JTPLF Asking for Help on #GivingTuesday

With the holidays in full swing, sometimes it’s easy to forget about those in need. It’s even easier to move beyond the holidays without thinking about local non-profits that help those very people.

That’s why on Tuesday, Dec. 3, the Jeffersonville Township Public Library Foundation is asking for help with the Jeffersonville Township Public Library’s Makerspace Project.

The Makerspace Project hopes to bring a Makerspace to the Jeffersonville location. A Makerspace is a room that contains tools and components, allowing people to enter with an idea and leave with a complete project. The best part is that makerspaces are communal. The goal is to work together to learn, collaborate, and share.

The hope is for people to have an opportunity to build their own inventions, all conveniently located in the heart of their local public library.

Some of the supplies being requested are:

  • 3D Printer or supplies
  • 3D Scanner or supplies
  • Button Makers
  • Laptops (for a Laptop Labratory)
  • Instruments for Recording Studio (Please, no drums)
  • Large Laser Cutter or supplies

Makerspace Beginning to Take Shape

The Jeffersonville Township Public Library has been working on a major project for 2019-2020: a Makerspace.

A Makerspace is a room that contains tools and components, allowing people to enter with an idea and leave with a complete project. The best part is that makerspaces are communal. The goal is to work together to learn, collaborate, and share.

Currently, the Library is working toward having a functioning Makerspace by early 2020. A new Laser Engraver was added to the future lab last week, and more cool STEM equipment is on the way.

Stay tuned for future announcements!

A keychain made from the Library’s new Laser Engraver.

JTPLF & WHAS Crusade for Children Team Up to Distribute Bookpacks

We wanted to take a moment to highlight our latest partnership with the WHAS Crusade for Children. Thanks to a grant from the Crusade For Children and the JTPL Foundation, Bookpacks were distributed to students in need around Clark County.

The Bookpacks are a kit that includes books and a device that aids in the reading of the book. They are great for pleasure reading, vacation, and youth with learning disabilities.

Thank you to the Crusade for helping us make the day of kiddos around our community!

JTPL Foundation ‘Giving Tuesday’ STEAM Grant Report

Report from Jeffersonville Township Public Library Youth Services Dept. on progress of Giving Tuesday STEAM Grant

Written by Jennifer Harl

As of Jan. 31, 2019, all items requested in the JTPL Foundation Giving Tuesday Grant proposal have been purchased and received. The grant awarded the library’s youth services department $1,202.75 to purchase coding products that can be used in STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics) programming.

The money raised through the Giving Tuesday campaign made it possible for the Youth Services Department to purchase four Little Bits Coding sets, and one Cubelets Six Robots Blocks set. These kits are top quality products that will support the skills, required of young people in the 21st Century workforce, such as computational thinking, problem solving, and collaboration.

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Little Bits Coding set

These kits will be shared and used in programming at both library branches.

The Clarksville Branch library is hosting STEAM Break, which is a series of STEAM-related programs that will be happening during the week of the local schools’ Spring Break session. Public Services Librarian Jennifer Harl plans to introduce both kits at the Family STEAM Day program planned during that week. Family STEAM Day is a program that encourages families to come to the library and experience our STEAM related items such as, robots, marble mazes, KEVA planks, and VR Headsets.

The addition of the Cubelets and Little Bits to our library resources will enhance our existing STEAM programming and open the door for future coding programs. The library is planning to host a Girls Who Code program in the fall and our new kits will be a great addition to that future program. We are excited about the programming opportunities that will come from having these technology-based kits.

Cubelets Six Robot Blocks

Cubelets Six Robot Blocks

This report is submitted with a sincere thanks to the JTPL Foundation Board for raising money on behalf of the JTPL Youth Services. Thank you for allowing us to be a part of the Giving Tuesday campaign. Our staff recognizes that there were many ways this money could be used to support our library, but the JTPL Foundation Board members decided to invest in our library’s youth.

For that, we are very grateful. We look forward to collaborating with the JTPL Foundation again as we work together to support the JTPL mission and vision.

Clarksville library renovations feature new technology, expanded space

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from The Evening News & Tribune
Story by Brooke McAfee | Photo by Tyler Stewart

CLARKSVILLE — After months of renovation and construction, the transformation of Clarksville’s library is complete.

The Clarksville branch of the Jeffersonville Township Public Library, at 1312 Eastern Blvd., held a ribbon cutting Thursday to celebrate the recent completion of its $1.8 million expansion and renovation project. After 10 months of work, the library added 1,700 square feet to the building, and the entire space was renovated.

The library’s expansion allowed for the addition of a large meeting room and three new private study rooms. Before, the library faced competition for its limited meeting space, according to Jeffersonville Township Public Library Director Libby Pollard, but now the library has three meeting rooms available to the community, allowing for the accommodation of more outside groups.

The Clarksville Redevelopment Commission donated $75,000 to the library, allowing the branch to add 10 laptops for a mobile lab, 12 additional public computers for adults, teens and children and new self checkout kiosks. The renovations also included new furniture, doors, ceiling tiles and interior decorating.

The community has the opportunity to meet in a beautiful public setting, Pollard said.

“I believe that attractive public spaces are really important,” she said. “They’re uplifting to people, and I’m very proud of the fact that the Clarksville branch meets that criteria of a nice public space.”

The addition of the 10 laptops will allow the library to present free technology classes in its meeting rooms, including classes on Microsoft Office and social media, Pollard said.

