. Statistics may be found in the Survey of libraries in Canada, issued annually by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Education Branch, Ottawa.
Public Libraries.
In comparison with the United States and England, Canada is not very well represented in the field of public libraries, the greatest number being found in Ontario, which has 468 libraries out of a total of 637. Of the 4,750,891 volumes in all Canadian public libraries, 3,192,075 are in Ontario, while the circulation of that province accounts for 15,137,418 of the total 22,126,340. Of the 1,100,923 borrowers using Canadian public libraries 761,592 are in Ontario . More than half ($285,955) of the $421,142 spent on library books in Canada was spent in the same province.Public libraries serve the population in cities, towns, and villages, but not in rural areas. In the two provinces of Ontario and British Columbia the total urban population approximates the population served by public libraries; the population served by public libraries in Ontario is 2,153,016, while its urban population is 2,095,992; and in British Columbia 365,172 of the 394,739 total urban population has public library service. Of Canada's 5,572,058 total urban population, 4,423,736 receive public library service.
In the whole Dominion, Quebec is the province with the least public library facilities, since the registered library borrowers in the communities served amounts to only 2.4 per cent. of the total population. For the Dominion as a whole, the percentage is just under 25 per cent.
In the matter of per capita circulation in the towns and cities, 5 per cent. were served in Canada in 1933 as against 4.76 per cent. in 1931; but the per capita expenditure on books, periodicals, and binding has decreased from 12 cents in 1931 to 10 cents in 1933.
In the matter of personnel, of the total of 891 librarians and assistants in 272 public libraries, only 329 have been trained, and they were on the staffs of only 66 libraries. Here again, Ontario is numerically in the lead, with 261 trained librarians out of a total of 595; British Columbia, however, employs a higher percentage of trained workers, as slightly more than half (26 out of 49) of the librarians in that province are trained. In small libraries (under 10,000 vols.), the fewest trained librarians are found, as 200 libraries in this class have only 15 trained librarians.
The Toronto Public Library is the largest public library system in Canada and serves a population of 631,207 (1931 census). It has central libraries for reference, circulation, and books for boys and girls, as well as seventeen branches containing 582,588 vols. In 1933 the 269,553 registered borrowers read 4,111,203 vols., and $88,145 was spent on books and periodicals. This is not only the outstanding public library in Canada , but one which holds an important place in the general rank of public libraries. Its high requirements for its staff, its fine reference and circulating collections, its work with boys and girls, are all notable features, and it has been fortunate in having James Bain (q.v.) and George H. Locke as its librarians for half a century of development and expansion.
The Ottawa Public Library is important, as its public service is indicated by its bilingual collection of books. A main library containing 123,838 vols. in French and English and four branches serves a population of 126,872, of whom 27,693 are registered borrowers. W. J. Sykes, the librarian, who is retiring in 1936, has organized a readers' advisory service, and has arranged for the wide distribution of printed reading lists.
The Fort William Library has one branch, under the able direction of Miss Mary J. L. Black. It contains 42,391 volumes for a population of 26,277, and in 1933 it circulated 199,058 books to 8,000 borrowers, or 24.88 books per borrower. In the same year its "sister city"; Port Arthur, circulated 28.5 books to each borrower; and both libraries provided extensive service for foreign-born groups.
Montreal at present has no public library system, and its needs are only partially met by the Civic Library, the Fraser Institute Library, the Mechanics' Institute Library, and, in Westmount, by the Westmount Public Library.
Library Training.
The training of librarians and library assistants in Canada has recently made great progress in organization and quality. At the beginning of the century it was nonexistent: librarians were born and not made. In 1904 the first training was given in a summer course established at McGill University by C. H. Gould. To-day it is possible for an applicant to train in Canada for any type of library work.In 1911 a short course was established in Toronto by the minister of education for Ontario, and was placed under the direction of the inspector of public libraries. In 1916 the Ontario Library School was organized and, until 1928, gave a three months' course of intensive training in library methods. It was then attached to the Ontario College of Education, University of Toronto, and the course was extended to one academic year, with an entrance requirement of senior matriculation or its equivalent, for the purpose of training librarians.
In the province of Quebec, the first McGill University Summer Library School was conducted in 1904, and since then has held eighteen sessions. In 1927, with the assistance of a Carnegie Corporation grant, a one-year course was organized. Shortly afterwards it was accredited by the Board of Education for Librarianship of the American Library Association, and in 1930 it was organized on a graduate basis and became one of the seventeen accredited library schools on the continent to require a bachelor's degree for entrance. It grants the degree of Bachelor of Library Science (B.L.S.), to those who have successfully completed the course. The School also provides evening extension courses leading to a certificate, and has conducted summer courses elsewhere: in 1930 a six weeks' course at the University of British Columbia , and in 1933 a similar course at Prince of Wales College. In 1932 a short summer library course in French was held at McGill University .
Acadia University and the University of Western Ontario offer short courses in library science as part of the undergraduate course in arts, in order to facilitate the intelligent use of the library by the students.
Children's Libraries.
Ontario led the way in the establishment of children's libraries in Canada , when a school library in St. Thomas was opened in 1902. In 1906, the Sarnia Public Library admitted children, and a year later other libraries offered the same privilege. In 1908, under the auspices of the minister of education, instruction was given throughout the province in this type of work. Though for a time lack of space and funds impeded progress, to-day children are provided for in all public libraries in Canada . Usually a trained librarian is in charge of the children's room, which is appropriately decorated with brightly coloured posters, holiday reading-lists, and honour rolls, and is supplemented by reading clubs, exhibitions, and story hours. Many libraries lend books to teachers for class-room circulation. The educational value of the library is emphasized. by public addresses and talks at teachers' meetings, mothers' meetings, and normal schools. Since 1921 Children's Book Week has held organized exhibits and talks throughout Canada.In the province of Quebec the children's wing of the Westmount Library, built in 1911, with separate entrance and attractive rooms is worthy of notice. In 1928, the Local Council of Women opened a children's room in the Fraser Institute, in Montreal, to which several branches were subsequently added.
School libraries were established in Ontario about 1850, when the Department of Education purchased the necessary books wholesale and resold them to the schools. After 1881 this method was discontinued owing to opposition from booksellers, and little was done until 1902, when grants were made to each school, and a catalogue provided from which books could be selected. The other provinces introduced similar methods, and to-day practically all schools throughout Canada receive government aid, either in books or money.
Library Legislation.
It was by Acts of parliament that public libraries have been established throughout the Dominion. In Quebec and the Maritime provinces, mechanics' institutes and library associations were established or incorporated by early legislation which has since been amended at various dates. Ontario was the first to have a Free Libraries Act (1882), and the four western provinces followed suit. In addition to regulations regarding library administration, these provinces impose a special library tax. In Ontario, Alberta, and Saskatchewan, the Department of Education has been made responsible. In the Maritime provinces and in the Yukon, legislation provides for public libraries only in certain specified cities and towns.Some form of school library legislation has been enacted in each province and the Yukon. Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick are entitled to grants from the Board of Education; Nova Scotia, Quebec, Alberta, and British Columbia receive provincial aid, supplemented, in the case of Nova Scotia and British Columbia, by local aid; while Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and the Yukon are provided for locally.
Specific Acts of parliament established the legislative libraries of Nova Scotia and Quebec and the Provincial Library of Manitoba. In the case of the latter, this was superseded by the Act which established the Department of Library and Museum.
