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Mass training in mediacy by libraries?!. Two projects by Finnish public libraries to raise mediacy skills of citizens Tuula Haavisto Senior Library Adviser Tuula Haavisto Library Knowledge T:mi, Helsinki, Finland tuulah@kaapeli.fi.
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Mass training in mediacy by libraries?! Two projects by Finnish public libraries to raise mediacy skills of citizens Tuula Haavisto Senior Library Adviser Tuula Haavisto Library Knowledge T:mi, Helsinki, Finlandtuulah@kaapeli.fi
Two ideas to reach larger groups in one time, though individual service is the strong point of libraries • In 2000-2002, yearly SeniorSurf campaigns were organised, to encourage elder citizens to use Internet and SMS (Short Message Sending via mobile phone). For 2003, the campaign was refocused: it promoted ways to find the requested content from Internet. • Ideological discussions among professionals about the focus of mediacy training in libraries and provisions of sponsorship • From Autumn 2003, a radio program ”Ask whatever” is run in co-operation between Helsinki City Library and YLE, the Finnish public service broadcasting company. Library staff answers all kinds of questions, sent to radio by the listeners. • The radio program was based on certain preceding development, which is described.
SeniorSurf 2000-2002 • SeniorSurf was oganised by the Finnish Library Association, the idea was imported from Sweden • financing from the Ministry of Education • It concentrated on basic skills in using new media • The concrete target was to encourage citizens of the age 55+: • to get the first touch with Internet, • in the two first years, to learn to use the SMS (Short Message Sending) function of their mobile phones.
Working forms of the SeniorSurf • Lectures, personal guidance ”how to use the web”, Internet sources and the SMS, discussions, presentations of Internet-based services by e.g. banks and municipal officials etc. • A list of web resources for the libraries • web sites offering Internet study packages or other good starting points for new-beginners • A special material to learn to use the mouse • A special material presented the SMS use • An extremely popular basic guide ”Pleasure and learning with your computer”
SeniorSurf in numbers • 170 to 250 participating libraries / year • there are ca. 900 public library units in Finland • 5.000-10.000 participating people per year • Individual guidance resulted less audience than programs based on lectures • no connection between e.g. the size of the community and the participant amount; but a clear connection between the work done in the library to advertise the event
Ideological discussions questioned SeniorSurf • Two sponsors: teleoperator Sonera & mobile phone producer Nokia • Paid the expensive press advertisements, test mobile phones & connection time to the participating libraries hot ideological discussion among librarians: • acceptable forms of sponsorship: ”named mobile phones and operators should not be advertised in any form inside libraries, or the participating libraries should get a clear payment in cash on it.”
Ideological discussions questioned SeniorSurf 2 • SMS training in libraries: ”SMS is not at all a business of libraries,they should concentrate in deeper information and knowledge. If there is need to teach SMS, it is up to other institutions.” • For our partners, National Research and Development Centre for Welfare and Health, and organisations of senior citizens, SMS is first of all a potential safety equipment for elderly people • public institutions responsibile to train seniors to use it • public libraries due to their easy access excellent venues to learn SMS skills • non-commercial context in public libraries; compare to a short ”training” by a young salesman in a shop
Where did we end up? Sponsorship • Opinions of the participating libraries were collected in 2000. • 62% (133) of the participants returned the form • Majority saw that the press campaign and availability of test phones on the campaign day was a balanced price for allowing visibility to commercial enterprises in libraries for one day. • Only one of the answerers gave negative feedback, and in her own name, not on behalf of the library • The arguing also led the Min.of Education to produce a short guide for sponsorship in public libraries. The English version is available on Internet http://www.minedu.fi/minedu/culture/library/english/information.html
Where did we end up? SMS • The result of the discussion remained partly open. • The participating libraries: ”we took part in a mediacy enlargement project.” • The critics still remained: ”no library resources should be used for such purposes. Literacy and reading campaings should be prioritized in public libraries.” • However, out of e.g. the 5-7 yearly campaigns of the Finnish Library Association, 3-4 concentrate on literacy and reading, one in mediacy (like SeniorSurf) and the rest on varying topics.
