Archive for the ‘community organizers’ Category

Tips For Writing A Culture Days Story

November 7th, 2011 by Culture Days

Storytelling is a great way to share your Culture Days experience! But sometimes it’s easier said than done, so Culture Days has compiled a few handy tips to get the creative ball rolling.

Sharing your story will undoubtedly inspire others to take action in their communities and support the arts and culture! Whether you were an activity organizer or member of the public who participated in the over 5,500 activities that took place throughout the country over the Culture Days 2011 weekend, your first-hand experience is distinct and insightful – so don’t be shy!

Because your story is uniquely yours, feel free to use the format in which you feel most comfortable (ie. short story, essay, question and answer, etc.) with a maximum length of 500 words.

Here are some questions to get the ball rolling and to help ward off that pesky writer’s block! Feel free to use them as a guide to help you document your experience.

For Activity Organizers
Who are you and what do you do?
Why did you want to get involved in Culture Days?
What opportunities did you identify for you/your organization/community’s participation?
What did you organize for the Culture Days weekend? Describe your activity and the goals you set out for your activity.
What made your Culture Days 2011 activity unique?
What kind of feedback did you get from those who attended your activity?
Are there any moments from the lead up to and during the weekend that stand out?
Any moments during the weekend that made an impression on you?
What were the keys to your success?
What did you learn from your experience of Culture Days overall?
Do you foresee any long-term benefits for you/your organization and/or cultural community?
Is there anything else about your Culture Days experience that you’d like to share?

For Public Participants
Who are you and where are you from?
How did you discover Culture Days?
Why did you want to participate in Culture Days 2011 activities in your community?
What activities did you participate in and what attracted you to them?
Did you participate alone, with your family or friends?
Are there any moments during the weekend that stand out in your mind?
What did you learn/take away from your experience of Culture Days?
Are you planning on participating in Culture Days again next year?
Is there anything else about your Culture Days experience that you’d like to share?

Please submit your story to Culture Days via email at stories@culturedays.ca and it may be included in an upcoming blog post or newsletter.

Tips on How to Maximize Your Culture Days 2011 Experience

October 11th, 2011 by Culture Days

Thanks to everyone who participated in and helped make Culture Days 2011 a weekend to remember! Your participation transformed September 30, October 1 & 2 into a wonderful celebration of arts and culture from coast to coast to coast.

Though Culture Days is an annual 3-day event, the movement continues to grow year-round! Here are some tips to help maximize your Culture Days experience:

Thank yous! If you had volunteers, friends and/or trusty aids help out, remember to thank them for all the hard work they poured into your activity. Simply acknowledging the important role they played in helping to make your activity a success is a great way to strengthen your bond and make planning your Culture Days 2012 activity(ies) a whole lot easier!

Stay connected! As suggested in the Checklist for Hosting an Activity, if you collected email addresses, business cards or even Twitter handles to form or grow a mailing list, now is the time to get in touch with participants you met during Culture Days weekend. Reach out and thank them for participating in your activity and take the opportunity to promote your upcoming and ongoing artistic and cultural endeavors!

Social Media! If you are active on social media channels, like Facebook or Twitter, continue your Culture Days conversation online and maintain interest in your activities! Speak to the masses with a simple click and build a network with the growing Canadian arts and culture community.

Share pictures and videos! Did you capture your Culture Days experience? Upload and share your photos and videos via the Culture Days Flickr pool and YouTube channel. Be sure to submit high-quality photos to Flickr and allow for downloads and re-distribution on YouTube as they could be featured in the 2011 Culture Days Highlight Reel!

If you made a video of your activity or weekend celebrations, upload it to YouTube and share the video URL with Culture Days (via email, Twitter or Facebook), so it can be featured on the Culture Days YouTube channel! Check out the free, downloadable video bumpers available for use in your videos here.

Share your anecdotes! Send in your Culture Days anecdotes or stories to stories[at]culturedays[dot]ca and your Culture Days 2011 experience could end up featured in an upcoming newsletter or blog post!

Checklist for Hosting an Activity

September 27th, 2011 by Culture Days

Whether you are a first time activity organizer or you’re participating for the second year, Culture Days has created a checklist with suggestions to help you host your activity and maximize both your and your participants’ Culture Days experience!