British Columbia also has a government department, created by the Legislative Library and Bureau of Statistics Act. In Ontario a clause relating to the Legislative Library was inserted in the statute law regarding libraries. Acts established the law libraries at Fredericton and Winnipeg , the Advocates' Library at Montreal and at Quebec, and also the Quebec Library.
A summary of library legislation for the year may be found appended to the Survey of education issued annually by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics.
Library Associations.
Library associations have been organized in the provinces as follows: Ontario, 1900; British Columbia, 1911; Saskatchewan, 1914; the Maritimes, 1918 (reorganized 1934); Alberta, 1930; Ontario Regional Group of Cataloguers, 1927; Quebec, 1932; Montreal Special Libraries Association, 1932. The formation of a Canadian library association was discussed as early as 1900, but no effective steps were taken, and as late as 1927 an unsuccessful attempt to put it into operation was made. Finally on June 26, 1934, during the American Library Association. Convention in Montreal, a Canadian Library Council was formed and was affiliated to the older and larger professional association.Carnegie Libraries.
Through the generosity of Andrew Carnegie and his representatives, a number of grants have been made for the establishment of free libraries in Canada, usually with the stipulation that the community supply a suitable site, annual taxation for maintenance be kept at a minimum, and building plans be approved. The Carnegie Corporation has also aided the development of libraries in Canada in financing demonstrations, encouraging training, and making fellowships and scholarships available.Libraries for the Blind.
In 1906 the Canadian Free Library for the Blind was organized in Toronto. In 1917 the name was changed to the Canadian National Library for the Blind, and in 1919 it became the Library and Publishing Department of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind. One of the largest collections of its kind in the world, it distributes throughout Canada and the United States books in Braille, New York point, and moon type, and in a number of languages. There are smaller libraries at Brantford, Montreal, Halifax, West Point Grey, Vancouver, and Winnipeg.Travelling Libraries.
In 1890 the Aberdeen Association was organized in Winnipeg to distribute reading material to isolated settlements in the west. In 1893 a branch was formed in Halifax , followed by others at Ottawa, Calgary, Vancouver, Toronto, Montreal, Hamilton, Victoria, Brandon, St. John, and London. Later these branches were united in one association with headquarters at Ottawa. In 1896 British Columbia began sending travelling libraries to mining camps and agricultural districts and later to lumber camps. In 1897 Kingston established a system for sailors on the Great lakes. In 1900 Queen's University and the Canadian Club of Toronto contributed libraries for lumber camps. In January, 1901, the Travelling Library of McGill University began distributing boxes of books throughout the Dominion, its services being later restricted to those districts not supplied with books. In the same year the Canadian Reading Camp Association was formed and established the Frontier College. Travelling library systems were established in Ontario in 1901; Alberta and Saskatchewan in 1913 ; and Manitoba in 1918. One or more books at a time are lent to individuals by mail under the system of open shelf libraries operated by the Universities of McGill, Alberta, and St. Francis Xavier, by the British Columbia Public Library, the Departments of Education in Nova Scotia and Manitoba, the Legislative Library of Ontario, the Public Libraries Branch, Ontario, and the Saskatchewan Open Shelf Library.College and University Libraries.
Of the 232 institutions of advanced education in Canada, including normal schools and colleges, 23 are universities. Of these, King's College (1789) was the earliest, and was followed by Dalhousie in 1818, McGill in 1821, Toronto in 1827, and Queen's in 1841. In these institutions there are 3,856,751 volumes and 398,000 pamphlets. The relation of these libraries to instruction, their physical equipment, organization, and staff, shows no general uniformity, but have developed largely as a result of local conditions. The best treatment of the subject is in Libraries in Canada by the (Carnegie) Commission of Enquiry (Toronto, 1933), Chap. xii. An impetus to college libraries was given when in 1932-3 the Carnegie Corporation began annual grants to thirty colleges amounting to $69,500, to be continued for three years.Special Libraries.
Libraries on special subjects (e.g., insurance, banking, pulpand-paper, etc.) have recently developed in large numbers, with a local branch of the Special Libraries Association at Montreal . Their members have aided in the compilation of local lists and co-operative catalogues. There are numerous special libraries in Canada, the activities of which are concentrated upon the needs of the institution or business in which they were developed and by which they are supported.Regional Libraries.
Much of the new library development of Canada in the near future will depend upon the effective organization of rural library systems. Already this method has been established in different parts of the Dominion, with notable success in Lambton county, Ontario (18 units), and in the Carnegie demonstrations in the Fraser valley, British Columbia (24 units), and in Prince Edward Island (21 units). In other places, similar work is being carried on by Library Commissions, Travelling Libraries, and Extension Departments.The Parliamentary Library.
The Parliamentary Library was established in 1841 on the union of the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada. It has been successively located at Kingston , Montreal , Quebec, Toronto, Quebec, and Ottawa, where it is now inadequately housed. Though much early material was lost by fire, the library now contains 365,175 volumes. There are also numerous special libraries in various government departments.Provincial Libraries.
There is a provincial library in each of the provinces, though in some (e.g., Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick ) it functions also as a public library; in others its services are confined to the government. The legislative libraries in Nova Scotia, Quebec, and Manitoba (subsequently, established as the Department of the Library and Museum) were created by special Acts, and similar legislation has been enacted in Ontario, British Columbia, and New Brunswick.Bibliography.
There is no published history of libraries in Canada. Information on various phases of the) subject will be found in Canada, Dominion Bureau of Statistics (Education Branch), Survey of libraries in Canada (annual); Libraries in Canada (Toronto, 1933), published by the Carnegie Commission of Enquiry; and James Bain, "The public libraries of Canada", in J. C. Hopkins (ed.), Canada (Toronto, 1899), vol. v, pp. 207-11. The Canadian Almanac (annual) contains lists of libraries with names of librarians. Of the numerous articles in the professional periodicals, reference may be made to the following: A. L. A. Bulletin, No. 2, pp. 136-43; Library, vol. vii, pp. 241-9; Library Asst. vol. xxiv, pp. 105-11; Library journal, vol. xii, pp. 217-20, 406-9, 450; vol. xxv, pp. 7-10 (conf.); vol. xxviii pp. 43-6 (conf.); vol. xxxiii, pp. 17-8; vol. Iii, pp. 525-6, 590-1, 711-5; vol. lix, pp. 493-8, 503-5, 506-11; Library World, vol. xxvi, pp. 267-8; Ont. Library Assoc. Proc., 1911, pp. 46-54; Public Libraries, vol. viii, pp. 75-6, 125-6, 175-6, 333-4, 439-40; vol. ix, pp. 207-8. For further references consult H. G. T. Cannons :Bibliography of library economy (Chicago, 1927), pp. 58-9; and its supplement (ed. L. M. Morsch), Library literature (1921-1932) (Chicago, 1934), p. 68. See also Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Annual Survey of Education in Canada, 1928 (Ottawa, 1930), p. 164.Source : W. Stewart WALLACE, ed., The Encyclopedia of Canada , Vol. IV, Toronto, University Associates of Canada, 1948, 400p., pp. 76-81.
Date Published:
February 2005
February 2005
http://faculty.marianopolis.edu/c.belanger/QuebecHistory/encyclopedia/LibrariesinCanada-CanadianLibraries-Canadianhistory.htm
---------------
Beyond Books:
Why Some Libraries Now Lend Tools, Toys and More
A growing number of libraries now lend
Kindles, board games, power tools and even musical instruments.
The next time you need
binoculars or a Bundt pan, you may not need
any money. Instead, your library card could be the key to accessing
an array of items, as public libraries across the country expand beyond
books and other media.
