Wednesday, June 21, 2006
Books at work, Reading
Always keep a stack of books on your desk. Though most non-librarians and naive LIS graduate students think that librarians spend their work days reading books, nothing could be further from the truth. While this image is romantic and quaint, the reality is that most librarians spend their days dealing with annoying administrators, attending mind-numbing meetings, and pushing paper of the non-book variety. Keeping a stack of books on your desk will help you maintain the romantic image of librarianship, and should you find yourself (by some stroke of luck) with the opportunity to actually read at work, you'll already have a book within arm's reach. In the meantime, books also make good paperweights.
Wednesday, June 14, 2006
Prospective new boss, On Googling the living sh*t out of
A new prospective employer will probably do a minimal background check to ensure that you fit the qualifications for a job at their company... and you should do the same on them. The last thing you want to do is to leave a pretty good job for a new position working for an insecure, immature, bi-polar workaholic (true story, btw). Do your own due dilligence on the person who interviews you by Googling the living daylights out of them. Remember, blogs and MySpace profiles probably won't use the person's real name, so get creative. And if you find the person's personal website, run it through a domain search tool in order to find the joker's real email address and Google that too. Remember, the job interview is a two-way street.
Tuesday, June 13, 2006
Interviews, Doing presentations at
When hiring a librarian, many academic libraries try to fill part of the obligatory eight-hour interview with a presentation by the candidate. More often than not, the candidate is asked to "demonstrate a database." Zzz. When inviting candidates to your library to interview, make things more challenging by asking them to...
- Speed-weed your ready reference collection.
- Work a real-life reference desk shift... blind-folded.
- Make a halfway decent pot of coffee... then catalog it.
- Play a game of Trivial Pursuit/Scrabble against your most cantankerous faculty member.
- Explain Ranganathan's laws of library science through interpretive dance.
- Wrestle a cataloger.
Monday, June 12, 2006
Signatures, Using email
Put a little spice into your correspondents' lives by adding a personality-filled signature line at the end of all your outgoing email messages. In addition to your name and contact information, include a quippy quotation from A Librarian's Guide to Etiquette, a particularly poigniant Bible verse, or your favorite Garfield quote ("I hate Mondays"). This extra little gem at the end will make it worth your readers' time to wade through your boring everyday library talk.
Thursday, June 08, 2006
Vacation, Going on
If you go on vacation, be sure to come back to work with a photo album or scrapbook, a tan, and souvenirs for everyone. It's important to remind everyone that you were off having fun while they were at the library working. Plus, if you don't celebrate your own return, you may come to the painful realization that no one even noticed that you were gone.
Faculty, Addressing
Teaching faculty are very important people. Be sure to address a faculty member by his or her earned title, "Dr. Smith," rather than by the familiar name, "Sally." This shows the important teaching faculty that you respect them. They will no doubt reciprocate this respect by letting you pull their books from the stacks, forgive their overdue fines, and babysit their classes while they're away at conferences.
Wednesday, June 07, 2006
Territorial, Being
Librarians often find themselves in uncomfortable situations where there is not a clear consensus on who has jurisdiction over a certain library collection or service. Some examples:
Pee on it.
Yep, like a dog. Pee on your call number range in the reference collection. Pee on the music education books. Pee on the web page. Pee on the catalog. While you're at it, pee in your office. Pee on your favorite chair in the director's conference room. Pee on the reference desk. Pee on your coffee cup.
Note: Do not pee on people, even if they do report to you.
Drink lots of fluids. It can take a lot out of you to have so much control.
- Who orders the DSM-IV for the reference collection -- the head of reference or the subject bibliographer?
- Should the music education collection be managed by the music librarian or the education librarian?
- Who controls the web page to which everyone contributes?
- Who has the final say on how the public catalog records display -- reference librarians or catalogers?
Pee on it.
Yep, like a dog. Pee on your call number range in the reference collection. Pee on the music education books. Pee on the web page. Pee on the catalog. While you're at it, pee in your office. Pee on your favorite chair in the director's conference room. Pee on the reference desk. Pee on your coffee cup.
Note: Do not pee on people, even if they do report to you.
Drink lots of fluids. It can take a lot out of you to have so much control.
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