DAY FOUR – Wed 2 November
This was the final day of the conference with the last keynote delivered by Jenica Rogers ‘Reality-based librarianship for passionate librarians’. Jenica is a wonderful presenter and I found her presentation captivating. We were provided with a lot of really useful information that allowed us to answer her initial question: Having attended conference, how do you implement the reality at home? We were reminded that ‘You are your most powerful resource’ and that it would be foolish to think we can all go forward in the same way – our individual realities are as individual as we are. Whilst we may all have the same goals we will achieve them in very unique ways. And that’s ok. We have to power to choose which hill to climb, which hill is worth it. I particularly liked Jenica’s statement that change doesn’t just happen; you need to plan for brilliance! With many libraries undergoing change around the world, the analogy of librarianship to farming, particularly to a New Zealand audience made perfect sense – farmers never have a good year, but they still keeping farming!
The last formal presentation for the day was Alastair Smith’s ‘NZ Info on the internet’. Alastair is one of my current lecturers for the MIS so I took the opportunity to attend a face-to-face class as such, rather than my usual online conference. The presentation covered issues around the efficiency of indexing New Zealand content on global search engines, the impact of macron use within a result set, Wikipedia and open access research. It was important to note that New Zealand search engines have limited value and that not all content is contained within the .nz domain. Alastair conducted an exploratory experiment using macronised vowels: Hāngi, Hangi, Haangi and Hängi which reflected a vast difference in returned results. I also learnt about the Flesch reading grades and was surprised to learn the content contained on Wikipedia equates to undergrad level, contrasted with the content on Te Ara which equates to a High School level (approx Year 10). Would Wikipedia be so widely used if that became common knowledge? Or rather, should we be expecting more from our ever faithful Wikipedia users? Certainly food for thought!
The conference closed with a presentation from the LIANZA 2012 Conference committee and its pleasing to see this will be held in Palmerston North next year.
I would encourage anyone that has not been to a LIANZA conference before to firstly, please join LIANZA and/or Te Rōpū Whakahau, and secondly, please apply to your region for a Conference Scholarship (if offered), or consider applying for the 2012 Hydestor Award to use towards Conference costs. It really is worth it.