Friday, December 31, 2010

The free internet

When The Times of London began charging for access to its daily online edition, it was a watershed moment for my life as an internet user. The ethos of free and social and the commons was shown up, as with most things from Silicon Valley, as carefully constructed spin, half the conjuring trick leading us to a state of chronic and compulsive electronic consumerism (the other half of the trick, of course, is the creation myth as pronounced by its prophets - Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerburg, the Google dudes).

I cannot use sites like Hulu, because I have the wrong IP address; I must pay for apps; I need to buy a life on Farmville; ESPN wants 10 dollars a month to read the good stuff - plus ads; now, I need to pay to read The Times. 

The internet, therefore, is moving away from an ideal information state, where that information is free and available to all, and moving towards the state of a mobile, electronic mall, open, blaring and neon, 24 hours a day. The second generation digital divide is not that the citizens of Africa cannot access the internet, or electricity. Instead, it is the three card trick that internet companies are playing on the West - increasingly, we the users are being channelled towards a pyramid where our few cents are becoming a hill of millions (or billions) for the savvy and clever and entitled.

A commie rant? Maybe, or maybe a lament from a jaundiced information idealist, who bought into the opening day publicity - free for all, free for ever, access to everything, anywhere, anytime, until the end of time. If I can't even read the paper now, how long is it until the search engines become fully monetized, a cent a time - surely the rub-your-hands-together end goal.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Google: Good or bad?

Google lights up my life. I get sports scores in real time, know what the weather is going to be like in Rome tomorrow, convert my baht to euros, book flights and hotels, read the paper, blog. Google doesn't necessarily do all these things itself, but it does facilitate straightforward access to them. When I was young, growing up in the South Pacific, I sometimes wouldn't know who won the World Series until the following year, when the new season's preview magazines hit the bookstands - now I know the same moment that someone in New York or San Francisco or, less likely, Kansas City does.

I use Google in class a lot, teaching students how to use it effectively, primarily through using straightforward search strategies, but also using Google Maps, and Blogger, and Youtube, and as a starting point for research in numerous projects. Like a public library once was, Google is the place we head by default when we have a general need for information.

And, like a librarian, Google interprets our query and attempts to return the best possible result - not by in depth questioning of the user, or years of experience, or conversational nuance, but through use of an algorithm that is more secret than the recipe for Coca Cola. This does put the onus on the user more than the facilitator - to get the best results, our searches and keywords need to be carefully chosen. But Google is intuitive enough for most users to understand this to a basic level, and we can all usually find something we want on the first page of results.

So that is my perception of Google. I view it not as a great storage unit of information, but as a sort of robotic librarian - it knows where to go to get the information I want, even at 3a.m.

But a great deal of the information that Google can go and get would not have been in the public library of 1976. In some ways, Google is a library of iniquity: pornography, paedophelia, bomb making, terrorist tips, racism, gambling - these are all growth markets, partly because of the accessibility to these type of sites, as facilitated by Google.

Of even greater concern, I feel, is the deadening effect of Google. As in a casino, the world becomes timeless as we surf the net. Instead of great novels or poems, great pop songs or even great TV advertisements, Google encourages output in the form of blogs, or tweets, or email, or videos of our dogs bodily functions, or Facebook, or more usually - nothing. At least watching a TV show in the middle of the day, even if it was a rerun of Kojak, represented a linear event. Time passed, notably. Narrative occurred. There was a beginning and an end.

Now, using Google, it is possible to pass whole afternoons without even that minor achievement. Cricinfo scores flick over. Farmville swells, grows, recedes, swells again. 1979 is still on Youtube, and so is Benny Hill. I blog, I email - and at the end, I am pretty much at the same point at which I began. I want the man who ate McDonalds every day for a year to sit in an apartment, Googling from 8am-5pm, and find out which was worse for his health.

I'm overstating my case? Perhaps, but when 200 of the richest people in America get together to discuss brain-computer interfaces, it is time for people to dissent. Grow potatoes, write a haiku, wrestle with your son - anything. Take an hour a day that you would spend online and do something human instead.

I love Google. It is the advance of my lifetime that has most changed the way I carry out that life. But none of that change has been creative, none has been physical, and none has made me a better parent or husband or person.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Censorship in a school library

When I first started in my role at this library, a teaching staff member went to the shelves, found a copy of Ben Elton's Post Mortem, opened it to an explicit scene and brought it to show me. She wasn't outraged or offended, but felt the text was unsuitable for students at the school.

