Creating Visual Content for Multiple Platforms

Creating visual content that can easily move from one platform to another - from social media to websites, digital signage, and newsletters - allows libraries to work smarter and strengthen the brand experience across audiences. Explore practical strategies for planning, adapting, and repurposing visual content while keeping messaging clear and consistent across a variety of platforms. Participants will explore how to think in "content families," design with reuse in mind, and make small adjustments that work within the constraints of different mediums.

Digital Accessibility in Libraries Conference

New federal accessibility requirements raise the stakes for digital services and re-center libraries' roles in championing equitable access to information. Beginning in April 2026, the ADA Title II rule requires all public-facing library websites, mobile apps, and electronic resources to meet WCAG 2.1 Level AA standards. These changes impact every aspect of library operations—from vendor negotiations and licensing to catalog design and metadata practices.

Message to Media: Media Production Essentials for Library Workers

Creating compelling media content is essential for today’s libraries. This hands-on session is designed for library staff who create media content specifically to support outreach, programming, and events. Using Canva, participants will learn how to streamline their design workflow and transform a single message into cohesive materials for print, social media, and video.

AI Prompting with Purpose: Building, Refining, and Testing AI Prompts for Library Work

As artificial intelligence tools become increasingly integrated into library workflows, the ability to craft effective prompts is essential. Develop practical strategies for building, refining, and testing AI prompts tailored to real-world library scenarios. Explore how prompt structure influences responses and learn techniques to improve clarity, relevance, and usefulness. Through guided activities, experiment with prompt variations, compare outputs, and evaluate whether results are appropriate for contexts such as instruction, collection management, communication, and creative projects.

Introduction to Programming with Python and PyMARC

Python can be an invaluable tool for automating process and saving time. Python is a programming language that can help automate workflows and metadata management processes. This straightforward introduction will help staff get started with Python, reviewing the basics of the language to write simple scripts, and how to use the PyMARC library of code to automate library-specific tasks.

Introduction to MarcEdit

Interested in doing more with your MARC records? Looking for an easy way to add or delete fields, split a batch of records into several groups, or extract particular fields to create a report? This introductory course will take on these tasks and more, starting with the basics of how to download and install the free MarcEdit software.