Showing posts with label naturalization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label naturalization. Show all posts

Monday, October 22, 2012

A re-introduction to our homepage's resources: the Reference tab

I've noticed myself blithely clicking through the library's homepage, hardly noticing what has changed.  As staff at the library, I ought to be acutely aware of the resources at hand.  So, to re-acquaint myself, I will take you, dear reader, with me on a trip through the library's homepage.

Libraries are all about order and sequence, but this time I will hop around the tabs instead of starting on the far left and working to the right.  Or maybe I just want to start with the Reference Tab.  Allons-y!

Home, Calendar, Library News, Research, Children's Library, Teen Scene, About Us, Contact Us, e-branch
The bar of tabs on the homepage

When your mouse hovers on the Reference Tab, two options appear: Ancestry and ABE/ESL students.  The Ancestry option works inside the library building; it takes you to our subscription for Ancestry Library Edition, which is similar to Ancestry.com.  Look up a name, learn how to interview a relative to preserve family history, or connect with other potential family.

The ABE/ESL option stands for Adult Basic Education and English as a Second Language.  This tab suggests some fee and a few free sites to support anyone preparing for the US Citizenship Exam, GED, or California's Distance Learning Project.

When you click on the Reference Tab, the screen displays a plethora of link options, in fact 23 groups! Here is a brief overview of the categories:

About Computers (how-to classes from the very basic to the mildly advanced)

Business & Finance (small business beginnings to stock market information)

Consumer Information (Ruidoso's Chamber of Commerce and links to the federal government)

Create Free e-mail (most of these sites require a cell phone with text-messaging to get started anymore)

Education (how to start homeschooling, find money for college, or create a citation for your paper)

Elections (see where your precinct is, where to vote, request an absentee ballot, read the League of Women Voters or Project Vote Smart's interviews with candidates, sample ballots when available)

Fast Facts (what you used to ask the librarian for: statistics, local facts, safety recalls, or almanacs)

Federal Student Aid (guides to the FAFSA--often required for students to work in college)

For Seniors (local health services, NM's Aging & Long-Term Services Dept, and Social Security info)

Health (Doctor Finder, travel updates, and scientific or medical journals)

Jobs (State and Federal job listings and help sites; information for career seekers/changers)

Language (quote dictionaries and dictionaries for all ages)

Legal Forms (Bankruptcy, divorce, contract examples, and basic assistance)

Lincoln County Libraries (find Capitan, Corona, ENMU, public schools, and digital libraries in the county)

New Mexico Facts (Cities, maps, tourism, genealogy and government links)

New Mexico Law Library (more forms, regional court specifics, statutes, and municipal codes)

New Mexico Links (MVD's driver's manual, oral history projects, and fun sites)

People (find people, phone numbers, businesses, or census data)

Reading Suggestions (social networks for book lovers, a database of all mystery books ever, find which book is next in a series, or find a suggestion to try next)

Research (encyclopedia, more genealogy, maps, other municipal codes)

Tax Help (state and federal websites and forms and how to file in other states)

Village Emergency (where to register your physical address with the village or county to hear about evacuations or frozen pipes on your cell phone while you are out of town)

Other (look up ZIP codes, the World Fact Book, and read about jobs and salaries in the Occupational Outlook Handbook from the Dept of Labor)

Was that too much for one blog-post?  Probably.  If you find a broken link, please comment below or send an email to the library.  I check them every year, but that may not be often enough these days.





Monday, June 25, 2012

#6 Materiales en Español

Ideally, this post on library materials in Spanish would be in Spanish.  Lo siento.  Instead, I ask your assistance in sharing this information with anyone you know who might be interested in our Spanish-language materials. We also have bilingual materials (mostly Spanish/English) in case you are interested in dabbling on your own or with your child.

Hispanofonia
All the country and state flags where Spanish is a recognized language

Ruidoso Public Library offers fiction (novels) in Spanish, non-fiction (poetry, classics, cookbooks), even a few DVDs and music recordings.  We have ESL (English as a Second Language) materials, some especially for native-Spanish speakers.  These include DVDs to reduce accent.  There are books explaining immigration and naturalization processes, how to live with diabetes, and modern translations, such as The Hunger Games (Los Juegos del Hambre) and coming soon: The Hobbit (El Senor de los Anilos).

@your library has resources, in Spanish and English, on connecting with your children through library visits.  I will let their ad speak for me (Mira el PSA):
 

The @your library site is full of ideas on how to make a trip to the library a way to learn more about each other, perhaps find a new hobby to share, or help each other with money and saving. Those websites are also available in English.

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Questions about becoming a US Citizen? Free ENMU-R class this week

Naturalization ceremony at Kennedy Space Center

Wednesday night at 6pm, ENMU-Ruidoso will present a video (with Spanish subtitles) on the new rules to naturalization (becoming a US Citizen).  You don't need to register early, just show up tonight!  Show up anytime before 8pm, too, at ENMU-Ruidoso's new White Mountain Annex at 201 White Mountain Rd.

If you are a citizen by birth, check out some of the nearly 100 questions on the exam to earn your citizenship.

The US Customs and Immigration Services offers maps, brochures, and FAQs at their site or en Español.


If you are looking for an opportunity to give back to your community (perhaps as a tutor or advocate), you might want to drop in, too.


For more information please contact Susie Morss of ENMU-Ruidoso's Adult Basic Education, 575-258-1730.