I read the page as she watched. It was explicit, as she had said, and contained high level obscene language. I agreed to consider the place of the book in the collection, put it in my desk, read it again, put it back in my desk - eventually, the next time we weeded, I included it in the deselected items. We had other Ben Elton that students could read, I told myself. It was old, and dog-eared. It had to go.

What I was doing, in effect, new to my job, eager to please faculty, was placing myself in the position of censor, whatever rationale I was using to justify my actions to myself. I read a page of a popular novel, and judged it to be unsuitable for students using the library, and had thus withdrawn it from circulation.

Is that appropriate? In Kentucky, it was not appropriate for library staff to withhold The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen from an 11 year old library user who wanted to read it. My context is slightly different, as my salary, at a high-end private school, is paid by parents, not by county taxes; I work under Thai law, which has a different commitment to information than American law; most of my library users are adolescents, or younger; I was removing the text from circulation, rather than refusing to let a specific user borrow it.

My rule of thumb is to not purchase texts which will be offensive to users. This is reflected in the library purchasing policy. But I know that there are advanced students, leaving for Unversity later this year, who may benefit from reading American Psycho (they are studying sexuality in the American novel); the graphic novel collection would be richer, and probably better, if I was willing to select items that contained challenging content. I also feel that I am imposing my interpretation of 'social conscience' on the library and its users.

So what is the solution? I don't think it is to have a drawer of controversial texts that are issued to users signalled as mature enough to cope; or even to mark the due date sticker with 'Year 10 and above only'. It is not appropriate, to my mind, to extract a book from the collection because it has a passage of writing that may revolt or horrify or titillate the reader. But is it correct operating procedure to, alternatively, fill the shelves with mature content?

My compromise is to not buy every book I feel I should, and to take the middle-ground, motivated by the context of the library, and my perception of the requirements of the library stakeholders. If there are disputed texts, I now consult with those stakeholders before making a decision. However, if a student requests the library purchase a text, I will almost always approve that request.

But I still feel that my selection hand is too heavy, and that rather than facilitating straightforward access to information, my caution is in effect a form of defacto censorship - and that leaves me feeling just a little bit grubby.

Monday, December 27, 2010

The Bookless Library

Do libraries need books at all?

Cushing Academy, in Massachusetts, has made the decision that they don't, and that the future for school libraries is digital - ebooks, databases, portable devices, the web.

The result? Their new digital library is the hub of the school, with increased use and the need for more librarians to help students effectively navigate the digital world. Cushing hasn't thrown away its paper holdings - they have been redistributed to relevant departments within the school. But the library itself has been reborn, digital.

I admire them for so completely accepting the challenge of technology. One of my primary goals with Harrow students is to have them being information independent (and information authentic) by the time they leave school. I define this as their being able to access, interpret, present and acknowledge authoritative information - which increasingly means, electronic information. By exposing students so fully to digital information, and scaffolding that exposure with thorough, expert advice from information professionals, Cushing Academy is surely going to meet that goal in a way that is highly relevant to success in the 21st Century.

But I also agree with the dissenting voices in the debate. I believe in, and love, the stillness of the page. Reading a book is, I agree, a singleminded process - there is only one tab open. Books are not, thankfully, connected to the grid. Tactile, silent, pleasurable, lovable, dog-eared - books are the primary reason that I am a librarian.

They are not, however, the primary reason that all students come to the library. Some want to read The Hunger Games, or Bear Grylls, or Charlie and Lola. Some want to game. Some need to print last night's homework - now. Some want to watch Youtube, go on Facebook, browse car image sites. Some want to do research. Some want to talk to their friends. Some like the air-con. Some feel happy and safe sitting alone in a chair reading Asterix. Some read the papers, or Time magazine. Some need help. Some want to do Mathletics. Some want to....

Which I guess is my point. I think Cushing Academy, with an end-goal of information independence in the digital age, has done the right thing. But I want Harrow library to not just be about Electronica, with a capital E. I don't want it to just be for research, or even research and ebooks. I want it to be for research and reading and being social, or being alone, for surfing or lying prone in a beanbag, reading Meg Cabot or The Great Gatsby for the first time. I want you to come here and connect, charge up and fearlessly onwards. But I also want you to be able to come here and disconnect, to power down, to look, slowly, quietly, longingly - backwards, or sideways, or yes, even forwards.

