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Public Library Funding and Technology Access Survey: Using, Visualizing, and Contextualizing the Data John Carlo Bertot Information Policy & Access Center.

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Presentation on theme: "Public Library Funding and Technology Access Survey: Using, Visualizing, and Contextualizing the Data John Carlo Bertot Information Policy & Access Center."— Presentation transcript:

1 Public Library Funding and Technology Access Survey: Using, Visualizing, and Contextualizing the Data John Carlo Bertot Information Policy & Access Center College of Information Studies University of Maryland jbertot@umd.edu www.plinternetsurvey.org (survey materials) ipac.umd.edu (research center)

2 Discussion PLFTAS background Service context Changes in library services and resources Changes in information Changes in technologies Social issues and needs PLFTAS products Next steps/scenarios

3 Why the Survey? Longitudinal data collection since 1994 Provides snapshot of what libraries offer their communities: ◦ Library public access technology infrastructure ◦ Capacity ◦ Internet-enabled services ◦ Challenges and issues ◦ Funding

4 Why the Survey? Informs policymakers about what libraries do in their communities in key areas of ◦ Access to the Internet ◦ Access to increasingly digital-only content and services  Employment  E-government  Databases  More ◦ Digital literacy ◦ Digital inclusion Resides in the larger evolving information and technology context

5 Changes in Services and Use

6 Print Collections

7 Non-Print Collections

8 Reference

9 Changing Depository Landscape As GPO celebrates 150 years as a printer ◦ 97% of government information is born digital ◦ Depository program in transition  Do we need 1200+ physical collections?

10 To Summarize We are moving (and have been) away from a service based on physical collections designed to pull people to our buildings Just in time, as opposed to just in case Self-serve

11 Changes in Information

12 Quantity and Availability ◦ An LoC of indexing everyday ◦ 24 hours of video loaded on YouTube every minute ◦ Average of 144 million tweets per day  50 million tweets per day one year ago Speed of information ◦ Within minutes of your tweet, it’s indexed and searchable in Google ◦ What used to require effort is at your fingertips  Not reinventing the search - chances are it’s been sought before and captured ◦ Connection is instantaneous

13 Speed Google Public Data Explorer http://www.google.com/publicdata/explore

14 Changes in Information Interacting in New Ways ◦ Google 3D  http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/ http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/  http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/details?mi d=ddc839e17656ed9759bdbb2775b3c747&prevstar t=0 http://sketchup.google.com/3dwarehouse/details?mi d=ddc839e17656ed9759bdbb2775b3c747&prevstar t=0

15 Changes in Information Information is Social ◦ More is out there ◦ More is connected  Through social media ◦ More is shared ◦ Crowdsourcing enables more uses, sharing, problem solving through concentrated bursts of information sharing

16 Plane Spotting & CIA Rendition

17 Summary More information, more directly to users Our ability to access, use, and interact with information is changing Information is increasingly enhanced and linked in a range of ways The social nature of information enables stronger ties between people, communities, information sources, information providers

18 Changes in Technology

19 Smartphones Devices 35% own a smartphone overall

20 Tablet & E-reader Ownership

21 Tablets and E-readers

22 http://www.searchenginejournal.com/the-growth-of-social-media-an- infographic/32788/ Social Media

23 Siri – Ready Reference at Your Fingertips

24 Summary New technologies ◦ Allow for different experience with information ◦ New understandings of information ◦ Place information at user access instantly ◦ Offer “ready reference” Changes in library use and requested services ◦ Less about circulation and reference ◦ More about facilitation and intermediation  Education  Health  E-government  Employment

25 Why this Survey? In a world of sound bites like ◦ “ebooks are the future of libraries” ◦ “it’s all on the Internet” ◦ “access is cheap, or free, and everywhere” In an evolving technology, information, and services landscape, we need data about ◦ How libraries transform their communities ◦ Libraries in relation to their communities  The role of public access technology-based services

26 Showing Libraries in their Communities http://plinternetsurvey.org/dataviz/ http://plinternetsurvey.org/dataviz/

27 Participation

28 Broadband – Population Density

29 Broadband – FCC Underserved

30 Employment 90.9% provide job databases and resources 77.0% provide civil service examination materials 74.5% offer software and resources for resume creation 71.9% help people complete online applications

31 Employment by Unemployment

32 My Library/Library Lookup

33 Library Lookup – Mobile

34 Indicators Composition of various elements (e.g., e-government): ◦ Library staff provided assistance to patrons applying for or accessing e- government services ◦ Library staff provided assistance to patrons for completing government forms ◦ The library offered training classes regarding the use of government Web sites, understanding government programs, and completing electronic forms ◦ The library partnered with government agencies, non-profit organizations, and others to provide e-government services ◦ The library had at least one staff member with expertise and skills in the provision of e-government services

35 Narratives www.plinternetsurvey.org ◦ Topical  http://plinternetsurvey.org/analysis/public-libraries- and-digital-literacy http://plinternetsurvey.org/analysis/public-libraries- and-digital-literacy ◦ State  http://plinternetsurvey.org/advocacy/state- details?id=TX http://plinternetsurvey.org/advocacy/state- details?id=TX

36 Key Issues and Challenges Moving the data closer to the community Connecting to other datasets ◦ Library in the context of the community Data plus off-the-shelf products ◦ Visualizations ◦ Issue briefs ◦ One-page summaries

37 What Does the Future Hold? More traditional ◦ Reports (June 2012) ◦ Issue briefs (January/February 2012) ◦ PLFTAS one-page summaries (January/February 2012) ◦ One-page advocacy Leg Day (April 2012) New ◦ Visualizations (now and January/February 2012)  Static  Pan and zoom ◦ Lookup  January/February 2012 ◦ APIs ◦ GIS  http://bit.ly/vDnmcH http://bit.ly/vDnmcH Continuum of products from ready-to-use to wonkish

38 What Does the Future Hold? Sunrise? ◦ NLG Grant ◦ Modified survey Sunset? ◦ As much utility as possible ◦ Historical datasets

39 Thank You John Carlo Bertot Information Policy & Access Center University of Maryland jbertot@umd.edu ipac.umd.edu www.plinternsurvey.org Twitter: @iPAC_UMD; #PLFTAS @jcbertot


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