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Update

I hate to be constantly apologizing for sporadic updates. My internet access is still limited, and whenever I AM able to spend some time on the webz, it tends to go towards writing cover letters and scouring job boards rather than blogging and reading interesting articles.

I’ve settled into volunteering at a branch of the Atlanta-Fulton Public Library and looking for part-time work until I can find something professional. The library work isn’t exactly THRILLING, as it’s mostly backed-up processing and projects that the librarians have gotten behind on thanks to the hiring freeze, but hey – can’t be too picky. It’s in the field, and my time is definitely appreciated.

A couple of bright spots – first, we are moving into a new apartment at the end of the month which will be substantially nicer than our current situation and in a better area. Second, I think I am going to be able to set up a work exchange with a local yoga studio so that I can get some free classes in exchange for helping them out with cleaning and other little tasks.

Hopefully in the near future I’ll have a bit more time to post my thoughts on library-related issues and stop with the constant apologies!

helping out

So, as my Internet access has been extremely limited lately, I haven’t had the chance to mention something I’ve been thinking about…recently, the main library in Louisville, KY (my hometown) was severely damaged by flash flooding. Here’s a link to a Library Journal interview with the director. Things are really bad =(

As I am not working at the moment, I’m thinking about trying to go up there for a few days and volunteer. I’m still trying to track down the best way to get in touch with them, but if you’d be interested in doing something like this let me know! We can stay at my parents’ house for a few days.

back (sort of)

School is over, grades are in, and I officially have my MLIS.  Yay? I am back in Atlanta for the duration of my indefinite unemployment, but unfortunately without internet access at home for a while. I think one week is all that I am allowed of sloth and mincing about, however, so starting next week I’ll likely be setting up shop at the library or coffee shop to (re)begin applying to jobs, catching up on blog reading, and try to get out some last thoughts on the whole library school experience.

In the meantime, at least I’ve been going to the pool a lot, getting taken out to dinner at some of the Atlanta restaurants I’ve really missed, and sleeping in til noon. Not a bad life!B

ALA wrap-up

I finally have a minute to decompress and put down some thoughts about my experience at ALA – my first professional conference.

First of all, I have to say that I had an excellent time overall and absolutely plan to continue attending ala (and/or other library conferences) in the future. By and large, the sessions I attended were interesting and inspiring, the people I met friendly and encouraging, and the networking opportunities plentiful.

A couple of highlights: meeting Susan Gibbons from Rochester, one of my librarian idols (and seeing her speak about some newer Rochester research), the STS breakfast where I got to have a great discussion about user experience, hearing David Lee King (at least I think it was him, I was in the back) get REAL about the need for library staff to be computer literate, the NMRT social and proposing some DISinterest groups for LITA (mine is second life), and watching Pitt claim third place in the Book Kart Drill Team championships. I also made Library Journal’s “Top Tweets” for Sunday =) …on that note, did anyone ever find Junot Diaz?

A couple of frustrations: the slow, tedious process of taking the shuttles back and forth between the hotels and McCormick place, difficulty in determining what was and was not appropriate to just show up at uninvited (probably not so hard if you’re not a first-timer, but still), snobby vendors who didn’t want to talk to students (hey, I really AM curious about your catalog plug-ins and not just trying to scam you for a mini snickers).

One serious complaint: the Placement Center. Now, I’m having slightly better results in terms of job searching than many of my classmates, so this wasn’t quite as big of an issue for me, but the Placement Center was about the most depressing room I have been in outside of a funeral home. There were exactly 12 organizations there, only about half of whom were actually hiring (and I hear that even those were not too interested in students). To me, this is terrible. While the availability of interview space & resume review services is great and there should always be space for these services, I really think that if you can’t even hit double digits of employers looking to hire, just don’t bother. All it does is discourage students and other jobless librarians who are already facing an incredibly tough job market. In other words, if you can’t do it right – don’t do it at all.

But again, the GREAT definitely outweighed the bad and I’m so glad that I made the trip. Hopefully once I have some money, I can join a division or two and get on some committees and be more involved in all of this in the future.

Outside of the conference, I also had a great time walking around Chicago and seeing friends. This is the second summer in a row that I’ve had perfect weather there, and it has definitely left a great impression on me.