This so-called “library
of things” isn’t an entirely new concept – a Newark, New Jersey, library
started circulating framed paintings over a century ago, according to Alex
Lent, library director at Millis Public Library in Massachusetts – but it’s now
gaining momentum and expanding the role of libraries in communities.
Today, “you can check
out not only a book or music, but something you can make music on,” Lent says.
“We’ll probably always have books, but having unusual items and expanding what
a library can be and do is the way we’re going.”
At Millis Public
Library, patrons can check out items including binoculars, board games,
sewing machines, pedometers, cake pans, metal detectors and even ukuleles (the
latter is one of the library’s most popular items, according to Lent). For the
sake of simplicity, every item (book or otherwise) at Millis Public Library
carries a two-week lending period and a 10 cent per day late fee.
Meanwhile, the Baker
County Library District in northeast Oregon lends items including a digital
projector, GPS devices, telescope and, soon, a GoPro video camera. “It’s a
trend in libraries across the country to not only meet the community’s
recreational and intellectual needs, but to encourage digital literacy … for
people who wouldn’t ordinarily have access to that digital technology,” says
library director Perry Stokes.
Some university
libraries are getting in on the action, too. For instance, the library at
Montana State University offers laptops, cameras, projectors and more. Some
public libraries also check out Wi-Fi hotspots, Kindles and tablets, which some
people use while on
vacation rather than lugging a suitcase full of books or paying for
hotel Wi-Fi.
Janet Crystal, marketing
communications manager for the Wilton Library in Wilton, Connecticut, says lending
e-readers and tablets loaded with best-sellers gives patrons the
chance to test them out for longer than they could in a store (up to three weeks).
“We give them the opportunity to experiment with them, and now they’re starting
to buy their own,” she says. “That shifts them to downloading free books
through the library’s downloadable service.”
The Wilton Library’s
telescope is another popular item that patrons can check out for a week.
(They’re required to do a five-minute orientation before checking it out.) “We
also loan media kits that contain books, DVDs and music centered on a theme
such as a country, love of chocolate or stargazing,” Crystal adds. “We call
them Mixed Bags, and they have become quite popular for date nights or girls’
nights out.” For instance, Wilton Library’s Chocolate Mixed Bag contains a
chocolate cookbook by Christine McFadden, the moving “Chocolat” and the music
CD “Paris: La Belle Epoque” by Yo-Yo Ma.
Beyond boosting digital
literacy and fostering intellectual curiosity, lending these items also ties
into the broader trend of collaborative consumption or the sharing economy.
“Seldom-used tools like the stud finders or soil testers are great because you
use them once or twice a year, so there’s no point in purchasing them
yourself,” Lent says. He adds that a colleague in Brookline, Massachusetts, a
suburb of Boston where many residents live in small spaces, finds kitchen
equipment to be in high demand. “[In Brookline], people have mostly apartments,
and so they don’t want to have all this kitchen gear [when they’re not using
it],” Lent explains.
Not surprisingly, the
items offered by libraries often vary depending on the needs of their
community. For instance, the Erie County Public Library in Pennsylvania lends
fishing poles and tackle boxes, while the Petawawa Public Library in Ontario,
Canada stocks adult and youth-sized snowshoes. After noticing that some patrons
forgot their reading glasses, Stokes says his library added a small stock of
reading glasses for in-library use. They also have knitting needles, since a
knitting circle meets at the library.
Some libraries, like the
Wilton Library, have also added makerspaces where patrons can experiment with
3-D printing, take a robotics class or convert VHS tapes to digital format.
“Libraries are so much more than what people probably had in mind that they
were when they were growing up,” Crystal says. “We just have so much going on,
and it really becomes the heart of the community.”
-----
Tapping the Power
of the Local Library Anytime, Anywhere
Public libraries offer free Web access to powerful and otherwise expensive
databases.
Doing research in our pajamas is a huge benefit of the Web and modern
computers. But committed readers and researchers still want access to local
libraries, with their vast troves of books, periodicals, and reference works.
The best of both worlds? Tapping into your library over the Web, 24 hours a
day.
[You'll find plenty of
libraries in our list of 15 Great
Underpriced College Towns.]
Many dedicated
library-card holders don't know the wealth of data and entertainment that's
available with the click of a mouse. Libraries are rushing to convert resources
into digital format for instant downloading as they try to make themselves an
integral part of Web research and reading.
It's paying off. Once
seen as a threat to the need for public libraries, the Internet has proved the
opposite, says Sari Feldman, president of the Public Library Association and
executive director of the Cuyahoga County Public Library near Cleveland.
"The Web has instead generated new interest in public libraries," she
says. "It's added to their appeal." Web links to premium resources
are just part of the draw. Most libraries also provide PCs and Web access to
those who don't have them at home. In addition, libraries are teaching people
how to use their computers and conduct Web research.
[A controversial effort
by Google would
digitize the world's books.]
Access to exclusive
library resources on the Web is catching on. Web surfers last year conducted
nearly a million queries across the Internet at the St. Louis County Library in
Missouri, where the database page gets the most hits of the system's Web pages.
"People who know about the databases use them heavily," says Susan
Scupin, head of the system's reference department. But too many otherwise savvy
Web searchers don't know about them. They've not experienced the power and fun
available through libraries online. Here's a look at some of the best resources
that might be available at your local library:
Audio books
and E-books. Want to listen to Dan Brown's latest blockbuster, The Lost
Symbol? Or how about Dick Francis's Even Money? Both are among
thousands of titles available through OverDrive, a popular provider of digital
audiobooks to public libraries. Free software enables library-card holders to
download books for listening on a PC or a media player, including an iPod, and
sometimes burn them onto a CD. Thousands of titles are also offered as E-books,
which come in formats for viewing on PCs or E-book readers such as Sony's
E-Reader. Not all publishers make their titles available, and the books can be
checked out for only a matter of weeks. Plus, popular titles like The Lost
Symbol may have dozens of holds ahead of you. Still, it isn't like you're
standing in line at the library.
Ancestry and genealogy. The Web has produced a boom in amateur genealogists.
"After pornography, genealogy is perhaps the most popular use of the
Internet," says Scupin with a laugh, noting that ancestry sources are in
high demand at the St. Louis library. But many with a vague interest in their
ancestry don't know what's available for casual snooping from home.
HeritageQuest, for one, lets users click through census records, Revolutionary
War pension benefits, and records of Freedman's Bank, which catered to
African-Americans after the Civil War. InfoTrac can find mentions of ancestors
in urban and rural newspapers from the 1800s.
Article databases. Much of what's produced by professional journalists and business
analysts remains locked behind expensive subscriptions and pay-for-access
archives. Article databases like Factiva, LexisNexis, and ProQuest are
invaluable for research, but they're expensive for most individuals to buy.
Simple keyword searches can yield an abundance of professionally produced
insight from publications big and small, from the New York Times and Wall
Street Journal to Rock Products magazine. The services also enable
easy browsing of current editions of leading publications. Typically, accessing
these databases through a library isn't as convenient as owning an individual
account. Library users also can't save searches or customize the services, and
some time out quickly when left idle.
Business research. Databases like Morningstar, ValueLine, and NetAdvantage can arm
investors with data on companies and markets needed to get ahead with stocks
and bonds. Others like ReferenceUSA and the Million Dollar Directory compile
data on millions of large and small companies, including private firms that
don't publish the information themselves. They offer a treasure-trove for job
seekers and salespersons. Some of the more expensive data services may be
available only at the library itself, but many libraries make them accessible
across the Web.