The self-check kiosks are “easier than the ones at the grocery,” she said, and it allows people to checkout five books at the same time rather than scanning each individually. This helps speed up the checkout process, and it allows people to checkout books privately if they prefer.

The private study rooms will help people who are at the library for purposes such as tutoring, Pollard said. If groups need to have conversations while studying, the rooms will allow them to collaborate without disturbing other people in the library.

The Duke Energy Foundation also donated $15,000 for the creation of a rain garden at the library. The garden gathers stormwater runoff from the building’s roof, and it includes a variety of native plants.

“We want the rain garden to serve as an educational resource, teaching adults and children about the importance of planning for stormwater runoff, how rain gardens help minimize water pollution, how pollination is essential for food production and the important role that native plants have in pollination,” Pollard said.

Kofi Darku, library board of trustees president, said the changes help Clarksville improve its quality of place and meet the needs of the community.

“The Clarksville library branch project supports the library’s mission to identify and meet the informational, entertainment and technological needs of our community, which fosters lifelong learning and informed citizenship in a welcoming environment,” he said.

The library’s expansion ensures that the community has access to the tools they need, Darku said. He emphasized the role of the library’s resources play in workforce development, including technology and adult education/GED classes.

“If you can leverage this space and the tools they have available, from the workforce development perspective, individuals can skill themselves up,” he said. “They can do a better job of searching for the opportunities that may be of interest to them, and they can also find resources that help them improve their skills for those opportunities.”

Clarksville Redevelopment Director Dylan Fisher said he is happy to see a new vision of the library, including the new technology to connect people with modern learning techniques.

“I can recall as a child coming to this location,” he said. “As I walk back in here today, it’s just a breath of fresh air.”

Now that the Clarksville branch is complete, the Jeffersonville Township Public Library has started renovations of its main branch. Its renovations will include expanded technology, self checkout kiosks, more activity space and a maker space.

Changes Coming to Jeff, Clarksville Libraries

The Town of Clarksville Redevelopment Commission recently approved using $75,000 from local Tax Increment Financing funds to help with purchasing and installing new technology equipment for the ongoing renovation and expansion of the Clarksville Branch of the Jeffersonville Township Public Library.

A $5000 grant from WHAS Crusade for Children will be used to provide interactive and engaging computer programs and tablets designed to develop mental, emotional, and social skills in a fun, interactive format for special needs children at both the Clarksville branch of the Jeffersonville Township Public Library and the main JTPL library on Court Avenue in Jeffersonville.

The Clarksville expansion project features a 1,723 square foot extension with an abundance of new technology. New and renovated space includes a large new meeting room capable of being partitioned into 2 smaller rooms and 3 new study rooms

Thanks to this grant from the town of Clarksville, library director Libby Pollard says, “The upgrades and addition of technology at the Clarksville Branch Library will help insure that the residents of Clarksville have access to the latest technology. We will also utilize a new mobile lab to teach classes on email, internet, and Microsoft Office applications such as Microsoft Word. These classes will help Clarksville residents stay current with ever changing technology.”

Major renovations are also planned at the main JTPL library in Jeffersonville. The WHAS Crusade for Children grant, according to Pollard, “will allow the addition of new and supportive features for our special needs youth and their families, a long-term goal that highlights the library’s core values of fostering an inclusive community, providing friendly service, and encouraging lifelong learning” at both the main library and the Clarksville branch.

Examples of technology this grant may support include a computerized station full of interactive and engaging content focusing on seven curricular areas and children’s tablets pre-loaded with fun, educational games, movies, and apps, all focused on the needs and abilities of children with special needs.

New technology coming to both the Clarksville branch and the main JTPL library involves RFID – radio-frequency identification – technology, using electromagnetic fields to automatically identify and track special tags attached to books, videos, DVDs and other library material. With the RFID tags customers will no longer stand in line to check out books with the capacity for self-checkout.

by Valerie McCarthy

Slideshow of Progress on Clarksville branch of JTPL:

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JTPLF awarded WHAS Crusade for Children Grant

from press release | July 13, 2018

The Jeffersonville Township Public Library (JTPL) Foundation has been awarded a WHAS Crusade for Children Grant. The $4,900 grant will be used to support special needs children.

“We are very excited to receive this grant from the WHAS Crusade for Children,” says Libby Pollard, Director of the Jeffersonville Township Public Library. “The library has been wanting to add new and supportive features for our special needs youth and their families. The Crusade has given us the opportunity to do just that.”

All grant purchases will be made using the Crusade’s Mission and Vision statement to make life better for special needs children and to provide resources to help them succeed. The execution of the grant will also highlight the library’s core values of fostering an inclusive community, providing friendly service, and encouraging lifelong learning.

JTPL will utilize the grant money to provide resources for families with special needs children by purchasing toys and tools designed to develop mental, emotional, and social skills in a fun, interactive format. The library is looking at items like the AWE Early Literacy Station (a computerized station full of interactive and engaging content focusing on seven curricular areas) and the Playaway Launchpads (thematic children’s tablets preloaded with fun, educational games, movies, and apps). The library will scrutinize items purchased with the grant to ensure they will be most beneficial to JTPL’s special needs youth.

The Foundation Needs Your Help!

Through advocacy and fund raising, the JTPL Foundation, Inc., enhances the library’s ability to realize its vision and mission. The goal of the foundation is to supplement regular taxpayer support for the library by:

  • Building an endowment to ensure the viability and sustainability of the library.
  • Seeking additional funds to support enhanced library operations and service offerings.
  • Managing investments for the present and future benefit of the library.

The JTPL Foundation is a 501(c)(3) organization.