Here are some things to keep in mind as you finalize preparations for your activity:

  • Everyone loves a friendly face! Your connection to participants begins by simply welcoming them to your activity, so don’t be shy! Introduce yourself and be sure to thank them for participating in your Culture Days activity. Who knows, this may be the beginning of a lovely friendship and/or collaboration!
  • Is the environment comfortable? If applicable, provide seating, ensure there is proper lighting in your space, accessible washroom facilities and, if you wish, refreshments!
  • The Culture Days weekend is a great opportunity to promote your artistic and cultural endeavors, so if you have promotional materials (i.e. business cards, flyers, signage…etc.) be sure to have some on hand.
  • Your activity is also a wonderful way to introduce your work to a new audience, so keep in touch! Have a notebook and pens on hand so people can sign up to receive more information from you via email about upcoming activities or events you may have lined up after the Culture Days weekend. Building a mailing list is a good way to stay connected with those interested in you and your practice or organization.
  • Is your activity location identifiable as a “Culture Days activity” ? Culture Days Bright Spots Venue Identifiers help ensure that the public will be able to find you! These FREE vinyl clings can be picked up at your local Sun Life Financial Center and are available everyday until September 29th, from 8:30am to 4:30pm, local time. Please consult the Culture Days blog to find the one closest to you!
  • Do you have volunteers or a team helping you host your activity? Be sure they are aware of the key messages you want to communicate. Messages such as: instructions on how to participate, your wish to connect with them after the Culture Days weekend or the promotion of an upcoming activity or event – or anything else you want to communicate.
  • Are you active on social media channels, like Facebook or Twitter? Social media is a great platform to build and maintain an interactive dialogue with the public. Tell participants that you’re on Twitter or Facebook and encourage them to follow or “like” you and don’t forget to connect with @CultureDays on Twitter and Facebook too!
  • Document or ask a friend to help capture your Culture Days experience by taking photos or shooting video of your activity. Don’t forget to upload and share your photos and videos via the Culture Days Flickr pool and YouTube channel! Be sure to submit high-quality photos to Flickr and allow for downloads and re-distribution on YouTube as your photos could be featured in a Culture Days ad in the Globe and Mail and your videos used in a 2011 video highlight reel! Be sure to include important information with your photo/video submissions such as the activity name, location, names of those captured in the images and photo credits. All this information can be included in the file name of your photo or with your video upload. Please contact Culture Days for more information if you are capturing photographs of minors.
  • Videos are a fun and innovative way to capture your Culture Days weekend! Check out the free, downloadable video bumpers available for all to use HERE. Once uploaded on YouTube, share the video URL with Culture Days via email, Twitter or Facebook, so it can be featured on the Culture Days YouTube channel!
  • Last, but not least; have FUN!

Bright Spots Venue Identifiers Now Available for All Activity Organizers!

September 20th, 2011 by Culture Days

Thanks to the generous support of national Lead Founding Visionary Partner, Sun Life Financial, Bright Spots Venue Identifiers are now available to all Culture Days activity organizers!

These free, 1’ diameter round vinyl clings will serve as vital tools for organizers in helping to identify activities as “Culture Days activities,” and ensuring that the public will be able to find them. These clings can be affixed to windows, walls and almost any other surface to help identify the location of your activity. Be sure to place them in a highly visible location outside your venue!


Not only do these identifiers tell the public that they’ve found the right place but there’s also a “call to action” on them to encourage people to use social media platforms via their smart phones to publicize that they’re at your activity; helping to further promote you, your practice or organization.

The free Culture Days Bright Spots Venue Identifiers are now available and can be picked up at your local Sun Life Financial Center.

To find the Financial Centre closest to you, please click the link below that corresponds to your province and use the geo-location map on the Sun Life Financial Canada web site to locate the center nearest you:

British Columbia
Saskatchewan
Manitoba
Ontario
New Brunswick
Nova Scotia
Prince Edward Island
Newfoundland and Labrador

For those in the territories, please email Reuben Finley (reubenfinley[at]culturedays[dot]ca) for more information on how to obtain your free Culture Days Bright Spots Venue Identifier.

Bright Spots Venue Identifiers will be available at these centres from September 21st to September 29th, Monday to Friday, from 8:30am to 4:30pm, local time. Should you not be able to pick up your identifier at your local Sun Life Financial Centre, please contact your Provincial Representative for information about how you can obtain one.