Working out a Tentative Schedule for ALA

I’m struggling through ALA’s “Event Planner” at the moment, trying to figure out a plan of attack for this weekend’s conference. I cannot express strongly enough how much I wish I could easily export this to my Google calendar! But I guess once I have everything in the event planner I can just copy it manually…

Anyway, here is my tentative schedule. I haven’t looked at any of this on a map, so some of it may be logistically impossible! Italics are possibilities.

Friday 7/10

2:30ish? Arrive

4:00 – 5:00 NMRT Conference 101

5:30 – 7:00 ACRL Instruction Session Soiree

OR

6:30 – 7:30 NMRT Mentoring Social

7:30 – 8:30 NMRT Meet & Greet

Saturday 7/11 (aka “The Day I See All My Favorite Bloggers IRL”)

8:00 – 10:00 ACRL 101 & Membership Meeting

10:30 – 12:00 Distance Learning Interest Group

OR

10:30 – 12:00 FYE: Targeting First-Year College Students

OR

10:30 – 12:00 Targeted Marketing: Hitting the Bullseye

1:30 – 3:00 The Ultimate Debate: Has Library 2.0 Fulfilled its Promise? (Meredith Farkas! David Lee King!)

3:30 – 5:30 Library 2.0 Buildings: Creating Spaces with Heart (Michael Stephens!)

Evening – See some friends that live in Chicago

Sunday 7/12 (Things related to Pitt day)

Morning – Placement Center and Exhibits if time

1:30 – 2:30 Junot Diaz

2:30 – 4:30 Marketing Academic & Research Libraries (unfortunately I will have to cut out a bit early, as Pitt is up first in BKDT)

4:00 – 5:30 Book Kart Drill Team Championships! (I am not on the team, but will be videotaping our performance)

5:30 – 7:30 Pitt SIS Alumni Reception

7:00 – 10:00 NMRT Reception

Monday 7/13 (I *will* see the exhibits today!)

8:00 – 10:00 Grassroots Program: From Legacy Data to Linked Data: Preparing Libraries for Web 3.0

OR

10:30 – 12:00 Social Software Showcase 2009

OR

Exhibits

OR

1:30 – 3:00 Content Management Systems in Libraries

4:00 Head back to Pittsburgh!

getting nerdy about a final project

I’m so excited because my friend Coral and I just got our final project approved for Web Engineering, and I can’t wait to get working on it (how often do you hear that? ha). We are going to create a working system to record reference statistics using the READ Scale. One of the developers works at CMU’s Engineering and Science Library, and we’ve both had a good experience using READ there. However, they record all the statistics on paper at the ref desk, which are then entered into a database later. We have a little web application for reference statistics in the Pitt libraries, but the categories they use for statistics are not nearly as informative as READ.

Coral will  be doing more of the actual programming end of this, and I’ll focus more on modeling the application. Knock on wood, the end product should be really useful and allow to analyze the statistics in much more intriguing ways than the current method of hourly tallies supports.

redesigning library spaces

While I’ve read quite a bit (both for class and on my own) on the subject of designing library spaces, this has only been an abstract concept for me until recently. Two separate situations have sprung up in the past couple weeks that have made these ideas a lot more real.

For starters, Pitt’s Engineering Library is moving into a new space in the fall (at which point I will be gone). We’ve obviously known this is happening for quite some time, but last week the blueprints arrived and I’ve gotten to study them a bit. I don’t have any influence over the outcome of this project, but it’s still really interesting to look at the blank space and imagine what it could be. I’ve just looked at these informally, but I hope to chat with my boss sometime in the near future about any plans they have to get student and faculty input on how the space is configured. There are certainly some limitations due to the actual space and setup (it will be on two floors, with stacks separated from the open space), but I think it will end up being very cool, and certainly a lot nicer than it is now.

I’ve also had the opportunity to sit in on planning meetings for the renovation of the Children’s Department at the Carnegie Library of Homestead, one of the ACLA libraries. Due to my spring semester schedule I missed a lot of the early stages of this, but since summer term started I’ve been able to sit in, and it’s really fascinating. Again, this is a space with some serious structural limitations (this is one of the original Carnegie libraries – it’s basically a cube with ultrahigh ceilings), but the plans look absolutely breathtaking. At a recent meeting they debuted mockup images of the ceiling paint job (clouds that are shaped like animals among other cool things), and everyone was just blown away by the possibility of transforming such a plain space into something so special. However, the price tag was a bit steeper than expected, and there was a bit of rumbling about possibly scaling back. I was so relieved to hear one of their Board members stick up for the project and say, “If we aren’t going to do this RIGHT, why are we doing it at all?” which got everyone back on track and focused on the goal of creating a truly amazing space. Demolition on the old space starts next week, and I’ve been soliciting volunteers from the MLIS program to help out…I think the prospect of smashing something with a hammer is very tempting for a lot of us right now!

