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Showing posts with label National Library Week. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Library Week. Show all posts

Monday, April 24, 2023

Welcome to National Library Week!

Elisabeth Scott
Reference and Social Media Librarian


Sunday kicked off the annual celebration of all the wonderful things that libraries do: National Library Week. Started back in 1958, the event encourages people to use their library and to read. These days, though, libraries do more than ever. Yes, they are still the perfect place to go to find a book, but now libraries offer a range of programs and items to check out far beyond the printed word. This year's theme is There's More to the Story, which focuses on all the stories libraries tell: stories from books, yes, but other stories, too.

Here in Mississippi, there are 230 public libraries divided between 53 systems. Some library systems are very small, like Long Beach Public Library, which serves one city of 3,400 on our Gulf Coast. Other library systems are quite large, like First Regional Library, which serves over 300,000 people in five counties. Big or small, our Mississippi libraries have a lot to offer! Here are a few things you may not know about your local public library:

  • Your library has eBooks. EBook lenders vary from system to system, but most systems offer at least one of the many lending platforms, like Libby, hoopla, and the Palace Project. Ask at your local branch to see what's available.
     
  • Your library brings in great people from the community. From visits by authors and musicians, to events led by astronauts and magicians, your library has a non-stop calendar of people to meet and learn from. Many libraries post about their upcoming programs on social media and their websites, so give them a follow online to stay abreast of their latest.

  • Your library is a learning resource, even when you don't set foot inside. Many Mississippi libraries offer language learning apps, genealogy websites, and online classes to their patrons, in addition to websites that are available statewide, like LearningExpress Library, a tutorial and test prep resource, and MAGNOLIA, a database of articles and eBooks for research and learning. Check with your librarian to see what's on offer.

  • Your library lends more than books. Check your library's catalog; you could walk out with anything from a laptop and Wi-Fi hotspot to seeds and a gardening kit. Some Mississippi libraries check out bicycles, cake pans, and art. The list is limitless, but you'll never know what's available until you ask.

  • Your library has access to a huge number of kits provided by the Mississippi Library Commission. One of MLC's original tasks was to provide advice to public libraries. This original mandate has expanded to support public libraries in our goal to provide quality library services to all Mississippians. Offering StoryWalk kits, the Mobile Archive Project, Book Club in a Box kits, and STEM kits, is one way that we can ensure that everyone has access to new experiences and ideas.

We hope you head to your Mississippi public library this week (and the next, and the one after that) to see what all they have to offer. Need to get in touch with them? Check out our handy public library directory. And remember, there's more to the story than just books! (But books are pretty great, too.)






Friday, April 15, 2016

MLC's First National Library Week Program

The Mississippi Library Commission hosted its first National Library Week program April 12-16, 1999. The theme was Read! Learn! Connect! @ the Library. More than 300 K-3 students from Jackson Public Schools attended the week long event. The students were greeted by Mickey Mouse and enjoyed story times with local new anchors like Howard Ballou, WLBT TV 3, Steven Jefferson and Stephanie Strickland of WJTV News Channel 12, and WOAD radio talk show host/station manager Othor Cain. The week concluded with "Staff Participation Day." This day was designed to get staff involved in the celebration of National Library Week. 

To learn more about the first National Library Week Program hosted by MLC visit volume 28, issue 3 of The Packet.

Friday, April 17, 2015

Benjamin Franklin and poetry and libraries and kites with keys

On this day in 1790, Benjamin Franklin passed away in his home in Philadelphia, PA at the age of 84. Franklin was well know for things like Poor Richard's Almanac, the invention of bifocal glasses, aiding in the drafting of the Declaration of Independence, and a little experiment involving a kite, a key, and a bolt of lightning. But did you know he also helped establish the first circulating library in Philadelphia?

Franklin, along with other members of the philosophical association Junto, drew up articles of agreement to form the library on July 1, 1731. The library submitted its first order for books the following year and the rest is history. The Library Company is still open today. Read more about its history here. As it's National Library Week, we were thrilled to share this tidbit of information with you!

As a lover of books, it seems only natural that Franklin was a writerly sort, but did you know he also dabbled in poetry? National Library Week is almost over, but National Poetry Month is still going strong. Celebrate by reading some of Franklin's poetry! Read his poem "Death Is a Fisherman" below and check out some of his other poems here.

Death Is A Fisherman
Death is a fisherman, the world we see
His fish-pond is, and we the fishes be;
His net some general sickness; howe'er he
Is not so kind as other fishers be;
For if they take one of the smaller fry,
They throw him in again, he shall not die:
But death is sure to kill all he can get,
And all is fish with him that comes to net.

http://www.ushistory.org/franklin/philadelphia/library.htm
http://allpoetry.com/Death-Is-A-Fisherman
http://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/benjamin-franklin-dies
photo from: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cc/BenFranklinDuplessis.jpg


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