A printable version of the Bright Spots Venue Identifier is also available for download via the Culture Days web site as part of the many free tools in the Culture Days Marketing Kit. You can download and print a colour version of the Bright Spots Identifier on an 8.5” x 11” or 11” x 17” sheet of paper.

Passport to Culture – An Interview with Marlee Robinson

September 19th, 2011 by Culture Days

Culture Days – Who are you and what do you do?
Marlee Robison – I am a retired art historian and event planner. One of the organisations I am involved with is the Erie Ridge Cultural Action Team (CAT) of which I am Chair. Our focal point is the development of cultural activities in our area. Chatham-Kent is an amalgamated community of 22 scattered towns with a total population of approximately 107,000. The Erie Ridge CAT runs along Lake Erie at the eastern end of the municipality.

CD – What made your 2010 Culture Days activities unique?
MR – We created the “Passport to Culture” – a sort of cultural Doors Open. The Passport featured 8 stops covering a wide range of cultural assets in this area of Chatham-Kent in our predominantly rural area.  With funding from the Community Futures Development Corporation, we designed and printed maps and posters, as well as supplied ballot boxes for draw prizes. We tried designing maps that people would want to keep, highlighting local cultural centres.

Chatham-Kent’s diverse history includes early Black settlements. The Buxton National Historic Site and Museum on the original site of the Elgin Settlement, one of the last stops on the Underground Railway for hundreds of fugitive slaves, offered free admission for the day and organised guest artists with deep roots in the Buxton community. Three bead makers from the New Hope Beaders took part using handmade beads from Uganda to make jewellery. Profits from the sale of the jewellery funds schools in the Rift Valley in Tanzania.

We included Ridgetown weekly Farmers’ Market, which features locally grown produce and handmade craft items. A number of crafters did demonstrations on the day.

Two specialty gift shops participated. Mitton’s Jewellery Ltd. (established in 1897 and still run by the Mitton family) arranged the first solo exhibition of local jeweller, Brenda Braun. Mittons, which has received a Mayor’s Heritage Award, now stocks Brenda Braun’s jewellery on a regular basis as result of the Culture Days event. The second store, Antiquated Joys, exhibited painted pottery, glassware, and furniture by Lynda Goldhawk.

Another stop on the Passport trail was the Blenheim Freedom Library and Museum which celebrates the history of veterans in the area. The museum, housed in a former church, contains uniforms, medals, and biographies of veterans who served in the first and second world wars. The library houses 1,500 reference books and videotapes. During the Culture Days event, Veterans talked to people about their experiences and interacted with visitors.

The Blenheim Historical Society is housed in Heritage House of Blenheim & District, a family home dating back to the 1870s. The home was restored and furnished and is now used for the community archives and collections.

The Mary Webb Cultural and Community Centre is housed in the former Highgate United Church. This successful adaptive re-use is in the early stages of transformation into a venue for entertainment, presentations, education, cultural and community activities. For Culture Days, volunteers gave guided tours of the centre and the CK Etsy artisan group demonstrated and sold home crafts.

Finally, we were really excited when the local library asked to participate. The library put up a display of European centres: travel books about Europe, fiction books with stories taking place in European location, and videos of European countries. People from different communities were invited to speak about their culture.

CD – What inspired or surprised you about Culture Days?
MR – Rural communities can be seen as isolated, so by taking part in something that was across Canada, we were given a chance to confirm that we were a part of the national community.  We were pleased that our efforts were acknowledged in our community and that we were one on a list of 26 participants to be highlighted across the country in the Globe and Mail.

CD - What did you learn from your experience of Culture Days that would be useful for other activity organizers to know?
MR - Arts and culture is everywhere. People enjoy learning about different things. Stores and libraries are cultural centres. People need to be open to what is around them. Passport to Culture was a good name, because it was seen as an awakening journey. We would like to do more music and literary arts in the future.

The Mary Webb Centre has already had concerts by a number of Juno winners and now has a poetry reading evening coming up featuring award-winning poets.

