Tuesday, April 03, 2018
CONSAL XVII @ Naypyitaw, Myanmar
Source: http://www.consalxvii.org/home
Congress of Southeast Asia Librarians (CONSAL) is the sole regional organization of the libraries, library schools, Library Associations, and related institutions of the ASEAN countries. It was founded in Singapore in 1970 and has ten members which include the library associations and librarians of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
CONSAL holds a general conference every three years in each member country by turn and promotes cooperation among librarians in Southeast Asia Region. CONSAL provides the forum for the librarians and information specialists to strengthen networks, partnerships, and linkages with each other; promotes coordination, collaboration, and provides the platform for sharing and exchange of information and experiences on issues in the fields of librarianship, library and information sciences, documentation, information and related activities in the region.
Theme : "Next Generation Libraries: Collaborate and Connect"
Friday, March 30, 2018
PLAI-STRLC International Benchmarking Tour -- Invitation Letter
Good News !!! .... Early Bird Rate is extended until April 6, 2018
for the BKK-KL International Benchmarking Tour
Friday, March 16, 2018
PAARL National Summer Conference 2018
Dear Colleagues,
Here is the program of activities for the PAARL 2018 Summer Conference. The conference invitation is attached as well.
See you at the Conference! 😊
Online registration
Here is the program of activities for the PAARL 2018 Summer Conference. The conference invitation is attached as well.
See you at the Conference! 😊
Online registration
Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Friday, February 02, 2018
PDI Article : Emminent Nonlibrarian
For holistic appreciation of the hot issue confronting our beloved profession, please read Ambeth Ocampo ratiocination about the position of the NLP director and hopefully after reading this you could better appreciate the "polite action" taken by PLAI-NBOT and be with us in seeking an early resolution of the issue without burning any bridges or permanent damage to our collegiality as members of the profession.
Fulltext copied from Philippine Daily Inquirer article. Thank you.
To view the reader's comments/sentiments and or updates/corrections posted on this articles, please see the original article at the PDI website or simply click the links provided above.
COLUMNISTS
LOOKING BACK
Eminent nonlibrarians
By: Ambeth R. Ocampo - @inquirerdotnet Philippine Daily Inquirer / 05:28 AM February 02, 2018
Vernon Totanes, a licensed librarian, has asked the Office of the Ombudsman to investigate the appointment of Cesar Gilbert Q. Adriano as director of the National Library of the Philippines (NLP). Totanes called the presidential appointee a “nonlibrarian” and, in the process, burned his bridges with the Philippine Librarians Association Inc. (PLAI) which had issued a polite “statement of concern” that stopped short of seeking a validation or revocation of the appointment.
Totanes also dragged Ateneo de Manila into the fray because he is the director of the university’s Rizal Library. Totanes and the PLAI defended their citing of the Philippine Librarianship Act of 2003 that regulates the practice of librarianship in the country. They brought up Section 26 of Illegal Practice of Librarianship that states:
“A person who does not have a valid Certificate of Registration and Professional Identification Card or a temporary/special permit from the Commission shall not practice or offer to practice librarianship in the Philippines or assume any position, which involve performing the function of a librarian as provided under Section 5 of this Act.”
They also cited Section 31 of Employment of Librarians that states:
“Only qualified and licensed librarians shall be employed as librarians in all government libraries. Local government units shall be given a period of three (3) years from the approval of this Act to comply with this provision.”
Their fear is that the appointment of a “nonlibrarian” as NLP director will be a precedent that may allow nonprofessionals in government libraries. But it is a narrow reading of the law because the NLP director does not perform a professional librarian’s functions. He/she crafts policy and directs the administration and management of the NLP, which is not an ordinary library but a cultural agency responsible for the preservation and dissemination of the history, culture, and heritage of the nation in book form. While a professional license in librarianship is preferred, it should not be an obligatory qualification for NLP director.
The NLP traces its roots to the Museo-Biblioteca de Filipinas of 1887 and was first housed in the Intendencia in Intramuros whose third and most (in)famous director was the eccentric Pedro A. Paterno. A contemporary of Jose Rizal, Paterno was appointed in 1894 and caused to be published the short-lived Boletin del Museo-Biblioteca de Filipinas (Bulletin of the Museum-Library of the Philippines). The Museo-Biblioteca was abolished when the Americans took over from the Spanish as the Philippines’ colonial masters, prompting Paterno to take the Museo-Biblioteca collection to his Quiapo home and merge it with his private library.
