The three courses listed below were recently added to the WJIL Course Catalog. If you are a registered user of WJIL, these courses are available to you for free.
Mentors and Protégés: Creating Successful Workplace Programs (LE@D)
There’s a lot of common-sense planning that goes into running an effective, creative, dynamic mentor program. It really isn’t about magic — it’s about organization, details, and continual evaluation to help us stay on target and focus on our goals.
Throughout this course, we will be exploring how to create the best interchanges between mentors and protégés, with an eye toward positive results for all involved.
Strategic Planning: Quick, Cheap, and Decent (LE@D)
What happens if you don’t have time to research and write an A+ strategic plan? What if you have an impossible deadline, no budget, no experience, and no staff? Something has to give.
This is a class for when you need a quick, simple, short-term working strategic plan for your library or project; when your plan needs to be good, not great; when your existing plan needs a fast makeover; when your existing planning process is stalled and you need a jump-start; when you have a difficult planning deadline; when your library’s leadership and management have never created a strategic plan before, and they want to start small, simple, and doable; or when there is only one of you to do it all.
If you’re looking for a more thorough introduction to the strategic planning process, or a solution to long-term problems, please consider Strategic Planning: The Five-Minute Introduction
Strategic Planning: The Five-Minute Introduction (LE@D)
Strategic planning is about inventing a new future and creating a written plan for coordinating the steps and the resources to get there. That doesn’t sound so very terrible, does it?
But, poll a library audience about why they hate strategic planning, and the issues appear all too familiar. What if I could offer you a strategic planning process that was both reasonable and beneficial to your library?
This class is designed to introduce you to the skills and techniques necessary for developing a strategic plan and emphasizes two important concepts:
Why Five Minutes? Because that’s how long it takes to explain the main steps of this effective strategic planning model.
If you’re looking for more practical, hands-on information, or if you need a quick, simple, short-term working strategic plan for your library or project, please consider Strategic Planning: Quick, Cheap, and Decent
Attend this state-wide video conference from the comfort of your library system and take away ideas from a panel of Teen librarians on how they successfully get teens involved at their libraries.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
9:30am – 12:30 pm
State-wide Library System Video Conference
Cost $10 (Please write check to Metropolitan Library System. The mailing address is 125 Tower Drive Burr Ridge, Illinois 60527. Attention: Attention: Christina Stoll)
Note: When registering, be sure to select the library system location where you will be attending the workshop.
Continuing education program evaluations are now available for completion on Library Learning (L2)! Online evaluations reduce the use of paper and streamline the collection of evaluation data, saving trees, time, and money. Following an event, participants will be emailed a link to the electronic evaluation form. Participants simply click to complete and submit the form. When you receive the emailed link, please take a moment to evaluate the program. Your comments and suggestions are valued and help shape future continuing education opportunities.
The course enrollment statistics In the most recent WJIL State of the Stats tell the story of an Illinois Library Community learning together. Over the course of the past 2 years that the WJIL Course Catalog has been available, course enrollments have gone from 76 in August of 2007 to a total of over 1,800 in May, 2009. That represents a lot of continuing education, professional development and just in time learning – all fully subsidized* by the Illinois State Library for the Illinois Library Community.
Part of what we discovered in our statistical analysis is that the LibraryU courses that are now available in the WJIL Course Catalog have been very popular, and the completion rate on them at 63% is astoundingly high for online learning. On the flip side, we found that over 45% of you have not yet found the time to start the WJIL course(s) that you enrolled in.
Although you do have a year from the time of enrollment to complete your WJIL course, the more you put it off, the less likely you will complete - or even start it. Here are some tips for motivating yourself to get back in there and launch your course!
1. Find a learning buddy. Ask them to enroll in the same course and give yourselves a deadline for completion. That way you have someone else to hold you accountable, and to provide discussion and feedback on the content.
2. Create a formalized timeline and plan for yourself to complete your course(s). It’s always hard to find time for the things you see as “extras.” So instead, incorporate a formal learning plan into your workflow that will help you to reach pre-defined goals for completion of your course. Use the Resources for Learners materials on WJIL to help you, including an E-Learning Approval Form, Door Hanger and E-Learning Tips.
3. Be a learning “scout” and complete your course with the intention of making recommendations to colleagues and staff. After launching your course, you will see two additional buttons next to the course name in your “My Courses” list. Use these to “Add Your Comment” to the course or “Recommend to a Friend.”
4. Course Completion Status for UNT LE@D Courses. Courses provided by the UNT LE@D program are administered on their own servers, so WebJunction cannot accurately track your progress. Once you complete the course, click on the “Launch Course” button and read the instructions in the pop-up window on how to move the course into completed status.
So go forth and continue learning – but don’t put it off!
* Funding was provided by the Illinois State Library (ISL), a Division of the Office of Secretary of State, using funds provided by the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), under the federal Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA)