CD - What do you feel is the impact of culture in your community?
MR - We are mainly an agricultural community. We are also a manufacturing community, but this industry has had a decline. Municipalities are starting to understand that culture and heritage create jobs - not just for artists, but also for the people who work around culture, bringing new money into the economy. Visible culture brings a higher quality of life attracting entrepreneurs and businesses.

NRTEA Challenges Participants to Take Part in Culture Days

September 17th, 2011 by Culture Days

During the National Roundtable for Teacher Education in the Arts conference held in Spring 2011 at the National Arts Centre in Ottawa, some 50 education professors, artists, arts administrators, teacher candidates, teachers and government officials from across Canada met to consider the best ways to provide effective instruction to teachers in the fine and performing arts.  A unique feature of the event was that many participants insisted that ideas be expressed through artistic creation.  Some did art-making, others created dance and music pieces and many performed improvised dramatic sketches. Interwoven into the dialogue, a hula hoop practice led by a PHd specialist in hula hoops and mixed with tap dancing lessons was also part of the overall experience.

An added challenge to all the participants at the conclusion of the discussion was for them to contribute something to the Culture Days weekend in their part of the country relating to some discovery or idea they leaned at the Roundtable. The Let’s Make Music Conference in Brantford ON, organized by NRTEA participant and Assistant Professor at Nipissing University Christina Grant, is one of these responses. During this Culture Days activity, a variety of free practical music education workshops will be offered to anyone with a love of music. Another response to the NRTEA’s challenge comes from the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board (OCDSB), which will showcase arts performances by elementary and secondary students with filmed highlights of various schools’ musical, dance and drama shows.

The following text is an excerpt from the NRTEA’s summary report. For the full report, click here.

For more information or to share your thoughts on the NRTEA’s initiatives, visit www.nrtea.ca or contact Michael Wilson: mpwilson@uottawa.ca.

Jumping through hoops for culture

NATIONAL ROUNDTABLE FOR TEACHER EDUCATION IN THE ARTS
MAY 25, 26, 2011
SUMMARY OF PARTICIPANT COMMENTS IN SMALL GROUP DISCUSSIONS

The National Roundtable on Teacher Education in the Arts, held on May 25 and 26 ,2011, at the National Arts Centre, in Ottawa,  heralded the first time that an invited group of 53 experts consisting of education professors, teachers, artists, education students (both pre-service and graduate), arts administrators, government officials, and school board consultants and superintendents, met to discuss critical issues in the process of teacher education.  The connecting question to arts advocacy in general was: – In order to have better quality arts programs in our schools, we need better educated teachers.

A unique feature of this event was the element of preparation by all participants that included the offering of a creatively decorated piece of material that might symbolize prior to the event, attitudes on teacher education in the arts.  Each submitted piece at the beginning and during the progress of the Roundtable, was added to a kind of garden of ideas that stimulated metaphoric images throughout the experience. The interweaving of vocal dialogue, mixed with arts experiences continued throughout. In the 2 day dialogue, small group discussions of 8 participants each, met to consider 4 major themes of teacher education: a) pre-service or initial teacher education  b) models of in-service education  c) the role of partnerships  d) the relationship of instructor and candidate. At each opportunity for reporting findings to the whole, narrative summary, dance response, improvisational sketch creation, soundscape atmospheres and visual renderings, were all employed by the reporting groups.  The resulting findings and crystallization of ideas for all participants, included both logical idea suggestions and metaphoric images that continue to resonate in a kind of dynamic symmetry that has promoted alternative meanings for everyone.

As a concluding challenge for each participant, we asked all to conceive of an innovative theory, practice or event that resulted in some way from the experiences of this Roundtable, that could be offered to a public forum as part of the national Culture Days celebrations, scheduled for September 30 – Oct. 2, 2011.

Topics covered during the Roundtable include:

1.THE PLACE OF THE ARTS IN AN OVERALL PROGRAM OF PRE-SERVICE TEACHER EDUCATION

Participants in this discussion group were asked to comment on delivery models,overall programs, the relative time for the arts in relation to the total program, the relationship to practica, degrees of integration, training for generalist candidates and pre-requisite issues for specialized candidates.

2. MODELS OF IN-SERVICE ARTS EDUCATION

Participants were asked to make observations about the situation of in-service training from their perspective, comment on insights that might have been sparked by their observations and recommend solutions or avenues for exploration on possible policies, procedures or models that could better in-service training in the arts.