In March 1900 an American Circulating Library was established. Its collection was donated to the Philippine Commission, which accepted it on March 15, 1901, the date on which the foundation of the present NLP is reckoned. By 1908 all government libraries had been consolidated, and the American Circulating Library became the Philippine Library in 1909 that later merged with the Division of Archives, Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks and the Law Library of the Philippine Assembly, which called it the Philippine Library and Museum.
In December 1928 the Library and Museum were separated and the National Library was placed under the Philippine Assembly and relocated to the Legislative building (now the National Museum). In 1936, supervision of the National Library was returned to the Department of Public Instruction from the National Assembly, but Manuel Roxas, in 1947, created the Bureau of Public Libraries under the Office of the President, shifting its function from a cultural agency to that of an administrative office.
Of the 23 library directors starting from James Alexander Robertson (1910-1916), only four were librarians. Aside from Robertson—who coproduced the 55-volume compilation of documents on Philippine history known to scholars today as “Blair and Robertson”—there were Filipino directors who were eminent nonlibrarians: Macario Adriatico (1917-1919), Trinidad H. Pardo de Tavera (1923-1925), Jaime C. de Veyra, Fernando Canon (in acting capacity, 1925), Epifanio de los Santos (1925-1928), Teodoro M. Kalaw (1929-1939), Carlos Quirino (1962-1966), and Serafin D. Quiason (1966-1986)—men who distinguished themselves in the realm of history, scholarship, learning and culture.
We need more than a professional librarian as NLP director. We need a distinguished librarian, an administrator, or a scholar to head this cultural agency.
Comments are welcome at aocampo@ateneo.edu
Thursday, February 01, 2018
PLAI Statement : Letter-Complaint to the Ombudsman
PLAI already made known its official stand in the issued Statement of Concern. That revised statement was the result of a series of consultation to our stakeholders and does not prohibit any members from initiating their own actions.
At the outset, PLAI does not agree with the appointment of a non-librarian in any library whether public or private considering the provision of RA 9246 Section 31. But the issue on the appointment of a non-librarian in the National Library of the Philippines is a question of legality considering the different interpretations and stand of government agencies that can answer best this query.
PLAI then would like to know first the opinion of PRC being the implementor of laws related to professionals and CSC being the office that sets the qualifications in government offices, whether laws have been violated or not and follow the due process, hence the Statement of Concern was crafted and was submitted to PRC and CSC for their opinion on the issue so we will know the next course of action to take.
As to Mr. Totanes' complaint in the Ombudsman, PLAI respects his decision and opinion. It's his right to file a complaint before the Ombudsman.
Mr. Totanes' action complemented the PLAI action to CSC and PRC by adding the Office of the Ombudsman to investigate the matter as the appointment of a non-librarian in a government library is an act or omission constituting a violation of our law (RA 9246) and criminal laws particularly on anti-graft and corrupt practices act which the ombudsman has jurisdiction to investigate.
Please share po sa ating mga colleagues para po aware sila papaano tinitingnan ni PLAI ang isyu. Maraming salamat po.
Monday, January 29, 2018
Why is the NLP Headed by a Non-Librarian?
Sharing this rather than that Philippine Star (PS) article I shared earlier to PLAI officer and members group because in this blog post of Dr. Von Totanes, he included (updated) all the media reporting about the letter-complaint he filed to the office of the ombudsman. I hope he could also include the video links (e.g. Bandera, ABS-CBN) so that we could be appraised of the latest development by simply visiting his blog. Thanks.
Click HERE to view Dr. Von Totanes Filipino Librarian blog.
Note: also posted earlier in the fb group of PLAI and PLAI-STRLC.
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Esquire Magazine : Librarians Are the Keepers of Information
Fulltext of the article as it appeared in the Esquire Magazine. Thank you Esquire.
Please visit/view the original article by clicking the link provided above for the comments, graphics used, info as to how many times the article was shared, and other updated information regarding this article.
