#libraries

danie10@squeet.me

Cape Town City libraries use technology to draw young patrons to the bookshelves: Read something, before you can use a tablet

Child holding a tablet, with a game being played on the screen. In the background is a red plastic table with various books on it.
Waiting times have increased due to the tablets’ overwhelming popularity, prompting the library staff to devise a creative solution. Those waiting their turn must read to a staff member before being allowed to use the tablets. This approach has produced remarkable results, with many young students improving their reading skills and gaining newfound confidence.

Gaming sessions are limited to Fridays, Saturdays and school holidays. To secure a slot, children are encouraged to borrow books, read them and then provide a brief review to the librarians, either written or spoken.

Simple, but brilliant! It’s a win-win as the kids get something they’ll enjoy, and at the same time their literacy skills improve. These literacy skills are what will make a massive difference to their school learning, as well as their ability to get jobs one day. Gaming itself will undoubtedly also teach them skills, but literacy trumps all. As an added bonus, they also learn that effort equals reward.

The rollout of this initiative began the previous year with the distribution of 66 tablets to 13 libraries. In 2023, the endeavour has expanded further, with 99 tablets allocated to 19 libraries, and this momentum is expected to persist throughout the year. I hope that more such tablets can be rolled out to additional libraries.

Librarians are not just people who sit behind a counter and stamp books out or charge fines for overdue books. I’ve always found them very helpful (taking you top something instead of just pointing in the distance), and what they do, is more than just about books. Libraries often have computer and Internet facilities, meeting spaces, and more. Many communities really underestimate the importance of libraries, especially to younger children who have a thirst for knowledge. One of the most precious gifts a child can get, is good reading and literacy skills. There is so much knowledge (and entertainment) that is available free of cost at libraries. Reading can inform, relax, motivate, and entertain.

See https://www.capetownetc.com/tech/city-libraries-use-technology-to-draw-young-patrons-to-the-bookshelves/
#Blog, #capetown, #libraries, #literacy, #reading, #technology

danie10@squeet.me

Cape Town libraries have free access to Overdrive or Libby eBooks as well as over 7,000 local and international newspapers via PressReader

Bild/Foto
Apart from the above there is also online access to African storybooks in English, isiXhosa and Afrikaans, Fundza literacy learning, SA curriculum for homeschooling, ISET publication for careers in IT, and more.

It is really good to see libraries catering for online and remote access in modern times. I see too our local library will be celebrating their 100th year of service next, after starting out in May 1924 from the premises of a private home shortly after the suburb was established and the first houses were built.

Free online access such as this brings really easy access to all residents, who just need an Android or iOS device to access a rich variety of learning and news.

I remember many years ago when I first got the PressReader app, how I wished there was easier, more ready access to it. But back then libraries, by us anyway, were not really up to date and e-books were not on their horizon at all. I remember then still visiting a library in person and having to navigate the Dewey catalogue system of cards in order to actually find the book on the shelves, and hope it was not checked out already. Today, there is little need to travel to the library unless you want to use the free computer resources or get person-to-person assistance.

See https://opac.capetown.gov.za/
#Blog, #capetown, #learning, #libraries, #southafrica, #technology

girlofthesea@diasporasocial.net

#books #reading #libraries
SANCTUARY LIBRARIES
Book Sanctuary Cities Like Chicago Are A Response To Book Bans, Censorship.

  • As book bans pass across the country, some cities and libraries are declaring themselves “book sanctuaries.”**
    imagine facing possible felony charges for lending students library books. That unimaginable scenario is currently playing out in Florida, “where teachers are being told” to remove any “vetted” books from classroom libraries or risk prosecution.

  • Florida is far from the only state where state officials seem eager to challenge and ban books. In North Dakota, lawmakers are considering a bill to ban books with “sexually explicit” content — which includes sexual or gender identity — from public libraries, as well as imprison librarians who don’t comply. Meanwhile, lawmakers in Indiana have reintroduced a similar bill that would criminalize librarians for giving minors what some may view as obscene material.
    https://www.teenvogue.com/story/book-sanctuaries-chicago-toronto-libraries

mlansbury@despora.de

Books Unbanned

Teens and young adults ages 13 to 26 living anywhere in the U.S. can access our entire collection of e-books and audiobooks. We believe in your right to read what you want, discover yourself and form your own opinions.

https://www.spl.org/programs-and-services/teens/books-unbanned

#censorship #America #banned #books #BannedBooks #library #libraries #ebooks #free #audiobooks #QuestionAuthority

beaubobobonobo@diaspora.psyco.fr

The Internet Archive kept many books and media lost to time alive for us. So many pieces of lost media, including vintage films, books someone uploaded from their personal collection, political news that got scrubbed off the world, to name a few.

