TLNing (teacherlibrarian.org)

A community for teacher-librarians and other educators

Since funding is so low in Longmont and the surrounding cities, people are flocking to the local Borders to get their reading fix as well as their gourmet coffee fix. I know this is nothing knew, but for some reason I find this depressing today. How many of these people would be at their local library if they had the opportunity? Why should they go? After all, Borders has all the new releases in virtually unlimited supply. People were sitting in the cafe doing research, the same type of research that is typically done with the assistance of a librarian! How necessary are we? Are they finding the information they need at the time they need it? Probably a good percentage of them are doing just that. Someone, anyone please tell me that all the time and money I spent on this degree was not a total waste of time and lost hours upon hours of sleep.

Views: 11

Comment

You need to be a member of TLNing (teacherlibrarian.org) to add comments!

Join TLNing (teacherlibrarian.org)

Comment by Kimberly Brosan on August 6, 2007 at 2:21pm
I believe that unsold titles can be returned to the publisher for credit, so the bookstore has nothing to lose and everything to gain by having people come in and browse (and buy). They surely make more profit (percentage-wise) on their coffee shop than they do on books.
Comment by holli buchter on August 6, 2007 at 1:03pm
They reshelved huge piles of books from the cafe while I was there. They did not seem to mind. I bet they sell more than they reshelve.
Comment by Sandra Carswell on August 6, 2007 at 12:30pm
I'm just wondering what the book store thinks about their customers using their books for research and then putting them back on the shelves and not purchasing anything more than coffee? How long will it take before their new books are considered used?
Comment by Connie Masson on August 5, 2007 at 9:38pm
Well, the Longmont Public Library is not open in the summer on Sundays. Here are their hours.
Regular Hours - Labor Day to Memorial Day:
Monday-Thursday 10 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday & Saturday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Sunday 1 p.m. - 5 p.m.

Summer Hours - Memorial Day to Labor Day:
Monday-Thursday 9 a.m. - 9 p.m.
Friday & Saturday 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Sunday Closed

I glad kids have an additional source for reading. It is the library for my kids because it is so close and they can get their own their own quickly.

Many libraries are considering changing their system to match that of books stores and Amazon to be more marketing oriented.

This does not mean the libraries aren't busy. I think they are always a hub of activity when I am there. Perhaps we just have a larger populations and geographic issues than in the past. And people go where it works best for them.

School libraries have starting offering latte cafes. Maybe the public library should let a starbucks open in it? ? ? ?

A Learning Revolution Project

Twitter feeds

TL Scoop.its

Teacher Librarians of the 21st Century Curated by Mrs. N Ideas and Resources for the 21st Century Teacher Librarian

Libraries as Sites of Enchantment, Participatory Culture, and Learning Curated by Buffy J. Hamilton Ideas and resources to develop the concept of libraries as sites of participatory culture and learning

Personal Learning Networks for Librarians  Curated by Donna Watt

Staying ahead of the game, managing your own professional development, joining the dots

SchoolLibrariesTeacherLibrarians Curated by Joyce Valenza News for teacher librarians

What is a teacher librarian?  Curated by Tania Sheko Defining the role of teacher librarians for those who think we just look after books

Teacher librarians and transliteracy Curated by Sue Krust Explore the evolving role of the teacher librarian

Teacher-Librarian Curated by Librarian@HOPE Best sites and resources on the web for teacher-librarians

ResearChameleon on School Libraries Curated by Kathy Malatesta Teaching, mentoring & leading in today’s school libraries

Student Learning through School Libraries Curated by lyn_hay Building evidence of impact through research and professional practice

SCIS  Curated by SCIS News and resources about school libraries

Educational Technology and Libraries Curated by Kim Tairi In libraries we teach, we learn and many of us are early adopters of technology. This is your scoop on those things.

21st Century Libraries Curated by Dr. Steve Matthews all things 21st Century library related

Join our Diigo Group! VIsit TL Daily!

Coming soon

Events

Members

#tlchat: #tlchat your tweets!

© 2025   Created by Steve Hargadon.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service