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Good Morning! October 1, 2018
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October is Health Literacy Month
 October is
designated as Health Literacy Month, an ideal chance for public
libraries to curate and promote health information. Helping with that cause is the National
Network of Libraries of Medicine (NNLM) and the American Library Association
(ALA) These two agencies have partnered to create a free toolkit for raising
awareness of how libraries support health literacy in their communities. This toolkit is part of the Libraries
Transform campaign.
Studies show that more than 90 million American
adults have low health literacy skills, which measures the extent to which people
can access necessary health services, as well as their understanding of pertinent
health information. Public, school, academic and special libraries play a key
role in making quality health information accessible to all.
Library policies deter staff from
answering specific patron questions regarding medical conditions or treatment
options. But staff can certainly guide
library users to reliable, authoritative information, allowing patrons to make
more education health-related decisions. Look to the Libraries Transform Health
Literacy Toolkit to use throughout October.
And check out these additional websites for more on the topic
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The Big Library Read Returns
 October 1-15
These first two weeks of October, the Big
Library Read returns. This reading initiative is the world’s largest eBook club, a virtual version of a
local book discussion group. This month’s
Big
Library Read title is The Girl with the Red Balloon by Katherine
Locke. From October 1-15, BRIDGES eBook readers can join readers world wide by reading and discussing
this title with the added advantage of being able to borrow this book
simultaneously without wait lists or holds.
The Girl with the Red Balloon is a
young adult novel telling the story of sixteen-year-old Ellie Baum. Granddaughter of a f a Holocaust survivor, as she time-travels
to 1988 East Berlin, where she is caught up in a conspiracy of history and
magic.
It’s easy to
participate in the Big Library Read by using marketing materials created by
OverDrive. Again, local participation offers community-wide access to
simultaneous downloads of this title at no cost to your library. OverDrive’s marketing materials include
posters, bookmarks, and press releases, click below
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 October 7-13
It’s next week already—Teen
Read Week 2018 will be celebrated October 7-13. This is the week when libraries
nationwide have great options for teen programming. When
you participate in Teen Read Week, your library is joining a
national literacy project sponsored by the Young Adult Library Services
Association (YALSA) of ALA.
The 2018 theme is “It’s Written in the Stars—Read.” This is your
chance to spotlight all the
resources and activities you provide for the teenage crowd. From the YALSA website: “…Teens are not simply ‘older
children’—the have reached a developmental stage that requires a different
strategic approach in order to effectively understand, connect with, and serve
them. In addition, the needs and
developmental abilities of younger teens ages 13 to 15 vary from those of older
teens ages 16 to 18. YALSA helps
libraries increase their outreach to teens and serve them better…”
One great activity is to get your teen patrons involved
in Teens Top
10 Voting. Now through
October 13, teens can vote for their favorite three titles from this
year’s list of nominees. Find the 2018
nominees, watch a promotional video, and encourage your community’s teens to
vote early and often! Find those details at the button below.
Also visit YALSA’s website http://www.ala.org/yalsa/ YALSA is a division of the American Library Association; its website is a great
spot to find promotional materials, along with collection development lists, top YA titles,
STEM and STEAM toolkits too.
How
will you help teens in your community Unleash Their Story?
Share your plans for Teen Read Week on LibraryTalk...
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 This Week and Next
For everyone pre-registered, the Public Library Support Course begins
next Thursday October 11. This 5-week
online course is the certification program for support personnel in Iowa libraries.
Look to dozens of national education
providers for a menu of webinars at this link
https://www.statelibraryofiowa.org/ld/c-d/continuing-ed/other-conted
These are free online programs on a variety of topics, using a variety of web
conferencing software. Note that
different web conferencing software have varying system requirements or require
downloads. Click into any of the program
topics for connection instructions.
Finally, hundreds of Iowa library personnel
and trustees converge in Cedar Rapids for ILA’s annual conference
Wednesday-Friday this week. Here’s to a
great conference and safe travels!
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