The re-posting here is merely for compiling all related articles published in the national media for future reference of the raging issue confronting the librarianship profession in the Philippines.
Librarians Are the Keepers of Information, And That's
Why The Gov't Needs to Look Into This Complaint
Last January 19, Von Totanes, director of the Ateneo de Manila University Library, filed a complaint before the Ombudsman regarding the appointment of a non-librarian as director of the National Library of the Philippines (NLP). The Philippine Librarianship Act of 2003 states that “only qualified and licensed librarians shall be employed as librarians in all government libraries." Despite the law, President Rodrigo Duterte appointed Cesar Gilbert Adriano to the highest post in the National Library on March 17, 2017.
The mandate of the National Library of the Philippines calls it the "repository of the printed and recorded cultural heritage of the country and other intellectual literary and information sources." If you think of our cultural heritage as something sacred, you'll see why the position is also a profoundly important job.
"[Many people] think that anyone who works in a library is a librarian. And that's how many relatives of government officials were appointed to work in government libraries before the first law on librarianship was enacted in the 1990s: They were assigned to the library and—voila!—they were librarians," says Totanes. "The provision in RA 9246 regarding the need for licensed librarians in government libraries was put in specifically to address this problem.”
Librarians are regulated in the way lawyers, doctors, and nurses are—one needs to have earned a degree in library and information science, and passed a licensure exam administered by the Philippine Regulatory Commission (PRC).
“And then there's ‘Do we still need libraries? Everything is on the internet.’ This is not true. Just ask anyone who has relied on electronic databases (vs. Google) and looked for books that are not available online to finish their research papers,” Totanes adds. “That includes high school students who are routinely told by their teachers that Wikipedia, like encyclopedias, is not an authoritative source. As well as fresh grads, who keep going back to us to ask if they can still use our electronic databases.”
Having a non-librarian head the National Library affects the ability of the office to effectively perform its mandate. “As far as I know, [Adriano] has done nothing worth mentioning. He did not even appear at the National Congress in Bacolod last November,” Totanes adds. “Since he has no idea what librarians do, then he just approves whatever is recommended to him. Has anything changed at the National Library took over? I don't think so.”
Totanes is not alone in his complaint. In fact, the Philippine Librarians Association (PLAI) publicly issued a Statement of Concern on May 15, 2017, which says that, first and foremost, this appointment could set a precedent for other government agencies, schools, and corporations to do the same when selecting directors and staff for their own libraries.
However, the statement ends with the group saying that they were not “questioning the President’s power to appoint the NLP Director” nor Adriano’s “other qualifications and capacity to be a good manager.” They also weren’t asking for Adriano’s appointment to be revoked—all they wanted was for the next director of the NLP to be licensed.
The PLAI also sent a revised Statement of Concern to the Professional Regulation Commission (PRC) and the Civil Service Commission in November 2017, though Totanes was unaware of this before he filed his complaint.
Nevertheless, Totanes says: "With this complaint, I hope more attention will be paid not only to the appointments that the President is making, but also to the fact that libraries without librarians are merely warehouses with books and computers. It is people—including the librarian—who turn the warehouse into a library.”
His efforts have already started to pay off. As of today, presidential spokesperson Harry Roque said that the government will "look into it, even if there are remedies for it."
Saturday, December 09, 2017
Journal of Philippine Librarianship [vol. 36 no. 1 (2016)]
The latest issue of the Journal of Philippine Librarianship is now available online at http://journals.upd.edu.ph/index.php/jpl/issue/view/605
Table of Contents
Articles
EXPERIMENTING WITH REFRIGERATED MARGARINE AS PHASE CHANGE MATERIAL AND ZEOLITE AS DESICCANT FOR TEMPERATURE AND HUMIDITY CONTROL IN PHILIPPINE ARCHIVES
Eloisa E. Huet
A REPORT ON THE STATUS OF RESOURCE DESCRIPTION AND ACCESS (RDA) IMPLEMENTATION IN PHILIPPINE ACADEMIC LIBRARIES
Yhna Therese P. Santos
Journal of Philippine Librarianship (ISSN: 0022-359x)
University of the Philippines School of Library and Information Studies
3/F,Gonzales Hall,UP Main Library
UP Diliman,Quezon City 1101, Metro Manila
09204249223
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)