Education and job prep. Web-based Coin3 Career Library offers career
planning information and describes what's required to climb into 2,500
different occupations and what might be expected in salaries. Users can dive
into assessment quizzes to get automated guidance for careers that might be a
good fit, and they can also find tips on building résumés for specific fields.
Learning Express Library has online courses for beefing up pre- and
post-college math and reading skills, as well as prep courses for college
admission tests such as the ACT and SAT. The service also offers courses and
practice exams for citizenship tests and for GED tests that can earn the
equivalent of a high school diploma.
Kids. Young
students can get study help across the Web, and harried parents can entertain
them with picture books read aloud to them. Many libraries offer educational
games that can boost math and reading skills. And services like TumbleBooks
will read from hundreds of well-known picture books, such as No, David
and How I Became a Pirate by David Shannon. Narrators read them aloud as
words on the page are highlighted. Characters in the illustrations move, but
not so much as to distract from the written word. It doesn't top snuggling up
with the kids to read them a book, but it's better than plopping them in front
of a TV.
-------
Public Libraries Offer More Than Just
Books to Teens
Older teens may often use public libraries, but they are
less likely to say they highly value them, a new report says.
Libraries are home to antiques like microfilm readers and
encyclopedias, but they are also a popular space for something a little newer –
teenagers.
Sixty-five percent of
older teens ages 16 to 17 surveyed in 2013 used a library in the
past year, the largest percentage for any age group included in a
recent report on younger Americans and public libraries,
released by the Pew Research Center.
"It's a place where
you can read and learn and truly find yourself and find your passion and you
can be guided by highly trained professionals," says Sari Feldman,
president-elect of the American Library Association.
But older teens were
also less likely to say that they highly value public libraries, both as a
personal and community resource, the report said.
Many public libraries
have developed resources geared specifically at teens to keep them interested
in learning.
[Find out tips for parents
to help teens de-stress.]
• Teen spaces: Many public libraries include a space just for young people so
that they feel at home, Feldman says, and oftentimes teens are involved in
designing the spaces.
"We want to be sure
that our communities know the libraries belong to them," says Feldman, who
is also the executive director of Cuyahoga County Public Library in Parma, Ohio.
At Cuyahoga’s
Warrensville Heights branch, a dedicated teen area includes a recording studio,
computer access and a gaming station, according to the library’s website. In
the recording studio, teens can learn how to record music and poetry slams,
Feldman says.
"While they’re
obviously having the opportunity to create content, they are also learning
digital media skills, which are 21st century workplace skills," she says.
Although these spaces may be a social hub for teens, she says, librarians focus
on making them a space for learning.
• Digital tools: Many public libraries offer electronic resources through their websites
and at their physical locations.
In Arizona,
the Yuma County Library District recently created a homework help center,
geared toward high school
and college students, according to an
article in The Yuma Sun. The center includes multiple tablets and
personal computers at the library’s physical location.
The Arizona program also
offers patrons use of Tutor.com, a service that connects students to a personal
tutor online.
"Even when the
library is closed, they have access to homework help,” Sarah Wisdom, the
library’s community relations manager, told The Sun.
The Arizona library
isn't the only library offering this type of service – almost all public
libraries offer online homework assistance, according to a 2013 survey
from the ALA and University of
Maryland.
Feldman, of the ALA, says many digital services have been created
at libraries.
"In rural areas, I think it is even more critical because the
library may be the best high-speed Internet in a community," she
says. In lower-income communities, teens may not have as many
opportunities to explore digital content and tools.
[Discover tools to help develop critical thinking skills before college.]
• College and career assistance: Helping teens with tasks that prepare them for life after high school is another focus of libraries.
Many offer test
preparation for the ACT and SAT, Feldman says, and librarians often help
students with college applications. Some may teach students and their families
how to fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid – not an easy
task, she says.
And the library is often
the first stop for teens who want to get involved with their community by
volunteering, she says.
At the Ramona Library in
California,
teens involved with the Teen Action Council program shelve books, assist
with library events and help elementary students with homework – all while
earning community service hours, according to an
article in the Ramona Sentinel.
"What we’re trying
to do is prepare them for leadership roles," Ellie Slade, manager of the
branch, told the newspaper.
Feldman says that
libraries are a place where teens can be themselves, which makes them a
valuable resource.
"It is kind of a
great equalizer," she says.
Have something of
interest to share? Send your news to us at highschoolnotes@usnews.com.
-----------------
BLOG: CANADA MILITARY NEWS-
ISRAEL- THE JEWS- WWI-WWII-HOLOCAUST HEARTBREAK/ Evil European Red Cross/
Canada Jewish History... our shame and our good/THE FINAL SOLUTION LAID BARE http://nova0000scotia.blogspot.ca/2015/01/canada-military-news-jan-2715-israel.html
---------------
HALIFAX REGIONAL LIBRARY- NOVA SCOTIA
https://www.halifaxpubliclibraries.ca/teens/homework_survivor/canada-history-culture-geo.html
-----------------
-------------
Top 10 Tips for Doing E-Research at College
Canadian Biographies
Canadian History Overviews
Exploration & Settlement in Canada
- Exploration, the Fur Trade & the Hudson’s Bay
- Exploration, Settlement, Pioneers & Immigrants 1497-1914
First Nations & Inuit
- Aboriginal Peoples - The Canadian Encyclopedia
- Aboriginal Treaties & Relations 1492-2003
- First Nations in Canada - History & People
- The Mi'kmaq Info Sheets - Nova Scotia Museum
Geography of Canada
- The Atlas of Canada - Natural Resources Canada
- The Canadian Atlas Online - Canadian Geographic
- Natural Regions & Ecozones of Canada
Government in Canada
- About the Federal Government
- Citizenship in Canada
- Constitutional History
- How Canadians Govern Themselves
- Federal Elections & Other Levels of Government
Military History of Canada
- 1000-1754
- 1755-1871
- 1872-2000
- Canadian War Museum
- First World War (WWI)
- Lest We Forget Project
- Naval History
- Peace & War in the 20th Century
- Second World War (WWII)
Statistics - Canada
https://www.halifaxpubliclibraries.ca/teens/homework_survivor/canada-history-culture-geo.html
-----------------
-------------
Top 10 Tips for Doing E-Research at College
A research librarian at Harvard University offers advice
on how to find information for that paper.
The situation: You've
just been given your first 15-page college research paper assignment. Your
professor wants you to use books and scholarly journals in writing your paper,
and doesn't want you to rely solely on Google and Wikipedia to do the research.
What do you do? You could call your parents or ask advice from a friend. But a
far better idea would be to follow these 10 best tips, offered by visiting
blogger Cheryl LaGuardia, research librarian at Harvard
University's Widener Library:
1. Start with Google and Wikipedia. Sure, your professor doesn't want you to rely solely
on these e-sources for your research. But they're both good for giving you an
overview of your topic. Once you get a general view and some descriptive words
from Google and Wikipedia defining your topic, you can move on to the meaty
stuff.
2. Proceed to your library's Web site. Once you've Googled and Wiki-ed to your
satisfaction, you'll be ready to use more serious, scholarly sources that will
provide you with dependable information. Go to your college library's Web site
and consult the online catalogue. The main library home page ought to give you
detailed instructions about how to search. Here's an
example of a library catalog that requires you to search a certain
way for keywords, authors, titles, and subjects. Some library catalogs have you
search the way you do in Google; here's
an example of that kind of catalog.
