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September classes start on the 3rd. We accept registrations through the first week of classes, unless enrollment is full, and unless the class was canceled before it started due to low enrollment.
Most of the classes listed below are four weeks in length, with a price of $175.
Classes are taught asynchronously, so participants can do the work at any time of the day. Assignments are typically on a weekly basis.
Cultural Competence for Librarians
Shaundra Walker
Critical Strategies for Implementing and Managing Organizational Change
Deborah Schmidle
Metadata and Description for Digital Special Collections
Elliot Williams
Primary Source Pedagogy
Robin Katz
Introduction to Text Encoding
John Russell
Writing for the Web
Heidi Burkhardt
Getting to Know: Fantasy
Jessica Moyer
Foundations of Early Literacy: Using Your Knowledge to Enrich Library Experiences for Young Children and Their Families
Saroj Ghoting
Using Intentional Planning to Choose Developmentally-Appropriate Media and Meaningful Experiences for Storytimes
Lynn Baker
Stories, Songs, and Stretches II: Stretches and Stillness
Katie Scherrer
Transforming and Querying XML with XSLT and XQuery
Robert Chavez
OCTOBER
Introduction to Cataloging
Natalie Hall
Metadata Design
Grace Agnew
Library of Congress Classification
Robin Fay
Introduction to Project Management
Robin Hastings
Growing, Developing, and Retaining Dynamic Staff
Deborah Schmidle
Allyship, Anti-Opression Practices, and Building Inclusive Libraries
CJ Ivory
Introduction to Public Services in Special Collections Librarianship
Robin Katz
Introduction to Digital Humanities for Librarians
John Russell
Digital Repository Fundamentals and Design
Christina Harlow
Mental Disorders in the Library: Understanding and Meeting the Needs of Patrons Struggling with Mental Disorders
Dawn Behrend
Changing Lives, Changing the World: Information Literacy and Critical Pedagogy
Maria T. Accardi
Early Literacy Enhanced Storytimes: Supercharging Your Storytime Using Interactivity, Intentionality, and Assessment to Help Children Learn with Joy
Saroj Ghoting
Technology, Literacy, and Young Children: Media Mentorship for Newborns to Five-Year-Olds and Their Families
Claudia Haines
Introduction to RDF
Robert Chavez
XSLT Fundamentals
Robert Chavez
Research Data Management
Jillian Wallis
NOVEMBER
Introduction to Collection Development
Robert Holley
Metadata Implementation
Grace Agnew
Authority Control
Natalie Hall
Telling Your Story: Successful Marketing Strategies for Librarians
Deborah Schmidle
Recruiting and Retaining Librarians from Underrepresented Minoritized Groups
Angela Pashia
Library Patron Access and the Law
Mary Minow
Introduction to Accessibility and Universal Design in Libraries
Carli Spina
Bilingual Storytime at Your Biblioteca
Katie Scherrer
Autism Spectrum Disorders and Libraries: Developing Welcoming and Accessible Library Resources and Services for Patrons on the Spectrum
Dawn Behrend
Techniques for Creative Problem Solving in Libraries
Annie Downey
Creating Family Service Partnerships through Community Outreach Programs
Lynn Baker
Introduction to Technical Services in Special Collections Librarianship
Robin Katz
Ethics and Sustainability for Digital Curation
Natalie Baur
RDF, RDFa and Structured Data Vocabularies
Robert Chavez
Introduction to JSON and Structured Data
Robert Chavez
Stories, Songs, and Stretches III: Stories and Songs
Katie Scherrer
Library Juice Academy offers a range of online professional development workshops for librarians and other library staff, focusing on practical topics to build new skills. The curriculum is designed by librarians with a focus on skills that are in demand in the profession, rather than the academic tradition of library education that tends to address other priorities. These workshops earn Continuing Education Units, and are intended as professional development activities. Workshops are taught asynchronously, so you can participate as your own schedule allows.
Since offering our first classes in October of 2012, we have taught 772 classes to students in 64 countries. This includes customers from all sorts of colleges and universities, public libraries of all sizes, corporations, and public agencies. Our institutional customers include the The United Nations, the International Atomic Energy Agency, the Office of the White House, NIST, the Max Planck Institute in Luxembourg, the US National Agriculture Library, the Smithsonian Institution, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Museum, the RAND Corporation, The Association of Research Libraries, and OCLC, as well as large groups from Stanford, Harvard, and the Library of Congress
Library Juice Academy
P.O. Box 188784
Sacramento, CA 95818
Tel. (916) 905-0291
Fax (916) 415-5446
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