Monday, July 14, 2008

Announcing the 2007 Gaming Census!

This is an annual survey done by Dr. Scott Nicholson, associate professor at Syracuse University’s School of Information Studies, and is designed to collect information about gaming programs run in libraries in 2007. This can be any type of game (board, card, video, chess, puzzle) at any type of library (public, school, academic, or special). The focus is on gaming programs, where the libraries schedule an event of some type featuring games, and on gaming programs that were run sometime during the 2007 calendar year.

You can take this survey at http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=64bf17n2mW5s4QdKL6ctxg_3d_3d until the end of July.

Data from last year’s census has been valuable in helping us to understand how libraries are using gaming and to get funding for other gaming programs. Adding data about your institution to our census will help us better understand how libraries are using data. You can see the publications that have used this data at http://gamelab.syr.edu/publications/. The results from this survey will be presented at the 2008 ALA TechSource Gaming, Learning, and Libraries Symposium.

Questions? Contact Scott Nicholson at srnichol@syr.edu. I can tell you that having this kind of data has been crucial when talking with reporters, so I hope you’ll help and fill out the form for this year’s survey. Thanks!

These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Furl
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • BlinkList
  • co.mments
  • connotea
  • Ma.gnolia
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • Slashdot
  • YahooMyWeb
5:40 am
tags: No Tags

2 Comments »

  1. Gaming nights are libraries do sound fun. I guess it’s a good way to start attracting the students to public libraries again.

    http://www.TheNaturalSapphireCompany.com

    Comment by Marilynn — Monday, July 14, 2008 @ 4:19 pm

  2. […] Virginia University Announcing the 2007 Gaming Census! » This Summary is from an article posted at The Shifted Librarian on Monday, July 14, 2008 This […]

    Pingback by University Update - Syracuse University - Announcing the 2007 Gaming Census! — Monday, July 14, 2008 @ 10:45 pm

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

accessibility acrl aggregator al focus ala alamidwinter08 alamidwinter2008 alamw08 alamw2008 alfocus american library association andy annual apples to apples apps attitude board games brian kelly bridging worlds browsability bw2008 cil2008 clay shirky colbert report collaborative spaces communists computers in libraries conference copyright creating games d w krummel daniel kraus david lankes digital literacy digital media education eric zimmerman feed reader feedback films finally findability flash games fundraising future g4c2008 games gaming gaming and libraries gaming in libraries gamingandlibraries gaminginlibraries glls2008 google google reader gtd guitar hero hazman aziz ila ila2007 illinois institute of technology illinois library association information literacy information tomorrow input institute of design iphone ivan chew james paul gee joann ransom kareem abdul jabbar karen calhoun kathryn greenhill kindle librarians librarianship libraries library 2.0 library clips library mini golf lishost local history lolcatz loriene roy macarthur foundation mario kart wii marriott metairie martin house media literacy metadata movies mpow national library week new york times nintendo wii nlw ocls online publishing OnlineInformation2008 open worldcat openness orange county library system out of the box publishing participatory librarianship peter godwin plug into marriott politics presence project next generation pullman rachel singer gordon read mini poster read posters reading review rss science scientific method scott nicholson scs2007 second life serioius games seven ages of librarianship solinet statistics sxsw syracuse tetris the joy of tech thinkering spaces third place transparency urban planning video videogames videos wii worldcat youtube

FireStats icon Powered by FireStats