3. THE ROLES AND CONTRIBUTIONS OF COMMUNITY, REGIONAL AND NATIONAL ARTS PARTNERS

Given the complexity and challenges of providing pre-service and in-service training in the arts for teachers and educators, it is important to explore and understand the diverse communities of partners and their possible contributions to the betterment, development and delivery of a variety of training programs. Many models exist and many more are being explored.

4. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN INSTRUCTOR AND CANDIDATE

This question was not related to any particular sector of teacher education in the arts but pertained to all. Issues examined included instructor modeling; information vs experience; differences between excellence in teaching teachers compared to teaching in schools; unique characteristics of excellent teaching in arts teacher education; relationship of artistic excellence and pedagogical competence.

Full report here.

Culture Days Launches the “In Conversation” Video Series, Presented by Culture Days’ National Broadcast Partner CBC

September 7th, 2011 by Culture Days

Today marks the release of the “In Conversation” video series, presented by Culture Days’ National Broadcast Partner, CBC. The series showcases key leaders in the Canadian arts and culture sector and the organizations they represent. Highlighting the important role these organizations play in further galvanizing the relationship between arts and culture and the Canadian public, the series reveals the many and diverse ways in which Culture Days is helping to foster and grow this connection.

These short clips will be rolling out over the next weeks in the lead up to the Culture Days event weekend, starting with insights from:

Kirstine Stewart, Executive Vice-President of CBC English Television and member of the Culture Days Steering Committee
Kirstine, expresses how Culture Days is an opportunity for the CBC, celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, to connect and engage with communities whose families have welcomed the CBC into their homes since its inception, and envisions a time when Canadians will celebrate “Culture Day in Canada” along side Hockey Day in Canada.

Antoni Cimolino, General Director of the Stratford Shakespeare Festival and Chair of the Culture Days Steering Committee
Antoni recounts his experience of the “real magic of Culture Days” when artists in Stratford came together to plan an activity for the inaugural Culture Days event weekend in 2010 and how the culmination of their planning was expressed in a large street fair where over 3500 people came together to celebrate the arts, artists and the Stratford community itself.

Marc Mayer, Director and CEO of the National Gallery of Canada
Marc describes how the National Gallery of Canada has built programs that serve the entire country and how its participation in Culture Days enables the formation of a deeper relationship between the public and the arts. This ultimately, Marc explains, helps the museum to further its goal of providing the public with access to the museum’s national collection and places Canadians’ visual culture within the greater context of art history.

Piers Handling, Director and CEO of the Toronto International Film Festival
Piers speaks of the impact Culture Days will create within communities and expresses how TIFF’s participation in Culture Days allows that organization to play a leadership role for other festivals and organizations by opening its doors and offering its resources to the public over the Culture Days event weekend.

Forthcoming “In Conversation” clips will feature interviews with:

Bruce Kuwabara, Founding Partner KPMB Architects
Zaib Shaikh Actor, Director & Producer
Martha Henry, CC, Leading Actor
Jeff Melanson, Executive Director & Co-CEO Canada’s National Ballet School
Louise Sicuro, CEO Culture pour tous
Andy Kenins, Chair Elect Tafelmusik Baroque Orchestra and Chamber Choir
Luce Moreau, CEO Orchestre Métropolitain du Grand Montréal
James (Jim) Fleck, OC, Chairman, Business for the Arts
Janice Price, CEO Luminato Festival
Stuart Reid, Executive Director MacKenzie Art Gallery
Marie Lavigne, CEO La Société de la Place des Arts de Montréal
Sarah Iley, VP Programming The Banff Centre
Sal Ferreras, Academic Vice-President Vancouver Community College
Tom McCabe, President & CEO Theatre Calgary

The first videos in this series are now LIVE and available on the Culture Days YouTube channel! Be sure to check back as more videos will be added in the lead up to the Culture Days event weekend.

Libraries across Ontario celebrate Culture Days

September 6th, 2011 by Aubrey Reeves

Public libraries throughout Ontario have enthusiastically embraced the spirit of Culture Days.  More than 100 public libraries in small towns, mid-sized cities and major urban centres in Ontario are taking part in Culture Days celebrations September 30 to October 2, 2011.