Find your way on Internet, 2003 • In 2003, the campaign day had a larger target audience: not-so-experienced-Internet-user adults • A narrower scope: concentrated on presenting guidance to existing Internet resources • Why the change: the SeniorSurf idea had fulfilled its purpose. • Many other actors offered possibilities to this group. • Seniors and Internet had even become a very fashionable topic in journals, adult education institutions and TV programs
Working forms in 2003 • Link libraries, search engines, other search possibilities and basic portals of public services were presented via lectures and individual guidance • A tabloid of 16 pages was disseminated, including articles, interviews and short infos on web resources • 10 training days for 420 library staff members around the country: trends of the Internet development and web searching
Half-success… • Individual libraries offered programs from lectures for schoolchildrens' parents to e-book and local congregation web page presentations. • There were ca. 3.500 participants in 150 public libraries. • The feedback showed, that this time the target audience was too undefined • Feedback also suggested to create an Internet policy for Finnish public libraries. Idea under work… • In 2004 no Internet day in libraries
”Ask whatever” • ”Ask about nature” - since the 70s a very popular radio programme in Finland • simple structure: listeners send questions, biologists and other specialists answer • According to this model, an idea was developed: librarians can answer questions not only in libraries and virtually, but also via the radio
Background elements in libraries • The new mobile service unit of Helsinki City Library: iGS, information Gas Station: • the unit with its staff can be located to serve people on railway stations, shopping malls, fairs etc. • a banner on the roof: ”Ask whatever” • questions can be asked and answered on-site, via phone, SMS, or e-mail • all the questions and answers are saved in an open databank, which can be used via the web • From the point of view of the radio program, the iGS team is the important element. • ca. 10 professionals from different branches of the Helsinki City Library. • iGS is part of their job, not full-time • half are librarians (university education), half library assistants (vocational or polytechnics level) • USED TO MEET PEOPLE IN NON-LIBRARY ENVIRONMENT
iGS, information Gas StationThe mobile information service station of Helsinki City Library • The station itself
Dual professional goal • Educating people in using information sources, especially in media critics – ”there is information and knowledge outside google, even outside the net sources” • Concetisizing information search, the invisible, demanding and unknown part of the library work • BUT: to be successful, first of all this must be a good program and service, a good product – says the iGS team
”Ask whatever” in numbers • 40.000 listeners per week, success in Finland • if library users, use it only for lending = new perspectives • net searchers needing help • 1-2 of the library staff in the studio, 3-4 persons backing them in the library • ca. 30 questions per week, all answered: one in the weekly radio program + discussion with journalists, the rest on the web pages of iGS and the radio program • each radio answer includes a view to the usage of information sources
Examples of questions and views • My family name was changed in mid-40s: can I get the information, when exactly and in which official institute this was done? • presenting archives and registers as sources • When and why the number “four” of the Roman clock-face was changed from IIII to IV? • Google is not the only search engine, e.g. Vivisimo gives more detailed and grouped search results • How does the water pressure remains strong enough even in the highest levels of the skyscrapers ? • the worldwide information service network: the answer came via e-mail from the San Francisco Public Library Live Online Reference service, open 24/7 • How do the snakes pee? (a question by a five-years old) • radio is a good media for the non-literate • Why there are no dogs in Shanghai? • presentation of the Chinese net papers and journals • How to make lahnanpääpälli, an old fish dish • Presenting traditional cook books, reminding about printed sources
Library skills shared with everyone? • Compare with the earlier development in media and IT skills: • White-collar people today more or less forced to learn the basic skills of journalists and IT people, to write a press release, or to make the basic tricks to the PC • The next profession to see its' basic skills to be spread among ordinary people – librarians! Will the profession itself be swipped out? • Not at all; the large diffusion of the skills of a profession means, that the profession itself gets stronger and more diversified • That has happened with journalism, PR and IT as well
Considerations • There are roles for public libraries in “mass mediacy training” • to offer zakuzki, the first contact with the new information sources and IT (SeniorSurf) • to organize ”dates” between interested individuals and organisations offering further training; libraries can have a “connecting people” role in the learning chain (SeniorSurf) • To use case examples to enlarge understanding about information sources and their usage; the existing elements were combined in a new, successful way (the radio program) • Librarians wait with interest, how the radio program will develop. Will there be more time for it? Will there be a TV version? Do we succeed to launch a more deep-going program on information sources?
Growing self-understanding • The discussions on the campaigns created new self-understanding of this institution. • Along the 90s, Finnish librarians were divided in the “book party” and “all media party” • The resistance against teaching SMS skills in libraries was one of the heaviest efforts of the ”book party” in Finland • The discussions, connected with concrete disagreements, are very much needed to reach as many as possible professionals in formulating the role of libraries in the age of virtual material