3. Use your library's online databases. While the online catalog helps you find books, it
doesn't usually let you find individual articles within scholarly journals. For
that you have to go into online library databases (take a look here
to see how popular magazines differ from scholarly journals). Usually there's a
way to locate databases by subject. Some databases you'll find on your
library's Web site might include Academic Search Premier, InfoTrac, JSTOR,
ProQuest Central, Readers' Guide, and Science Citation Index. Be sure to read
the instructions on the opening screens of databases to learn how to search
them; it's worth taking the few minutes, because this is where you're going to
find the current information your professor wants you to use. A bonus in using
these databases is that you may get the full text of articles on your computer:
a real time saver.
4. Try Google Scholar. Another good resource for finding scholarly
articles is Google Scholar, which
combines ease of use and rich content. If you go into Google Scholar from this
public link, you can search the
system, and get full-text access if you'd like to pay. However your college
library may have a link into Google Scholar in its list of library databases,
in which case the full text of the articles will be f-r-e-e.
5. Use online research guides. At many colleges and universities, librarians
create online library research guides for use by students and others. Here's a link to that section of my
library's Web site to give you an idea of the kinds of research guides you may
find at your college.
6. Evaluate Web sites. In the course of doing research, you may need to
use some Web sites on the open Web. You should evaluate these sites for
Authority, Bias, Currency, Documentation and Delivery. Here's a guide
that can help you evaluate sites for your research.
7. Use real, print books. You may find many research materials online, as new
books and journals are increasingly appearing in electronic format. But you may
find a wealth of research material in books and journals that are not yet
online—and the "secret bonus" is that many of your peers will not go
after that material, so you'll do the better, more complete research, and
probably get the better grade.
8. Use ILL.
One resource that beginning students aren't always aware of is the interlibrary
loan department. Here students can borrow books from other university
libraries—usually at no charge and quite quickly. To find out what library has
the books, check out WorldCat (used to be called FirstSearch) at your library
or in its public version.
9. Use citation tools. It's smart to create your paper's footnotes and
bibliography as you go along; it saves time and backtracking later. There are
lots of different softwares for doing this; your college will probably give you
access to one of these or you can go online and locate free software. Here's a guide
that outlines the citation tools in use at my library; and here's an example of
a free online citation tool, EasyBib.
10. Ask a librarian. As soon as you get that 15-page research paper assignment, go to the
library and find a librarian who can help you. Librarians will save you
enormous amounts of time, help you find research materials you otherwise
wouldn't, and help you get the "A" as painlessly as possible. Locate a
librarian as a first-year student and, with any luck, you'll be set for your
entire college career.
Good luck with your
library research, and may the best researcher win that "A"! Write me
at claguard@fas.harvard.edu.
---------------
Libraries
The earliest libraries in Canada were private collections belonging to immigrants from Europe. The first known library belonged to Marc LESCARBOT, a scholar and advocate who came to PORT-ROYAL in 1606.
Libraries
The earliest libraries in Canada were private collections belonging to immigrants from Europe. The first known library belonged to MarcLESCARBOT, a scholar and advocate who came to PORT-ROYAL in 1606. Early religious orders accumulated libraries: volumes from the Canadian Jesuit Mission of 1632 and the Jesuit College in Québec City (established 1635) still exist. Libraries were maintained in the 18th and 19th centuries in settlements, fur-trade or military posts - at Selkirk'sRED RIVER COLONY, at the Hudson's Bay Co post at YORK FACTORY, by John McKay on Vancouver Island, by Roderick McKenzie at Fort Chipewyan [Alberta], and at the Halifax garrison by Lord DALHOUSIE.
Public Libraries
In the 19th century, mechanics' institutes and subscription, social, school-district, university and professional libraries assumed increasing importance. Most public libraries that existed in the early decades of the 19th century were supported by subscription fees, eg, Governor HALDIMAND established a library at Québec City in 1779, the Montreal Library was founded in 1796, and a library began operation at Niagara in 1800.
By mid-century, libraries were firmly established in British North America. The first free tax-supported public libraries date from 1883 at Saint John, Guelph and Toronto. However, the development of the public library as it is known today was a slow evolution through a variety of forms, in response to the geographic, economic, cultural and demographic conditions of each province. Predecessors of the modern, tax-supported public library were school-district libraries, mechanics' institutes and association or social libraries.
University, College and School Libraries
University and college libraries are integral parts of the academic community in which they are located, and are supported with a percentage of normal operating funds (5-8%), with additional special grants from partnerships or endowments. A university chief librarian/director usually reports to an academic official, such as the office of vice-president, academic, and is represented on senior academic decision-making bodies of the university. College libraries receive a smaller percentage of operating funds and the administrative structure varies greatly in and between provinces.
Special Libraries
Special libraries serve the needs of a sponsoring organization, which may be federal, provincial or municipal governments; companies, associations or industries; or public institutions such as hospitals or museums. Special libraries can also be distinguished by a subject such as law, finance, insurance or health science. The origin of special libraries in Canada dates from the 17th century when 2 libraries at the Hôpital-général and Hôtel-Dieu in Québec City were opened to provide patients with religious materials. Most special libraries in Canada have been established since WWII. They are represented nationally by the Canadian Association of Special Libraries and Information Services, and by subject-oriented associations such as the Canadian Health Libraries Association and the Canadian Association of Law Libraries.
Library Associations
There are over 150 library associations in Canada, including national, provincial, regional, local, and ethnic associations, and groupings by library type such as public, academic, government, school and special libraries. The first was the Ontario Library Association, established in 1900; other provincial associations followed: in BC (1911), Québec (1932), the Maritimes (1935), Manitoba (1936), Saskatchewan (1942), Alberta (1944) and the Northwest Territories (1981).
The Canadian Library Association (CLA) was formed in 1946 as a bilingual national association but became unilingual in 1973. The CLA is subdivided into 5 type-of-interest associations, eg, the Canadian Association of College and University Libraries, and it also sponsors a number of interest groups and committees. Some of the major activities of the CLA have included microfilming of Canadian newspapers of historical importance; compiling and publishing theCanadian Periodical Index 1948-86; encouraging publication of reference works; developing standards; maintaining liaison with national and international library associations and with the federal government; and providing opportunities for continuing education for library staff through conference programs.
Association pour l'avancement des sciences et des techniques de la documentation (ASTED) is the national association of francophone libraries. Like CLA, ASTED has a substructure of sections for academic and public libraries.
Library Building
Although some public and university libraries had separate facilities before 1900, the Andrew Carnegie grants for public library buildings led to the construction of 125 Canadian libraries between 1901 and 1923. Influenced by the beaux-arts design common in public buildings of that period, classical columns and other elaborate ornamentation were features of even the smallest buildings. Unfortunately, these early libraries, although functional for the services of that period, proved difficult to modify or expand to meet an increased user population, changing services and new technologies.
A second surge in public library construction in the 1960s and 1970s, with emphasis on internal rather than external monumentalism, led to aesthetically pleasing but not necessarily functional libraries. The Metropolitan Toronto Reference Library (now the Toronto Reference Library), which opened in 1977, attracted international attention for the dramatic access it provided to its collections. Academic library buildings experienced a renaissance during this same period, with new central or divisional libraries constructed on every major university campus in Canada.
The period of financial restraint in the 1980s and 1990s focussed attention on renovations and additions rather than new construction for both academic and public libraries, although some new libraries were built. The Vancouver Public Library, designed by Moshe Safdie, attracted worldwide attention; the expanded McMaster University Library is an elegant example of a successful renovation and expansion. Technological developments such as electronic compact shelving became the basis for accommodation of collection growth without additional construction. In southern Ontario, three neighbouring universities integrated their catalogues and established a shared storage facility for less used materials, reducing the space required for the individual collections but greatly increasing the resources accessible to all members of the three academic communities.
