Shorewood Public Library events calendar
Ranked by percentage change in circulation 2009-2017, high to low
Related posts:
Madison Public Library. (8/26/2019)
Milwaukee Public Library. (8/27/2019)
Brown County Public Library. (8/27/2019)
Appleton Public Library. (8/27/2019)
Waukesha Public Library. (8/28/2019)
Hedberg Public Library, Janesville. (8/28/2019)
Kenosha Public Library. (8/29/2019)
La Crosse Public Library. (8/29/2019)
Marathon County Public Library. (8/30/2019)
Neenah Public Library. (8/30/2019)
Oshkosh Public Library. (8/31/2019)
Racine Public Library. (8/31/2019)
L. E. Phillips Memorial Public Library, Eau Claire. (9/1/2019)
Wauwatosa Public Library. (9/1/2019)
Fond du Lac Public Library. (9/2/2019)
Middleton Public Library. (9/2/2019)
West Allis Public Library. (9/2/2019)
Brookfield Public Library. (9/3/2019)
Mead Public Library, Sheboygan. (9/3/2019)
Sun Prairie Public Library,. (9/4/2019)
Verona Public Library. (9/4/2019)
Manitowoc Public Library. (9/4/2019)
West Bend Community Memorial Library. (9/5/2019)
McMillan Memorial Library, Wisconsin Rapids. (9/5/2019)
La Crosse County Library. (9/6/2019)
Franklin Public Library. (9/7/2019)
Elisha D. Smith Public Library, Menasha. (9/7/2019)
Beloit Public Library. (9/7/2019)
Portage County Public Library. (9/8/2019)
Everett Roehl Marshfield Public Library. (9/9/2019)
Beaver Dam Community Library. (9/10/2019)
Fitchburg Public Library. (9/10/2019)
10/21/2018 update starts here.
11/11/2017 update starts here.
Source: Wisconsin Public Library Service Data (2015 preliminary)
Original 9/10/2015 post starts here.
Shorewood Public Library website.
Related reading:
Library Services in the Digital Age. (Pew Internet, 1/22/2013)
- Part 1: The role of libraries in people's lives and communities
- Family members' library use from childhood
- Did anyone else in your family use public libraries when you were growing up? (table)
- Americans' library use
- Have you ever visited a library or bookmobile in person? (table)
- Visited a library in-person in the last year? (table)
- A snapshot of Americans' library use habits (table)
- Experiences at public libraries are positive
- How important libraries are to individuals and their communities
- How important are libraries to you and your family?
- How important are libraries? (bar graph)
- Libraries' importance to the community as a whole
- How important are libraries? (table)
Reading & Library Habits in Different Communities. (Pew Research Center, 12/20/2012)
- Urban/Suburban/Rural
- Book readers
- Device owners
- Among e-book readers
- Purposes for reading
- Library activities
- Where people get book recommendations
Younger Americans’ Reading and Library Habits. (Pew Internet, 10/23/2012)
- General reading habits
- Book readers by age (graph)
- Book formats read in the past year, by age group (graph)
- E-books beyond e-readers (graph)
- How e-content has affected younger Americans' reading habits
- When to borrow, when to buy
- Thinking about the last book you read, in any format, did you... (graph)
- Library use
- Library use in the past year (table)
- How important is the public library to you and your family? (graph)
- How library patrons' habits have changed since they began borrowing e-books
- Library patrons' experiences with e-book borrowing
- How they find out about e-books
- The checkout process
- Non e-book borrowers
Libraries, patrons, and e-books. (Pew Internet, 6/22/2012)
- Part 1: An introduction to the issues surrounding libraries and e-books:
- The strained relationship between libraries and publishers
- The current state of play between libraries and publishers
- The rise of Amazon
- Part 2: Where patrons discover and get their books
- The way people prefer to get books in general: To buy or to borrow?
- Where did the most recent book come from?
- A closer look at libraries
- The e-book ecosystem: Where do e-book readers start their search?
- Part 3: Library users
- Demographics
- How important are libraries?
- Library users are more engaged with all kinds of reading
- Part 4: How people used the library in the past year
- Book-borrowing patterns
- Print books
- Audiobooks
- E-book borrowers
- Using the library for research
- Research resources and periodicals
- Get research help from a librarian
- Part 5: Libraries in transition
- How patrons' book-borrowing habits are changing
- Librarians: Changes in library holdings
- The changing role of librarians
- The move to e-books
- Staff training
- Patron training
- Part 6: A closer look at e-book borrowing
- Overview of responses in our online panel
- Checking out e-books
- How they find out about the process
- The checkout process
- Checking out e-books: The good, the bad, and Overdrive
- Selection of e-books in libraries
- Issues patrons have encountered
- Availability
- Waiting lists
- Compatibility
- Other issues
- The main things librarians hear
- How to improve the process for the future
- Librarians and publishers
- Part 7: Non-e-book borrowers
- Why not borrow e-books?
- Help and training from librarians
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