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Upon learning a new online research skill or technology, I always feel a shade of embarrassment at the lengths I had previously taken to avoid acquiring it. Why had I expected podcasts to be daunting, when I took for granted the ease with which so many other Internet goals could be accomplished? My first experience of podcasts – to my knowledge, anyway, for I now recognize that I may have been using them all along without realizing it – was typical. My mother emailed me about an NPR segment on the mysterious bee disappearance, and offered to download it to her ipod for me. Naturally the experience didn’t differ much from listening to the same segment on the radio, and this was my first hint that podcasts were perhaps less intimidating than I had assumed.
Bolstered by the growing realization that I had again been rather silly, I set out to find podcasts related to academic libraries. Having so little experience with podcasts, I hadn’t really foreseen how they could be useful for librarians, besides providing a way to broadcast book readings to those who couldn’t attend in person. I quickly found a podcast of Chris Kretz’s address to the HigherEd BlogCon in 2006 that changed my mind, however. In it, Kretz discussed Omnibus, the podcast program he had created for Dowling College. He described the program as a way to create a unique voice that served as a continuing conversation between the library and the college, as well as the larger community. When he mentioned that he had patterned it after This American Life, I became especially intrigued – I’ve always had a weakness for stories. In addition to discussing the niche his podcast filled at the library, Kretz remarked on many of the practical aspects of podcasting, including getting guests beyond their fears of public speaking and how easily podcasting can be accomplished with some very basic equipment. Kretz also noted that his podcasts were a way to physically lure the people he interviewed into the library.
Next, I listened to a couple of podcasts of Omnibus itself. Kretz’s debut program aired in October of 2005 and is perfectly comprehensible, although he has worked continually to improve the audio since then. In this first podcast, he strove to create a balanced program in three parts that reflected his various goals: a segment on technology held practical value for college students, while a segment about a woman working to help victims of Hurricane Katrina drew in the larger community. The final segment, which Kretz described as a ‘primary source theater,’ was especially intriguing. In this, various voices read from documents in the library’s special collection about Idlehour mansion, built by Vanderbilts and now part of Dowling’s campus. By highlighting a piece of local history in a unique way, Kretz hoped to draw curious people into the library and its archives. Kretz’s format struck me as particularly appealing and well adapted to both the technology and his community.
And yes, for those of you keeping track – that’s three NPR allusions and two mentions of my mother over the course of two posts. I promise to get some new reference points for the next one.
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Cool. You could do worse than referencing Mom and NPR, both sources of great wisdom. I think you should reference the “Belly Dancing Librarian” or the “Leather Librarian” next time. She’s my new favorite. (Thanks Aimee)
Comment by bgood June 4, 2007 @ 3:21 amThanks for the kind words on our podcast. Love the title of your post and wish I had thought of it.
If you’re looking for other librarian uses of podcasts (and who isn’t), don’t neglect the professional development angle. Sirsi Dynix Institute podcasts their workshops for free and there are shows like Library Geeks that let you hear from prominent people in the field.
Good luck with the class and the degree.
Comment by Chris Kretz June 4, 2007 @ 3:05 pmEm, did you know that This American Life has a podcast?
Comment by Emily June 8, 2007 @ 5:05 pm