Showing posts with label Pinterest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pinterest. Show all posts

Thursday, 30 April 2015

Best Uses of Pinterest by Libraries

In general, Pinterest acts as place to collate bookmarks in a visual manner. A pin is an image, but also a link to a website. This means libraries can use Pinterest to visually engage people and capture their interest with an image, and supplement it with a description and a link, allowing people to investigate further or pin it to one of their own boards for sharing or bookmarking.

More specifically, libraries can use Pinterest to:

  • Create boards for book reviews and recommendations, as does Moonee Valley Libraries with their Staff Favourites and Reviews. Here, the pin includes the book cover, the description acting as a short review, and the link taking the user to the library's catalog, so customers can take actions towards borrowing a book.
  • Showcase activities, collections, and displays, letting people know what is happening at their local library.
  • Create reading lists (i.e. a board the recommends books to read over summer, or books for certain age groups).
  • Organise resources into different boards and make them available to the public. For example Hume Libraries' Pinterest and their Hume Communtiy board, which is a "collection of community resources", including many videos and information on what is happening in the area. Their Study Resources board fills a similar role, sometimes linking out to other sites with study tips and information.
There is a commenting system, but Pinterest seems to prioritise the pin's image and its source rather than any further discussion, the comment section often forgotten and neglected at the bottom of a pin.

Individual librarians can also use Pinterest in similar ways, and there are many boards dedicated to creative spaces and book displays for libraries. Pinterest can be a great source of inspiration. It can be a fun way to share ideas and find out what libraries all over the world are doing.