Database Training

In the second term, library staff will be offering database training to teachers at Harrow. The main focus of the training will be on EBSCO, and how to use it effectively in the classroom. Other resources that we subscribe to, including Britannica Online, Issues Online and Netlibrary will also be demonstrated.

The training will take place one day a week during term 2A. Each week's training will be on a different day from the previous week, so that teachers with activities have the opportunity to attend.

An email, with dates and locations, will be sent out early in the new term. Teachers who are unable to attend but would like to learn more about the school's electronic resources can contact library staff - we will be happy to arrange a time that suits.

We are also happy to demonstrate the databases to Harrow parents.

Does 2 + 2 = 4?

Not always, according to the boffins at New Scientist.

The Last Word is a useful site hosted by that magazine, where you can search for answers to those scientific (and mathematical) questions that have always baffled you.

So, if you added two librarians to two insurance underwriters, would the answer be four? Or a quiet night in? Or chaos theory?

Japanese Films

The SF World Cinema at Central World is showing a retrospective of the master Japanese filmaker, Akira Kurosawa. The films run from January 6th - January 19th, and will be in the original Japanese with English subtitles. Entry is free, and made possible by the Japan Foundation of Bangkok.

Here is a link to the schedule.

Kurosawa was the pre-eminent Japanese filmaker of the 20th Century. He won the Palm d'Or in Cannes, and was awarded an Academy Award for Lifetime Achievement in 1990. The film he is perhaps best known for is the epic Seven Samurai.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Merry Christmas

Is Santa Claus real?

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from all the staff at Harrow Library!

Friday, December 24, 2010

Best Teen Books

Here is a link to a list of the best teen books, as voted by readers around the world.

The library holds many of the titles listed, so come and borrow them when the new term starts!

Remember, you can check which books are available by using Oliver.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Merry Christmas!

Merry Christmas! Hope you have a great holiday and enjoy a well deserved break. Read lots of awesome books and we will look forward to seeing you again in Term 2. We probably won't write much on the blog over the holiday, so keep reading - we will update it again next term, promise!

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

The week of Christmas is nearly upon us!

This is the last week of term 1, and it has gone so fast.
This term we have had so many fun things to do in the library. We've had storytellers, creativity day, making stuff day, Guinness World Records day and many other activities.

We have a lot of things planned for next term, so make sure you come in and see us when you get back.

This week we have a festive theme at the library. For making stuff day (Wednesday, Primary lunch) we will be making mini cardboard Christmas trees. They are very cute, you should come and make one!

3 sleeps till the end of school, and 18 sleeps till Santa...

Monday, November 29, 2010

EBSCO... it's useful, not useless!

Recently I've shown some of our secondary school classes how to use databases that the school subscribes to. If you are a Harrow student or parent, you can use these resources from anywhere you have internet access. To get the login details, just visit the library.

You can find a link to the login page on the Harrow website electronic resources page.

What is this EBSCO database anyway?
Well, it is a service that we subscribe to, filled with useful and authoratitive* information. Lots of it is full text (that means you get to read the whole piece) but you may also find abstracts (you only get a blurb describing the content of an article).

The database contains items from magazines, journals and newspapers.
Most of the content is assessed by real people and assigned appropriate subjects so that it will come up when you search for it.

*What is authoritative? This means that you can trust the information inside to come from sources which have been verified and are more likely to provide accurate information. Please make sure you assess any information you find before you use it.
I'll write more about how to do that another day...

While you can use Google to find things, it's only one tool in your choice of many!
Using EBSCO will give you the edge over other students who don't. And you'll need to use other tools like this when you're at University, so it's great practice!

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Creativity day

Today is creativity day. We have many students coming in to make chocolate truffles, create collage, write fantastic newspaper poems, do fun things with i-pod touch and make their own stories with Storybird. We're really looking forward to seeing all the great stuff that students can make and do!

Here is a poem I wrote because it is creativity day.
Can you guess what it is about?