Contemporary Developments
In the postwar decades all types of libraries in Canada responded to the increasing information requirements of users. Collections changed to encompass such new formats as microforms, audio and video cassettes, compact discs, films, talking books, braille and kits. Programs for cultural or minority groups became an important part of public library service, and information retrieval, frequently from external computer-based bibliographic data bases, became a major component of reference service in public, academic and special libraries. Service to adult learners has become very important in college libraries and is gaining importance in university libraries as well.
These expanding services have been facilitated by local, regional, provincial and national co-operative agreements or resource-sharing networks and encouraged by support from the National Library and CISTI, both of which readily make their own collections available on loan or photocopy to libraries across the country using various services, such as SwetScan, which CISTI is marketing to North American libraries.
Since 1960 the most dramatic influence on libraries of all types has been the introduction of new technologies with implications for services, staff, collections and buildings. At the end of the 1970s advances in computer technology permitted the development of local systems at costs that most libraries could afford; and information networks, encouraged by the National Library and CISTI, provided mechanisms for resource sharing and data exchange.
Library services were changed and expanded with the introduction of computer-based systems which made available the very latest materials. CISTI made major data bases available through CAN/SDI (selective dissemination of information) and CAN/OLE (on-line enquiry), and encouraged electronic messaging for the transfer of interlibrary loan requests and for the delivery of documents (CAN/DOC). The National Library has made its extensive bibliographic data base (AMICUS) available to other Canadian libraries for on-line searching and introduced a public web-based catalogue in 1997. ISM Library Information Services, which purchased the University of Toronto Library Automation System, founded in 1971, now provides computerized library-related services, products and systems to about 2500 libraries in North America, Asia, Australia, Europe and the Middle East. Geac, a Canadian-based computer company founded in 1971, sold many on-line circulation and cataloguing systems worldwide, eg, Vatican Library, Bibliothèque National, Smithsonian Institution, during the 1980s and continues to sell products which automate standard library tasks.
Graduate university library educators have responded to changed requirements for librarians by adding computer and telecommunication technologies to their curricula and by providing continuing-education programs in the new technologies. Library technician programs have been offered at many community colleges. Requirements for accommodating new and future information systems and resources have become major considerations in the design or renovation of library buildings. To complement educational programs, there are about 75 newsletters and journals which currently serve the Canadian library community. Some, such as Emergency Librarian, Feliciter, and Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science, publish on a national scale.
The enhanced potential for gaining access to electronic resources and sharing library collections, which has been made possible by the new technologies, has presented new challenges, such as licensing of electronic resources. The creation of library systems and consortia which combine the resources of all types of library in flexible administrative structures will need to be carefully considered. This pattern is evident in the creation in 1996 of the Alberta Library, a multitype, province-wide library network, and the 1998 establishment of the Grande Bibliothèque du Québec, centred in Montréal. Support for the library and information networks of the 21st century will have to be co-ordinated at the national and regional levels if Canadian libraries are to succeed in meeting the greatly increasing demands of an INFORMATION SOCIETY.
School-District Libraries
School-district libraries were initiated by Joseph HOWE in Nova Scotia and Egerton RYERSON in Canada West (Ontario) in 1850. Both men felt that children and adults could be served by local school authorities, with some financial and organizational assistance from colonial legislatures. New Brunswick (1858) and PEI (1877) followed this example, but after Confederation school-district libraries were less successful owing to local disaffection with the centralizing tendencies of departments of education.
Mechanics' Institutes
Mechanics' institutes originated in Great Britain in conjunction with working men's societies. In 1828 the first Institute library was formed at Montréal. They became popular in communities such as Halifax, Hamilton, Toronto and Victoria because they offered the working class inexpensive access to books and newspapers. Interest began to wane after Confederation, and many institutes eventually became part of a public library. In Ontario, for example, this process was facilitated after 1882 by allowing the assets of institutes to be transferred to free libraries. Legislative grants were similarly transferred, with the result that the institutes ceased or were replaced by public libraries.
Association or Social Libraries
Association or social libraries dedicated to a variety of interests flourished in eastern Canada after 1800. The collection of theLITERARY AND HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF QUEBEC (est 1824) was particularly noteworthy. Most associations provided a meeting place for lectures, discussions, or other programs and a reference or circulating library for members. Like the mechanics' institutes, association libraries were public by virtue of serving a membership beyond class, ethnic or religious limitations because they catered to broader cultural, musical, literary, or sporting tastes; many eventually became free public libraries, though the type still exists in some areas, eg, BC.
Free Libraries
In 1882 an Act of the Ontario legislature provided for the establishment of free libraries, supported financially by a levy of one-half mill to be assessed on the value of all real and personal property. A local board composed of 9 members appointed by the municipal council and school boards was to provide leadership. The Toronto Public Library was the largest among the first libraries to choose free status. This Ontario pattern of legislating tax support for library services usually was followed in other provinces: BC (1891), Manitoba (1899), Saskatchewan (1906), Alberta (1907), New Brunswick (1929), Newfoundland (1935), PEI (1935, repealed 1936), Nova Scotia (1937), Québec (1959) and the Northwest Territories (1966).
Modern Public Libraries
The modern library selects, acquires and organizes books, periodicals, newspapers, government publications, reports, microforms, maps, audiovisual materials, computer tapes and other materials, and makes them available to users. Materials selected to meet user needs are acquired and processed for the shelves using a cataloguing and classification system to provide the user with access to the library collection. Reference service offers assistance to the user in determining what is needed and how to find it. Provision of additional services, eg, children's programs, audiovisual services, and access to electronic and Internet resources, depends on the clientele of the library and financial resources.
Public libraries in Canada are governed by provincial statutes and are primarily financed by municipal tax revenues and other local income, with provincial grants supplementing local funding. Public libraries are normally the responsibility of a local or regional library board with authority to appoint or dismiss employees, control library property, establish policies, and budget for library operations. Service has varied depending on the commitment of local communities and their library boards.
The period in public library development immediately after 1900 was marked by construction of Carnegie library buildings and expansion of collections and services. With an emphasis on broadening the membership base, open access was permitted, children's departments were introduced, and standard cataloguing and classification systems were adopted. Travelling libraries were introduced to BC, Ontario and Québec shortly before 1900 to provide library extension in rural areas. Similar libraries were operated by the universities of Manitoba, Dalhousie, McGill and Alberta, and by provincial authorities in Saskatchewan, Ontario and Newfoundland. Although public library development was checked during the Depression and WWII, the expansion of service resumed after 1945.
Following the 1960s' emphasis on education, more than 125 new or remodelled public library buildings were constructed in Canada, in part with Centennial grants, and public library service expanded. Library development has been adversely affected by the inflationary period of the 1970s and two major recessions after 1980. Often libraries are caught between increasing demands from the public for enhanced services and pressures from municipal or regional jurisdictions to reduce or stabilize expenditures, resulting in consolidation of jurisdictions, eg, Halifax-Dartmouth and Metropolitan Toronto. Nonetheless, resources and services are still impressive and continue to grow: in 1995, the National Core Library Statistics Program (NCLSP) reported that 1034 public libraries held 81.8 million volumes, circulated 234 million items, performed 24.6 million information transactions, and employed 13 564 people at 3668 service points across Canada.
