What I liked from the list:
- The Blogging Libraries Wiki was an impressive project that will come in helpful if I get my library to take on setting up a plan for creating and maintaining a library blog. It will serve as a resource for ideas and a way to show that there are a lot of library blogs out there in the big wide world.
- The Albystaff wiki was another that impressed me. Talk about making things transparent for the customers! And it serves as a training manual for new employees and a refresher for those that are current employees but not accustomed to helping customers with a particular aspect of the library’s processes. I’m definately going to put that on my radar for my library.
This was the first time that I helped edit a wiki that was I was not a part of creating. It was really rather remarkable to notice a typo, think “I wish I could fix that…it is really bugging me…” and THEN realize that I COULD go fix it…so I did. I helped. I like helping…it gives me a happy.
My library site is using a wiki to help us collaborate–gather and give input to each others projects…and plan openly amongst ourselves. We didn’t open it to the public, though…it is more of a messy collective brainstorming session that a editable procedures manual.
I’m rather inspired by Albystaff’s wiki…I want to create one for my library that the staff can freely edit…but I want to go a step further and offer the opportunity to customers to leave comments about what they like/dislike about the policies. I wonder what it would take to get my coworkers on board…hmmm….