But alas, this is the gardening company deciding to burn down the seed vaults because nobody will buy their packaged seeds.

By the way, if they believed they could get away with it, they would definitely try to outlaw physical libraries as well.

#InternetArchive #bookpublishers #CopyrightInfringement #DigitalLending #ebooks #libraries
(https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2023/03/publishers-beat-internet-archive-as-judge-rules-e-book-lending-violates-copyright/)

dailyjoy@diasp.org

I love going to the library, the smells, the sounds or lack of them. So much to browse, never bored. Our libraries allow us to bring in coffee and snacks so I don't even have to leave for sustenance.
#libraries #books

nowisthetime@pod.automat.click

"Culturocide" by Vasily Prozorov
#Culturocide - a #documentary

Description from Vasily Prozorov from UKRLeaks
#Literary #mission

My documentary "Culturocide" (https://t.me/ukr_leaks_eng/943) for the most part is based on the study of enemy literature in schools in the liberated territories of the LPR. Through books, Kiev introduced Russophobic attitudes to the younger generation (and adults too), distorting history and denigrating the big neighbor in the most "vivid" colors.

The process of restoring the liberated territories implies the return of cultural justice, the eradication of the openly fascist education system and, in general, the protection of the culture of the Russian population, which was subjected to the most severe repression by the Kiev regime.

The Union of Writers of the LPR performs (https://litrossia.ru/item/vojna-ne-otmenit-rabotu/) with honor and enthusiasm this difficult mission in the Luhansk region. In 2022, the Union brought about 20 thousand books to the liberated territories. Among them there is a part of the circulation of my book "The Hot summer of Mariupol". In the new year, 2023, the LPR Writers' Union plans to transfer about 14 thousand #books to #libraries in January alone, and this is an excellent indicator.

I would like to wish all the employees of the literary mission great luck in this extremely important work

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

Z-Library domains are seized and pirate book site is dead

Well, not quite.

https://goodereader.com/blog/e-book-news/z-library-domains-are-seized-and-pirate-book-site-is-dead

The pirate site is effectively dead right now, since all of their DNS servers have also been seized. It remains to be seen if they will go back online with new domains or if they will fade away into nothingness.

Thing is: .onion domain names don't use DNS. The Tor network, itself, takes care of routing. The browser doesn't learn the site's IP address, and the site doesn't learn the browser's IP address.

With the Tor Browser, you can access Z-Library at this URL.

http://zlibrary24tuxziyiyfr7zd46ytefdqbqd2axkmxm4o5374ptpc52fad.onion/


In related news: The Imperial Library of Trantor is having severe problems. Some weeks ago it went down. Then it returned, but with no books in its catalog (It had hundreds of thousands.) Today, the server is down again. The librarian there has a name that might be Russian, so Putin's government might be the problem. Here's the Imperial Library's URL.

http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion/

Maybe its down because he's restoring his collection. Or maybe the truth is worse than that.


The Free Book Library on I2P is still up, but it hasn't added any new books since September 19, 2021.

http://ebooks.i2p/

You need to be running I2P to access this site.

#books #ebooks #e-books #e-book #library #bootleg-books #pirate #pirate-library #z-library #imperial-library-of-trantor #libraries #free-books #tor #onionland #piracy #free-book-library #i2p

prplcdclnw@diasp.eu

Remember that lawsuit to destroy the Internet Archive?

If public libraries didn't already exist, publishers would never allow them.

It's pretty much the same for free public education. If it didn't already exist, it would never be allowed.

https://torrentfreak.com/publishers-internet-archive-both-seek-piracy-lawsuit-win-without-full-trial-220614/

#internet #archive #internet-archive #copyright #monopoly #monopolies #books #publishing #publishers #freedom #liberty #free-culture #library #libraries #book-lending