During the Aeroplan Culture Stories Contest, Canadians told Culture Days that their public library is a favourite place to experience arts and culture. As Catherine B. of Ottawa said, a library is “more than books and dust; it’s thriving, growing, cultivating – we meet, we share, we have a place that’s purely for exploration. Libraries ARE community, and they burst with arts and culture.”

The Elgin County Library is hosting a reading by Giller Prize winning author Bonnie Burnard and the Cambridge Libraries and Galleries is presenting storytellers Tongues Wagging Productions. The Stratford, Grimsby and Windsor public libraries are all holding “Human Libraries” during Culture Days. The public can check out “human books” including artists, writers and musicians who have volunteered for one-on-one informative and entertaining chats.

“Public libraries and Culture Days are a natural match because both are about inclusion and making sure that culture is available to everyone in the community,” said Stratford Public Library CEO Sam Coghlan.

Beyond the literary world, many Ontario libraries are also hosting a range of arts and heritage activities, such as a bilingual demonstration by instrument builder Pierre Laframboise at the Greater Sudbury Library. The Innisfil Public Library is holding a dance workshop by the Simcoe Contemporary Dancers and the Whitby Public Library is celebrating its 100th anniversary by asking the public to scan their historic photos of Whitby into a digital photo collection.

“Libraries have obviously come a long way in 100 years,” says Whitby Public Library CEO Ian Ross, “Back then we were inward looking. Today we are collaborative organizations, working with so many partners to achieve shared goals.”

Several major urban library systems have offered their spaces to artists and cultural groups wishing to present Culture Days activities. The London Public Library is hosting activities at every library branch in London. Similarly, the Toronto Public Library (TPL) is hosting 85 activities at 48 library branches for their program “Culture Days @ the Library.” This large-scale partnership between TPL, Culture Days and the Neighbourhood Arts Network is an unprecedented opportunity for the public to engage directly with artists in their own neighbourhoods.

“The great variety of cultural activities in urban library branches – from music and dance to poetry, storytelling, painting, bookbinding and stone carving – is testimony to the artistic talents in our cities,” said Toronto Public Library’s Senior Services Specialist Miriam Scribner. “In opening up library spaces for Culture Days, we are connecting artistic creators with local communities, providing high quality cultural experiences that are not always easily accessible.”

Participating Libraries include (as of September 7, 2011):

Barrie Public Library
Cambridge Libaries and Galleries
Chatham-Kent Public Library
City of Mississauga
City of Ottawa Archives
Cobourg Public Library
Elgin County Library
Elmira Library
Essex County LIbrary
Grand Valley Public Library
Greater Sudbury Public Library / Bibliothèque publique du Grand Sudbury
Grimsby Public Library
Guelph Public Library – Main Branch
Hamilton Public Library
Innisfil Public Library
Keswick Library
Kingston Frontenac Public Library
London Public Library
Masonville Public Library
Maynooth Public Library
Mississauga Library System
Norfolk County Public Library
North Perth Public Library
Orangeville Public Library
Ottawa Public Library / Bibliothèque publique d’Ottawa
Pembroke Public Library
Perth East Public LIbrary
Peterborough Public Library
Sault Ste. Marie Public Library
Smiths Falls Public Library
St. Marys Public Library
Stratford Public Library
Thunder Bay Public Library
Toronto Public Library
West Perth Public Library
Whitby Archives
Whitby Public Library
Windsor Public Library

Culture Days @ the Library – 85 free activities at 48 branches

September 6th, 2011 by Aubrey Reeves

Toronto Public Library, the Neighbourhood Arts Network and Culture Days are pleased to announce a major partnership called “Culture Days @ the Library” that welcomes more than 85 Toronto-based artists and cultural groups into 48 library branches throughout the city. On Friday, September 30 and Saturday, October 1 the public is invited to take part in free, hands-on and behind-the-scenes activities where artists will share their creative process, inspirations and techniques.

“The great variety of cultural activities at Library branches – from  Bollywood dance to Serbian choral music, to poetry, storytelling, painting, bookbinding and stone carving – is testimony to the artistic talents in our city,” said Toronto Public Library’s Senior Services Specialist Miriam Scribner.

