Registration closes April 30th for the Minitex Upper Midwest Digital Collections Conference and MDL Annual Meeting.
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Minitex has published a new webpage, "IMLS Information," with the goal of sharing information with the library community related to funding for libraries by the U.S. Institute of Library and Information Services.
Read some of the 2025 Minnesota Book Award winners in Ebooks Minnesota.
This session will provide a brief overview of key issues for libraries related to the Department of Justice's new rule updating the regulations for Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) regarding digital accessibility, before opening up for discussion. This conversation is scheduled for Tuesday, May 6, at 2: 00 p.m., and requires registration. Due to demand, watch Minitex Messenger for a second option in a different time slot to be announced shortly.
Download Britannica's summer reading kit, including books lists and activities.
The next installment of Minitex Conversations: Project Management is Wednesday, May 14, at 10 a.m. In this session, we will have a discussion about how you use AI to enhance your project work.
"Where We Come From" was chosen for the 13th iteration of Minnesota’s state-wide book club, One Book | One Minnesota. This title presents a picture-book collaboration in which four authors explore where they each come from, literally and metaphorically. Sun Yung Shin is one of four co-authors. Sun is an award-winning poet whose work has earned honors such as the Midland Authors Society Award for Poetry, the Minnesota Book Award, and the Asian American Literary Award, with additional recognition as a finalist for the PEN USA Literary Award and multiple Minnesota Book Awards.
Registration for the Upper Midwest Digital Collections Conference and MDL Annual Meeting closes April 30th.
Complete the ELM Community Input Survey and share your ELM story with us by May 9.
In every Minnesota community, there's a library. And in every library, you will find workers dedicated to the betterment of their neighbor's lives. That's why the most important resource in a library is not its books, but the people who work there. Kate Dougan, already employed at a library, is pursuing her MLIS degree at St. Catherine University.