I added a permanent link on the right hand side to save peeps searching for the link for the wiki, which is now buried under my random ramblings…
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I added a permanent link on the right hand side to save peeps searching for the link for the wiki, which is now buried under my random ramblings…
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…and I’m getting daily addition request emails (which is lovely!), I realise that there’s a flaw in the data I originally collected.
There’s no “visit date”, and for something as rapidly changing as blogs, that’s not good – things may change quickly, and without a visit date, it’ll be hard to know when things happened.
So….anybody want to volunteer to take a trip around the blogs, check what I’ve written about them for accuracy, and email me with the date of visit / revised synopsis?
No, thought not…guess what I’ll be doing this weekend?
Also, the line between “librarian” blogs, and “information professional” blogs is getting harder to draw. The list was set up to pull together all the UK library / librarian bloggers I could find. If people didn’t say in their “About” section that they were a librarian, or worked in a library, or the blog was run by a library, they were excluded. So yes, this has ruled out great people like Brian Kelly, and useful blogs on information literacy like Moira’s Info Lit Blog, but really, if the list is to stay accurate in only covering UK library bloggers, it’s got to be restricted to only those who define themselves as a librarian, or blogs for a library service…
In my traipse through the highways and byways of the interweb, looking for UK library and librarian blogs, I learned a few things about blogs in general, and UK library blogs. I’ll try and make sense of it below…
Blog Tips
And yes, I did edit my blog to reflect these points myself – nobody said I was perfect! 😀
General Musings
There are bloggers working freelance, in health libraries, school libraries, academic libraries, public libraries and special libraries. Every sector does seem to have at least one blog.
Even library suppliers have blogs!
Quite a few bloggers have started in the last 6 months.
The smaller countries have proportionately smaller amounts of bloggers, unsurprisingly! 4 or 5 Scots, and 2 or 3 Welsh (a rough estimate), both individual and institutional.
Academic institutions are well represented. They are usually very active blogs, with regular posts. This may be a result of both working as a team, and blogging as a team – it’s perhaps easier to keep the momentum going if you’re able to chat to co-workers about post ideas, what should be posted, when etc.
Very few, if any (going on memory here!) bloggers comment on their place of work…this isn’t unexpected, as mentioning workplaces can create all sorts of problems for the blogger. Any comments about workplaces are usually positive. This does mean that library blogs are skewed quite heavily towards the “isn’t the world a lovely place?” attitude, which may not actually reflect the reality of their work.
There are a good few librarian bloggers in the UK, but nowhere near as many proportionally as in the USA. What is it that encourages Americans to blog, but not British? Is it an attempt to stand out / be heard in a much larger group, which is easier to do in the UK without blogging, as the library pool is smaller?
Politics seems to be a taboo subject on UK library blogs – I’m aware of quite a few American blogs whose authors are happy to write about their political views / support for a certain candidate, but I can’t remember seeing any posts touching on politics on UK blogs. This might well be because of the upcoming Presidential election in America, and the fact that the UK isn’t near a General Election, but I’m not altogether sure about that. American bloggers seem to be more confident on voicing strongly held views anyway, and are willing to defend them, whereas UK bloggers are more reserved. Or am I just perpetuating cultural stereotypes? 😉
As suggested, I set up a wiki for this list, to allow for easier updating and accessing.
I’ll be inviting a few others to co-author it, as many hands make light work!
So, here’s the address, come have a look: www.uklibraryblogs.pbwiki.com/
If you’re on the list and would like to give yourself a better synopsis than I’ve managed, please get in touch either via the email here (in oh-so-cunning code on the right, below my profile), or via the link on the wiki. Also, if you’d like to be removed from the list too.
Hopefully, we’ll manage to get a nice comprehensive list together on there, and then get RSS feeds from all the listed blogs going…or something technical like that. Grown-ups are going to help me!