Thursday, July 08, 2010
Conferences, Returning from
Upon returning from a professional library conference, your post-conference report should include more than a list of restaurants you visited and a random collection of vendor brochures. Also leave out the part about waking up in an alley nine days after the conference officially ended.
Tuesday, June 22, 2010
Conference, Putting the "er" in
A good librarian will go to library conferences and sit through mind-numbing presentations made by other librarians. Repeat this mind-numbing ritual over and over again for three solid days, and you will be mentally ready to go back to your job at the library.
Editor's note: Your esteemed editor will be taking a break from the blog to attend the Annual Conference of the American Library Association in Washington, DC. In the meantime, you can follow your colleagues' notable breaches of library etiquette via Twitter at: http://twitter.com/politelibrarian.
Editor's note: Your esteemed editor will be taking a break from the blog to attend the Annual Conference of the American Library Association in Washington, DC. In the meantime, you can follow your colleagues' notable breaches of library etiquette via Twitter at: http://twitter.com/politelibrarian.
Monday, June 21, 2010
Fluids, Discussing bodily
Librarians should never discuss bodily fluids [including, but not limited to: urine, vomit, earwax, gastric juice, breast milk, mucus, phlegm, pus, saliva, sebum, semen, snot, vaginal secretions, sweat, tears, amniotic fluid, diarrhea, smegma, and blood] in the library work place... unless those fluids are found on recently-returned library books.
Friday, June 18, 2010
Music, Your choice of
Polite librarians know that their officemates hate their choice of low-playing music in the library workplace. If you insist on playing music in your office space, choose something that you both hate so that you can ridicule it together.
Ask the readers: What is the worst music you have had to endure in your library?
Ask the readers: What is the worst music you have had to endure in your library?
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Sinus, Bathing your
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Classrooms, Organic
Teaching librarians who don't like to do lesson planning should elect to let their classes sessions "grow organically." This can be done by arranging your students into rows, turning on a heated projector lamp, and feeding them some shit that you make up on the fly. If the students begin to wilt, allow them to take a water break, and then re-fertilize.
Monday, June 14, 2010
Green, Going
All good librarians should try to out-green their coworkers with increasingly aggressive attempts to make their library work spaces environmentally friendly. Below are some ideas to get you started...
- Publicly berate coworkers for not using double-sided printing.
- Go "off the grid" and cut the power lines that lead to your library building.
- Hoard empty soda cans and discarded beer bottles in your office and declare the area an "Ant Sanctuary."
- Steal your coworkers' discarded apple cores and banana peels for the fly-infested compost pile you keep under your desk.
- Turn off the lights in the reading room, and demand that all patrons purchase library-issued solar-powered light caps.
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