Regional Libraries
Because of Canada's demographic composition, provincial legislatures and professional associations have encouraged the formation of larger units of service such as county, regional and provincial library systems. The first regional systems were demonstrated on a trial basis in the early 1930s in the Fraser Valley and in PEI. After WWII other provinces adopted the regional forms. Some, such as Saskatchewan, have found that a regional system is the most effective solution to serving small communities separated by great distances - the province's large municipal libraries serve as backup to the regionals. Administrative frameworks and financial support for regional systems differ in each province.
Government Libraries
The federal government funds the Library of Parliament, theNATIONAL LIBRARY OF CANADA, the Canada Institute for Scientific and Technical Information (CISTI), libraries of government departments and crown corporations, the public library service of the Northwest Territories, Nunavut, and the Yukon Regional Library System, and it contributes to the provision of library service for Indian bands. Federal libraries are responsible to their departments, but co-operate on matters of common interest through the Council of Federal Libraries established in 1976, whose secretariat is provided by the National Library. The parliamentary librarian reports directly to Parliament; the national librarian, with the status of a deputy head, reports to Parliament through the minister of communications. The growth of provincial departmental libraries has been determined by factors influencing the development of their respective provinces, eg, since 1965 they have developed rapidly in Ontario, Québec and Alberta.
Legislative Libraries
Legislative libraries had their beginnings after 1758 when a colonial legislature was created for Nova Scotia; by 1800 legislative libraries were being established in PEI, New Brunswick, and Upper and Lower Canada. In 1867 the Library of Parliament was officially established in Ottawa, based on collections from the legislative libraries of Lower and Upper Canada (1791-1841) and the Province of Canada (1841-67). Until the creation of the National Library in 1953, the Library of Parliament received deposit copies of all books published in Canada. It serves as a reference library for MPs and senators. Provincial legislative libraries are financed by provincial governments and serve MLAs and sometimes civil servants. Their holdings are an important resource for the history and development of their areas. In Québec the position of the Bibliothèque nationale is unique; it acts as a depository for all Québec publications, co-ordinates Québec bibliographic projects, and through its mandate to promote literary activity, has entered into cultural agreements between Québec and France.
Professional, Business and Industrial Libraries
Among the earliest professional libraries were law libraries. The Law Society of Upper Canada was established in 1797, and by this time law collections were being used at Halifax and Québec City. As industry and business expanded rapidly, larger firms founded libraries: the Grand Trunk Railway's library for its employees, opened at Montréal in 1857, was typical in this regard. Modern industrial libraries, eg, Esso Resources Canada Ltd library in Calgary, tend to be in major cities where there are strong concentrations of business and industry, as in Montréal and Toronto. By the 1980s scientific and technical libraries formed the largest single group of special libraries.
Libraries in Nonprofit Organizations
Important literary collections pertaining to fine art, science and technology exist in many libraries attached to nonprofit organizations such as museums and art galleries, in particular the Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal, the NATIONAL GALLERY in Ottawa, the ART GALLERY OF ONTARIO, the NATIONAL MUSEUMS OF CANADAand the ROYAL ONTARIO MUSEUM. Libraries associated with theCANADIAN BROADCASTING CORPORATION and the CANADIAN MUSIC CENTRE in Toronto serve as information centres for broadcasters and composers.
In 1995, the NCLSP reported that 571 government and private special libraries held 17.3 million volumes, circulated 4.2 milion items, provided 1.5 million information transactions, and spent $137.1 million.
University Libraries
The first academic library as they are now known opened in 1789 with the establishment of King's College in Windsor, NS. Though libraries were included in many colleges and universities founded in the early 19th century in eastern Canada, academic collections remained relatively small until 1950, when Canadian academic libraries escalated rapidly in response to a new emphasis on education and research.
Typical of this rapid growth was the establishment of 5 new universities in Ontario, which opened their doors with completely catalogued basic collections thanks to the Ontario New Universities Library Project of the early 1960s, one of the first large-scale uses of library automation in Canada. Other provinces, most notably BC, also funded university library development, and the CANADA COUNCIL, and subsequently the SOCIAL SCIENCES AND HUMANITIES RESEARCH COUNCIL provided special grants for the enrichment of collections of national distinction.
In the late 1960s co-operative programs were introduced to allow the reorganization and sharing of collections. The Ontario Council of University Libraries developed a co-operative library network that included a transit system, a structured interlibrary loan system, automated union list systems for serials and government publications, and interuniversity and reciprocal borrowing agreements. In BC the Tri-University Libraries initiated a government-funded union catalogue project that included college libraries. Similar activities occurred in Québec under the library council for the universities. The most ambitious project, UNICAT/TELCAT (1974-79), was a union catalogue and support system shared by 18 Ontario and Québec university and government libraries; it was disbanded when newer technologies made local integrated systems linked to each other viaTELECOMMUNICATION networks more cost-effective. Subsequently, the Council of Prairie and Pacific University Libraries (COPPUL) was formed to develop and manage an infrastructure for information, research, and instructional services to assist university work in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and BC.
College Libraries
College libraries have developed rapidly in Canada since 1960 - in Québec in Collèges d'enseignement général et professionel, in Ontario in colleges of applied arts and technology, and in the other provinces in technical institutes, vocational training centres, or community colleges. These libraries are learning resource centres, emphasizing nonprint materials as much as traditional print collections. Recent developments involving Internet-related technology and resources have been of special interest to community and technical college libraries. A 1996 national survey found that most libraries were well placed to deal with two key issues facing libraries in offering Internet access, ie, the provision of effective training for library staff and the allocation of resources to meet rising user expectations about services and accessibility in the library.
The collective resources of post-secondary university and college libraries have developed dramatically since 1960. In 1995, the NCLSP reported that 219 academic libraries held 160.7 million volumes, circulated 40.2 million items, provided 6.1 million information transactions, expended $568.4 million, and employed 8312 people across Canada.
School Libraries
School libraries originated in the 19th century, but did not begin to develop rapidly until the educational reforms of the 1960s. For many years, provincial school-library associations as well as the Canadian School Library Association and Association for Teacher-Librarianship in Canada (established 1989) have discussed or proposed standards for the size of collections, for staff and physical facilities, and for the role of the librarian in curriculum development. The role of the school library depends on the willingness of the individual school board and principal to provide space, personnel, funding and materials. In an effort to maintain quality, supervisors or consultants are employed by many school libraries to help organize and oversee libraries.
Throughout the 1990s, funding for school libraries has been cut back. However, the National Symposium on Information, Literacy and the School Library held at Ottawa in 1997 reaffirmed the role of the school library for self-directed learning, reading, and media/computer literacy. Today, in our information-rich society, school libraries continue to be learning-resource centres for students and teachers and serve as essential "knowledge-navigators" in the teaching process.
Suggested Reading
- "Canada, Libraries in," E.L. Morton, Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science 4 (1970), 71-157; "Canada, Libraries in, 1970-1979," B.L. Anderson, ELIS 36 (1983), 94-155; A. Drolet, Les Bibliothèques canadiennes 1604-1960 (1960); L.S. Garry and C. Garry, eds, Canadian Libraries in Their Changing Environment (1977); P. McNally,Readings in Canadian Library History (1986 and 1996).
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/libraries/
------------
-----------
Modern Libraries: 1500-1540s CE
While secular libraries were rising, some church libraries also expanded including the Vatican Library.
However, a wave of anti-church sentiment starting in England caused the closure of many monastic libraries across Europe.
In 1566, Italian painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo created famous portrait calledThe Librarian.
The painting reflects the importance of the book culture and libraries during this time period.
The painting currently hangs at Skokloster Castle in Sweden.
Church Libraries
Although the Vatican Library was growing, smaller church libraries were threatened throughout Europe during the sixteenth century.