Home of aliens, paperclips, a person and an octopus
A flock of cranes
Bulldog clips, Cookie Monster cup
A solitary poppy
Tissues
Books (and more books)
A stick with a pointing finger
A sprinkling of glitter
A computer is under there somewhere

Friday, November 19, 2010

Harrow fair, Loy Krathong... exciting weekend!

Tomorrow is the Harrow fair - there will be all kinds of fun stuff to see and do. You can even eat candy floss (delicious and sugary!) I'm not sure if there are toffee apples (or as some would say candy apples) but I really hope there are! That's my favourite thing to eat at a fair. Or anytime I can get one.

Sunday is Loy Krathong. And for those of you at Harrow, we've had a whole day of Loy Krathong celebrations. It was a fun day and everyone looked amazing.

If you have time over the weekend, why not sit down with your toffee apple or candy floss and read a book or e-book? The perfect thing to unwind after a busy weekend. Just be sure not to get it all sticky :)

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Britannica Online trial


Right now we are trialling Britannica Online. So if you are doing some research and want to check it out, just ask us for the password. For those of you who haven't seen it before, Britannica is a well known and trusted encyclopaedia. A great authoratitative source for your school projects!

The Red Pyramid

I've been reading (again!) and have discovered another fantastic book for adventure lovers in the secondary/prep section.

The name of the book? The Red Pyramid.

This book is great for those of you who like Egyptian things/history/fantasy and Rick Riordan. Written by the author who bought you the Percy Jackson series, this is an exciting, action packed story. I had a lot of trouble putting it down, and finished it in only two days!

The story focuses on a brother and sister who have spent most of their lives living apart. They are reunited after their father (a world reknown Egyptologist) takes them to the British museum where he asks to see the Rosetta Stone. Things only get weirder, with the children's father unleashing several ancient Egyptian gods (some of whom have their mind set on world domination). After their father is imprisioned, it is up to the children to deal with the gods and save the world...

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Mysterious Benedict Society

I don't usually write blog posts about books that I'm reading, but I've just stumbled across a really good one in the Prep and Secondary library collection.

Have you heard of a book called The Mysterious Benedict Society? I started reading it the other day and I have been finding it really hard to stop reading and do other things I know I should be doing. It's an exciting adventure story with some fantasy elements - worth a read if you like spies and unexpected events.

The book follows the adventures of four children who are drawn together after answering a mysterious newspaper advertisment looking for brilliant and gifted children. All of the children have different talents which are essential for the dangerous mission they are asked to complete.

If you like CHERUB and H.I.V.E books then why not give it a try? If you like Harry Potter, Lemony Snicket and Spiderwick there are lots of similar elements (but I won't tell you what they are - it will spoil the story!) If you're looking for adventure give this book a try!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Need some help? Why not ask us?

We've added an ask a librarian link.
If you need some help to find books, information or have another library related query you can click the link to email us and we will reply to you the next school day. If you would like to contact the Head Librarian (Mr Piggot) or the Primary Librarian (Miss Goodall) directly you can find our email addresses in the Library contact section on the right hand side.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Welcome back to term 1B

It's hard to believe that there are only two and a bit months until Christmas!

We have some really exciting activites and events planned here at the library - one of which is the book fair. The book fair will be held next week, and Harrow kids and families will be able to browse through a wonderful selection of books from local booksellers. It's going to be a lot of fun - don't miss it!

This week for making stuff day we will be making crayon etching pictures. To do this we'll colour in really hard with crayons then colour firmly over the top with a black crayon. Once this bit is completed it's easy to use a sharp pencil to draw on the top. You then get multi-coloured crayon pictures on a black background.

Our storyteller Mrs Brownlow will be back with us on Friday too.

Welcome back everyone! See you in the library soon.

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Guinness Book of Records competition

Today we held the Guinness Book of Records competition at Primary lunchtime.
Congratulations to all our winners!
We had a fantastic time eating as fast as possible with chopsticks (milo balls and prunes = de-licious!), holding heavy books longer than anyone else, bouncing balls without dropping them and writing super fast.

Tomorrow is craft day. What are we making? We'll be using crayons to create leaf rubbings.
Ever wondered how crayons are made?


Tomorrow is also maths day! There are all sorts of exciting activities happening in Primary tomorrow - it should be a lot of fun.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Follow us on Twitter

It's official, we've got Twitter :) Our Twitter account will have what's going on from day to day, plus we'll post the link to the new books there each month!