Culture Days @ the Library matches Toronto-based artists and groups with library branches as a grassroots way of connecting artists to the public in their own neighbourhood.  The partnership allows artists to bring their work out of the studio and engage directly with the public.  Most activities are family-friendly, and all are free and interactive.

“Toronto Public Library is one of the best library systems in the world, but what makes it special to us is its accessibility. We jumped at the chance to present our traditional Tibetan dresses and music at such a community hub,” said Gelek Badheytsang, co-director of Tibetan arts group Drebu, which is participating in Culture Days for the second time.  “We enjoy being part of a movement that celebrates local arts across the whole country.” Drebu presents their activity Tibetan Chuba at Parkdale Library.

Search by keywords “Toronto Public Library” in the advance search to find Culture Days @ the Library activities. Or visit www.torontopubliclibrary.ca/culturedays for a complete list of activities at Toronto Public Library branches.

About Toronto Public Library

Toronto Public Library is the world’s busiest urban public library system. Every year, more than 18 million people visit branches in neighbourhoods across the city and borrow more than 32 million items. As cornerstones of their neighbourhoods, our libraries connect people to each other and to their community, inspiring the spirit of exploration, the joy of reading and the pursuit of knowledge for people of all ages and backgrounds. To learn more, please visit www.torontopubliclibrary.ca or call Answerline at 416-393-7131.

About Neighbourhood Arts Network

Neighbourhood Arts Network is the place where arts and community engagement meet. NAN helps artists and community organizations do what they do best: enrich Toronto and transform it into a more vibrant, beautiful, and liveable city. We catalyze new relationships and conversations, collect research and share information. We envision a Toronto where all residents are empowered to discover and shape the cultural life of their communities. Neighbourhood Arts Network is a project of the Toronto Arts Foundation. To learn more, please visit www.neighbourhoodartsnetwork.org

How to Use the Culture Days Bright Spots Schedule

September 5th, 2011 by Culture Days

The Culture Days Bright Spots Schedule, made possible with the generous support of national Lead Founding Visionary Partner, Sun Life Financial, is a free, online scheduling tool that will help both Culture Days activity organizers and the public create a customized schedule of activities taking place over the Culture Days weekend (September 30, October 1 & 2). The Bright Spots Schedule will provide activity organizers with another tool to help promote and publicize their activities by creating a program guide and ensure that the public can better discover and plan their weekend in advance.

Accessing the Schedule and Adding to Your Schedule
The Culture Days Bright Spots Schedule is easy to use! Once you’ve created an account using the “My Culture Days” portal on culturedays.ca and are logged in, simply browse registered activities and select those you wish to add to your schedule using the yellow “Add to my Bright Spots Schedule” button (located on the top-left on each activity description page). Once an activity has been added to your schedule, that button will turn green and will read “In My Schedule”. The activities you’ve decided to “add to your schedule” will automatically appear in your customized 3-day schedule. If an activity is happening more than once over the Culture Days weekend, the activity will automatically appear in your schedule on each day and at each time it’s scheduled to take place.

Viewing Your Schedule
To view your schedule, simply click on the “In My Schedule” button and you’ll be directed to the “My Schedule” page. You can also access your schedule via the “My Culture Days” section. Once you’ve logged in, click the link at the top right that reads “My Schedule”.

Removing an Activity
To remove an activity, click the icon to the right of the activity you’d like to delete (the circle with a line through it) from your “My Schedule” page. A message window will pop up asking you to confirm that you want to remove the activity; click the “Remove” button and you’re done! One important thing to note is that if an activity is happening more than once over the Culture Days weekend, it will automatically appear in your schedule on each day and at each time it’s scheduled to take place, and if you choose to remove it from your schedule, it will remove all instances of that activity.

Exporting Your Schedule
You can export your customized schedule in a number of ways: by email, to popular calendar platforms (ie. Outlook, iCal, Google, etc.) and in PDF format, which can then be shared and printed. For individuals or organizers who want to create a program booklet, choose the “Print My Schedule” option where you also have the option to include an accompanying cover and customized title.

Activity Recommendations
In addition to these exciting features, there is also a “smart” referral engine that will make recommendations based on activities you’ve selected based on the geographic proximity of activities you’ve already selected or by category, based on the kinds of activities you’ve selected (i.e. dance, visual arts, music…etc.)

So, what are you waiting for? Plan your Culture Days weekend NOW!