Vatican Library
Vatican City, Italy
In 1303 the papal library moved to Avignon and began growing to over 2000 volumes by the mid-1300s.
Bartolomeo Platina was appointed librarian. The image on the right by Melozzo da Forli (1477) depicts Sixtus IV Appointing Platina as Prefect of the Vatican Library.
In 1481, Platina produced a catalogue listing 3,500 items making the Vatican Library by far the largest library in Europe.
In 1587, Pope Sixtus V began the design for the Vatican Library. Designed by the architect Fontana, the library reflects a Roman design. The great hall with seven large windows is 184 feet long and 57 feet wide and divided into sections. The books are housed in plain wooden presses (7 feet high by 2 feet deep) on the walls beneath the windows. The floors are decorated marble and the walls are covered with frescoes exploring the great libraries of the world and the establishment of the church. It's unlikely that the room was intended for study.
The image (below left) shows the Great Hall of the Vatican Library looking west in 1901. The image (below right) shows a single press in the Vatican Library.
S. Walburga Church Library
Zutphen, Holland
Some church and monastic libraries began to open their doors to the public. Built in 1563, the Walburga Church Library provides a good example of how church libraries were used by the public. The library (60 feet long and 26 feet wide) is built against the south choir-aisle of the church (see floorplan below right). Windows provide light for the eighteen bookcase desks.
The books are attached to the desk by a 12 inch long chain (shown below). One end was attached to a wooden board on the side of the book, the other end contained an iron loop a loop attached to a bar.
The chain and book (above center and right) are from the Dominican House at Bemberg, South Germany during this time period.
Benedictine House of S. Germain de Pres
Benedictine House of S. Victor
Paris
The monastic libraries of the 1500s recognized the importance of making their resources available to the public. For instance, two Benedictine Houses in Paris were open to the public during certain days of the week.
Dispersal and Destruction
In some parts of Europe libraries were flourishing. However, overall "the sixteenth century was a bleak period in our library history" (Olle, 1971).
While the rise of publishing was having a positive impact on the spread of texts, it was having a negative impact on monasteries and church libraries. Scribes were no longer needed to produce manuscripts. In addition, the church was losing control over information. The printing press allowed reformers to spread their ideas quickly and efficiently.
By the late 1400s, many small monastic estates in England were being converted into educational foundations. These new foundations were often connected with universities such as Oxford and Cambridge. The library collections of these monasteries were merged with the large university collections.
Change was also impacting monasteries in other areas of Europe. When Martin Luther's 1521 treatise "On the monastic vows" declared monastic life as having no basis in scripture, rulers across Europe took the opportunity to close monasteries and confiscate entire libraries. In just a few years, Sweden, Denmark, and Switzerland dissolved monasteries across their countries. The well-known Abbey of St. Gall was one of few to survive.
Back in England, Henry VIII's divorce from Catherine of Aragon and marriage to Anne Boleyn resulted in a total breakdown of relations between England and the Church in Rome. King Henry VIII declared himself the Supreme Head of the Church of England. The Suppression of Religious Houses Act of 1536 passed by the Parliament of England set into motion the dissolution of monasteries. Specifically, it disbanded hundreds of monasteries, priories, convent, and friaries in England, Wales, and Ireland. Between 1536 and 1541 hundreds of religious communities were dissolved.
The dissolution of monasteries began under the reign of Henry VIII. Then, under the reign of Edward VI, the removal of Catholic institutions in England continued to have a dramatic impact on church libraries.
While this had little impact on some state sponsored university libraries like Oxford and Cambridge, some smaller college libraries were destroyed.
John Leland
London, England
John Leland (or John Leyland) (1503-1552) was a poet, historian, and an antiquarian who specialized in the study of antiquities (things of the past). Leland became friends with Thomas Cromwell, the chief minister of Henry VIII. In 1533, King Henry VIII authorized Leland to explore the libraries of all the religious institutions of England. Leland spent his time compiling lists of significant or unusual books from these libraries.
The image on the right is a line engraving of a bust of Leland from 1762.
After the First Suppression Act, Leland wrote to Cromwell requesting assistance in rescuing books from the monastic libraries. He stated that "The Germans perceive our desidousness, and do send daily young scholars hither that spoileth [books], and cutteth them out of libraries, returning home and putting them abroad as monuments of their own country."
Although it's unclear what role Leland took in saving books and establishing royal libraries, it's liked that in the 1530s and 1540s he was involved in providing monastic materials to Henry's palace libraries in Greenwich, Hampton Court, and Westminster. For instance, it's known that he received permissions to remove materials from the dissolved Bury St. Edmunds.
Leland felt strongly that the loss of the monastic library was tragic. In a letter written to Henry VII in the mid 1540s, he wrote:
"Never had we bene offended for the losse of our lybraryes, beynge so many in nombre, and in so desolate places for the more parte, yf the chiefe monuments & most notable workes of our excellent wryters, had bene reserved. If there had bene in every shyre of England, but one solepne lybrary, to the preservacyon of those noble workes, and preferrement of good lernynges in oure posteryte, it had bene yet sumwhat. But to destroye all without consyderacyon, is & wyll be unto Englande for ever, a most horryble infamy, amonge the grave senyours of othe nacyons. A great nombre of the shych purchased those superstycyouse mansyons, reserved of those lybrarye bokes." (Leland, 1544)
Archbishop Parker
Archbishop Parker collected many of the books dispersed by Henry VIII and Edward VI.
Glasney College Library
Penryn, Cornwall, England
Beyond the destruction of monastic libraries, other libraries were targeted during this period. In 1548, royal officials destroyed the college ending formal scholarship which helped sustain the Cornish language and cultural identify.
Resources
Leland, John (1544). The New Year's Gift. Published by John Bale as The Laboryouse Journal (1549).
Carley, Hames P. (2006). Leland, Johns (c. 1503-1552). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
Casson, Lionel (2001). Libraries of the Ancient World. Yale University.
Clark, John Willis (1901). The Care of Books. Cambridge University Press Warehouse. Available:http://books.google.com/books?id=uvQ_AAAAYAAJ
http://www.eduscapes.com/history/modern/1500.htm
----------------
BLOGS:
OUR LOCAL LIBRARY - CANADA: True Patriot Love Foundation ...
nova0000scotia.blogspot.com/.../canada-military-news-our-local-library.html - Cached
16 Nov 2014 ... CANADA MILITARY NEWS: OUR LOCAL LIBRARY- Kentville Library Lego ..... http://nova0000scotia.blogspot.ca/2013/10/homeless-harley- ...
PTSD- Mental Illness - CANADA: True Patriot Love Foundation ...
nova0000scotia.blogspot.com/.../canada-military-news-ptsd-mental.html - Cached
11 Sep 2015 ... Canadians gonna vote hard - welcome back HARPER /libraries r ..... http://nova0000scotia.blogspot.ca/2014/10/bullying-heartbreak- ...
Sep 5 - CANADA: True Patriot Love Foundation launches Highway ...
nova0000scotia.blogspot.com/.../billions-of-christians-are-sick-2-death.html - Cached
4 Sep 2015 ... http://nova0000scotia.blogspot.ca/2015/09/o-canada-remembering- ...... entertainment involves going to the park or the library, not to places like ...
Nova Scotia on Twitter: "BLOG: Kentville Library- WE HAD A ...
https://twitter.com/nova0000scotia/status/648204424154902529 - Cached
27 Sep 2015 ... @nova0000scotia · Nova Scotia · @nova0000scotia .... BLOG: Kentville Library- WE HAD A DREAM old aged archaic politics killed dream 4 all ...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.