Primary lunch times update!



Hi everyone,

So much has been going on at Primary lunchtime! We have been having a lot of fun doing all kinds of things - on our Wednesday making stuff day we made pop up cards and on Friday we heard some more stories from our wonderful storyteller, Mrs Brownlow.

Something else we've been doing is the good boy and girl award. We give this out every Thursday lunchtime to two students who have been especially well behaved in the library at lunchtime. The winning students get to choose a prize from our goody bags.

Our winners so far have been:
Nina 2B
Jeff 5S
Bua 2M
Chawin 4R
Derya 4R
Boss 3m

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Storyteller - Friday Primary lunchtimes

Every Friday for the rest of this term we will have the wonderful Mrs Brownlow reading stories during Primary lunchtime.

The first session was heaps of fun, with Mrs Brownlow reading stories from The Wind and the Willows as well as picture book twists on fairytales.

Come along this week for more stories. The stories will start around five past twelve!

Friday, September 10, 2010

Making stuff day!


This Wednesday at Primary lunchtime we had our first library craft session (or as we like to call it, making stuff day).
Our first craft was bookplates. What will it be next Wednesday? Come in and see!

If you didn't get to come along this week, you can print some bookplates and make your own at home.

Friday, September 3, 2010

More website links - Myths and legends

Looking for myths and legends websites? You can find a list on the right hand side of this page. Scroll down to have a look.

Monday, August 30, 2010

Finding good websites for school

How's your term going? By now you're probably super busy!

But don't forget the library has lots of things that might help you with your school work, including Oliver (and for you younger students, Olly).

Oliver is the school library catalogue and you can use it from anywhere you can access the internet - just go to the library page on the Harrow Thailand website and click the link.

One thing that's really useful about Oliver, is that we subscribe to a service which lets students and teachers find websites which have been specifically chosen to fit with areas they are studying. You can also do a Google or other kind of search (and I recommend that you do this too if you have time :)) but this is a great way of finding useful sites easily.

So... how do I do it? hmmm?
From Oliver:
1. Open the library catalogue click the OPAC search button (along the left hand side).
2. When this opens up click on the third tab (advanced).
3. Type your topic into the anywords box (eg myths, dogs, Oscar Wilde) and click on the online content button.
4. Press enter or click search.
5. You'll get a list of specially chosen web addresses just for your topic!
6. Click on the links to access the sites.

You'll need to click the back button to get back to your search as the links don't open in a separate window.

Better than Google, cos they're all chosen especially for school students!

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

New website links - The Victorians

As many of you are studying The Victorians this term, we have posted a list of (hopefully!)
useful weblinks on the library blog.

Scroll down the page to see them. They're on the right hand side at the very bottom.
We're here to help you with your research. So, if you haven't found what you need, please call in and see us.

Friday, August 20, 2010

Welcome back to Harrow!

Hi everyone!

Welcome back to all our new and returning pupils.
The library is here for all of the school community. If you'd like to come in and browse or ask for help finding books or information we'd love to see you. Teachers, parents and other family members can also borrow from the school library.

We have started class visits to the library, and you can also come by at lunch time and before and after school. We are open from 7.30 - 4pm.

The library staff are looking forward to seeing you all in the library soon!

Friday, May 14, 2010

New Library System

The Library has a new computer system called Oliver. Oliver is web based, meaning that it is easier for students, staff and teachers to access. All library users also have a username and password which allows them to renew books, reserve books, and check their library account. To learn your username and password, please contact library staff.



Netlibrary audio books and a set of curriculum linked websites are also loaded into Oliver and can be accessed by users.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Illustrator Visit

UK based children’s book illustrator Paul Geraghty visited Harrow this term. Students from Year 1 to Year 7 were entertained by Paul’s stories and his descriptions about how he comes up with the ideas for his books.

Being of South African origin, much of the inspiration for Paul’s books has been drawn from the animals and people of the African continent. He spoke wonderfully of the creatures he saw on moonlit nights around the waterhole, and how the animals outside his bedroom window inspired creativity within him.

Paul also discussed the creative process, and identified techniques that students could apply to their own creative work.

Some of these creatures came to life during the day, as the school was left with three startling illustrations: a frog, a dinosaur and an elephant. These illustrations will be hung around the school for viewing shortly.