Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Libraries and E-government: Building the Future through Collaboration and Education John Carlo Bertot Center for Library & Information Innovation College.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Libraries and E-government: Building the Future through Collaboration and Education John Carlo Bertot Center for Library & Information Innovation College."— Presentation transcript:

1 Libraries and E-government: Building the Future through Collaboration and Education John Carlo Bertot Center for Library & Information Innovation College of Information Studies University of Maryland jbertot@umd.edu clii.umd.edu

2 Libraries and E-government Broad in scope ◦ E-participation/democratization ◦ Open Government/transparency ◦ Digital government information ◦ Services  Hands on to resources ◦ Broad in participants  Individuals  Libraries  Agencies  Governments  NGOs

3 Libraries and E-government What we know (www.plinternetsurvey.org) ◦ Technology access  Libraries offer free access to workstations, broadband, and Wi-Fi ◦ Training  Libraries offer a wide range of free computer and Internet use training ◦ Expertise  Libraries offer expertise that helps people understand government and government services ◦ Information  Libraries help people find and use government information ◦ Assistance  Libraries help people understand and use government websites and services ◦ Complete Forms  Libraries help people complete immigration and citizenship, social service, emergency benefit, and other online forms

4 E-government in Public Libraries 88.8% help people understand and use government websites 78.7% help people apply for E-government services 66.3% help people complete E-government forms

5 Libraries and E-government Key issues ◦ What are the community needs regarding E- government?  Expertise  Assistance  Language  Public access technology and broadband  “Collections”  More ◦ What are library roles in E-government? ◦ What does this mean in terms of education, practice, and service?  Not just for libraries, but those in the E-government space

6 Changing Education E-government Librarianship ◦ clii.umd.edu/libegov Funded by IMLS 21 st Century grant Program starts Fall 2010 ◦ Online, with f-2-f at the 2010 and 2011 Fall Depository Council meetings Premise ◦ E-government is different, but builds on, the government documents tradition

7 Changing Education Partners ◦ Government Printing Office (GPO) ◦ Government Information Online (GIO)  www.govtinfo.org/ Program ◦ Online, part of the UMD MLS program’s E- government concentration ◦ www.clii.umd.edu/libegov

8 Changing Education Program ◦ Coursework  Coursework serves as the intellectual and conceptual basis for the evolving government information environment  Information policy, E-government librarianship, E-government, and more ◦ Practice  Through internships with the GIO program participants, students will develop applied government information skills. ◦ Professional  By bringing students together annually to attend the Fall Federal Depository Library meeting, students will become integrated into the larger government information community and engage key issues in government information ◦ Scholarship  Through inclusion in the review process of Government Information Quarterly, students will publish government resource reviews, contribute to furthering scholarship in government information, and learn the publication process

9 Changing Practice Partnerships ◦ IMLS proposal with ALA and  Agencies  IRS  USCIS  GPO  State libraries  CT, FL, MD, NJ, and TX  Library consortia  Middlesex (NJ; 28 public libraries and a community college)  Libraries  Alachua County (FL); Austin Public Library (TX); Baltimore County (MD); Caroline County (MD); Cobb County (GA); Montgomery County (MD); Newark (NJ); Pasco County (FL)  Government Information Online

10 Changing Practice Goals and objectives ◦ To create a collaborative delivery model for e-government services and resources that ensures access to e-government services, resources, and information ◦ To provide libraries, agencies, and the public access to government information and e-government resource specialists ◦ To clarify and implement different types of library e-government services roles and suggest which service roles may be most successful for different types of libraries ◦ To provide libraries with resources, guides, tutorials, and other useful materials in order to better serve as critical e-government access points in their communities ◦ To build on a century of librarian information service expertise through the use of social networking tools and other community building advantages inherent in digital tools ◦ To assist agencies and libraries in deliver e-government services to underserved populations and persons with disabilities

11 Changing Practice Initial focus on ◦ Taxes (IRS) ◦ Citizenship and Immigration (USCIS) Avoid wheel reinvention Web resource for libraries and agencies, not direct public access

12 Key Issues and Challenges Time ◦ Changing educational programs and practice takes time Collaborations ◦ Many levels of government, agencies  Starting nationally, but there are significant state and local components Roles ◦ Where do libraries and agencies collaborate and leave off?  Not all roles are appropriate  Liability Evolving technology ◦ Social media; mobile

13 Some Concluding Comments Status quo Fewer agency staff, locations, operating hours, and no public access technology = more people coming to libraries Libraries responding individually to meet needs, while simultaneously enduring cuts Libraries don’t have the expertise in all areas of E-government This is not sustainable


Download ppt "Libraries and E-government: Building the Future through Collaboration and Education John Carlo Bertot Center for Library & Information Innovation College."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google