Illinois libraries have the well-deserved reputation for leading the pack when it comes to innovation, service and creativity. In order to fuel the fire for continued leadership WJIL is launching a Focus on Learning. In this Special Edition of What’s New @ WJIL you’ll find free opportunities to learn more from content and colleagues with the added benefit of no travel. Prepare for the future by taking the time to learn today!
Contents: Resources | Courses and Learning | Community | What could I do with…? | What’s New RSS Feed 
“What’s New” RSS Feed
Want the latest “What’s New @ WJIL” to come to you? Add the RSS feed to your blog reader.
[http://webjunctionworks.org/il/blog/index.php/category/new-wj-il/feed/]
WJIL Course Catalog Competencies
Wimba Classroom Guides and Tutorials
CPDU Credits for WebJunction Courses
LibraryU Courses in the WJIL Course Catalog
WebJunction and WebJunction Illinois live online learning
Course of the Month Group: A statewide learning cohort
Jennie Alexander’s LibraryU module featured on WebJunction
Some of you are probably asking yourself how in the world you’re going to add one more thing to your already busy schedule. Where will you find time to take a course (even if it is online), much less talk about it with others? Creativity may be the answer. Find ways to incorporate this vital learning activity into your personal and organizational schedule. Here are some tips that might help:
1. Have all library staff take the course of the month and plan internal discussions around how it can be applied in your library.
2. Browse the member list on the Course of the Month group page and invite a group member from another part of the state to become a learning partner with you.
3. Plan a regional follow up face-to-face discussion session for those who take the Course of the Month to share mutual experiences and action plans. Meet at a central library location or your System headquarters.
4. Set aside focused and deliberate time to take the course you have chosen and remove distractions from your learning environment. Use the E-Learning Approval form to formalize your learning experience and the Door hanger for E-Learners to let others know when you are in a learning session.
5. Use the Discussion threads on the Course of the Month Group page to share how you plan to make the most of this learning cohort in your organization.
6. If you are not able to take one of the selected courses for February, go ahead and join the group and come back next month to see what the selected courses are.
7. Submit a suggestion through the Group discussion board for a future Course of the Month.
Go to WebJunction Illinois and log into your account.

Please make sure you sign in! You must be a registered user to enroll in free courses. If you have not registered, click on the “Create Account” and be sure to affiliate with Illinois.

Take a look at this fun video on how to sign in and set up your account or just read the how to. Once you are signed in, click on the Courses tab in the top navigation bar.
Browse the course topics and select one to see the offerings. The “cost” for courses should be $0 now that you are logged in and on the WJIL site, although there are some selected courses listed at a reduced price of $25 that can be purchased using your credit card.
After reviewing the Course Catalog guidelines on this page, click Add to Cart next to the course(s) you have selected.

Under My Account, below “Affiliations”, you will see that 1 item has been added to the shopping cart. Click on the Shopping Cart where it says (1 item[s])

Or you can click on the Go to Cart in the Shopping Cart Portlet on the Course Catalog page.

Click Proceed to Checkout button (near the bottom right corner).

Click Complete Order to finalize your course selection.
How do you start taking your course?
You can always access your course by using the My Courses link, at the bottom of the My Account box on the right when you sign in to WebJunction Illinois. You will launch the course from there.

When you begin your course, you will encounter some pop ups. The first one will be a Security Warning. It is OK to click Run. If you have additional security software installed on your computer, you need to take extra steps to let your security software know that this software is not harmful. Make sure when you exit the course you use the Exit button so your place will be saved.
If you are experiencing any difficulty with launching your WJIL SkillSoft courses, try these tips:
The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Graduate School of Library and Information Sciences is offering a distance learning class conducted in Second Life. This Immersive Learning (IL) in 3D Virtual Environments for Librarians and Educators will run for six weeks. The majority of the class will explore ways that educators can conduct (and librarians can support) IL classes and incorporate IL into their existing practices as well as breaking new ground. For more info, including how to register, visit the GSLiS site. (NSLS Newsletter)
The ILLINET/OCLC Department of the Illinois State Library is pleased to present upcoming workshops covering a variety of subjects. These workshops are being presented in the NEW WebJunction conferencing system, Wimba. Wimba allows you to stay in the comfort of your own library and use your computer to access a variety of workshops designed to help you succeed.
To maximize the efficiency of the system, you will need a headset and microphone ~ but you also have the ability to text message your questions in to the presenter. Here is the calendar for the next few months. Please feel free to contact ILLINET/OCLC Network Coordinators Debra Aggertt 217.558.1945 William Echelbarger 217.524.6313 for a quick demonstration or suggestion for future workshops.
Registration for these workshops is via the ISL CleO.
To find out more about the professional development and continuing education opportunities available to you through WebJunction Illinois, read the article from the January 4, 2008 NSLS newsletter.
Find out more about how to make online learning accessible for the deaf and hard of hearing in a free online webinar on January 8th provided by WIMBA. Dr. Sam Slike, a professor at Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania will discuss his use of Wimba to provide college courses to deaf and hard of hearing students. His innovative courses use a sign language interpreter broadcast through a web cam (and simultaneously broadcast via a Sorenson videophone); closed captioning of spoken lecture material via Caption Colorado; PowerPoint slides; text chat; and spoken lecture. Register now for the webinar on January 8th, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm CST.