Virtual exams?

While in the MLIS program I have taken several courses that were taught at least partially online. No two have been conducted in the same way, and none have been ideal. I can easily identify some components that make an online class good:

  • Some degree of synchronous interaction, even if it is not the entire course. In particular, I had one course where we held biweekly conference calls on Skype to discuss journal articles. This definitely helped make the class feel “real” and not just like some sort of message board.
  • On the same note – Avoid making students constantly check difficult to navigate discussion boards. If you can’t go so far as Skype or other methods of actual discussion, use chat. One of my professors actually had us create blogs to post our discussion points, so that we could put each others’ feeds into
  • Meaningful assignments, not just busy work. One of the best online courses I’ve been involved in had several more long, in-depth assignments than most of my other classes. However, we did not have any sort of “make-work” assignments. These assignments were much more valuable, and actually saved me time over the course of the term. I appreciated not being distracted by silly 200-word article summaries and having the time and energy to focus on more valuable work.

You can most likely deduce some of my complaints about online classes from those points as well! =)

I mention these things because today I have my first-ever exam for an online course. We have 24 hours to complete and submit the exam – it isn’t timed. I’m not sure what to think about it, but I suppose we’ll see how it goes, and I’ll be sure to share my thoughts when it’s all over with.

Summer 2009 Courses

It was difficult to select my courses for this semester, my final one towards my MLIS. Knowing that these are the last courses I will get to take before (knock on wood) entering the professional workforce made it especially painful to say “I just don’t have room in my schedule to take _____.” In the end I made my decisions with help from some trusted advisers, the listed qualifications I’ve been seeing in job announcements, and the likelihood that I could pick up the skills taught in the course in other ways. So here they are:

LIS 2700: Managing Libraries and Information Systems & Services

LIS 2850: The Library’s Role in Teaching and Learning

LIS 2970: Geospatial Information Systems (GIS) for Librarians

INFSCI 2955: Systems – Web Engineering

A couple of these have really been an interesting departure from my past courses in the program. Although the Information Sciences program is housed in the same department as LIS, there are only two students in the course that I knew previously from other courses, and of course the instructor is unfamiliar to me as well. While I was a bit worried that I wouldn’t be tech-savvy enough for the material, so far it has been at a great level – just hard enough that I have to push myself, but not too hard to handle. Check back with me when we get into the programming section =)

The GIS course is an online-only class, which is definitely not my favorite way to learn. I moved across the country to attend class in person, and have been slightly disappointed at the offerings for on-campus students in past terms. I must admit, though, that the instructors (one of whom I’ve met a few times socially, and she’s a recent grad from our program) have really put effort into making it more than just another “watch the video of the lecture” online class. I’ll probably write more about this in a later post…having been through a few different varieties of online courses I definitely have some things to say on the matter.

LIS 2700 is a required core course for my degree, and was the only one of my summer courses that I wasn’t particularly looking forward to taking. However, I must admit that the information we’ve gone over in class has been extremely practical (much more so than some of my earlier courses) and the assignments will be good practice in things like grant-writing and budgeting that I’m sure to end up dealing with somewhat regularly on the job. I’m doing a presentation later in the semester on Digitization, so check back to see how that goes.

My final course, LIS 2850, is in an interesting format – instead of meeting weekly, we are meeting four weekends throughout the summer for intensive, workshop-esque sessions. I was pretty unsure about this at the start, but we had our first session this weekend and it went really well, aside from the possible long-term injuries sustained by my posterior from sitting in a particularly uncomfortable lecture hall chair for nearly 12 hours! Note to self: bring a cushion next time. It was a bit of a gamble for me in taking this class, as we never met until after the add/drop period was over, but I’m pleased that I decided to take it in the end. Having taught before, a lot of the material (i.e. lesson planning) is kind of a refresher for me – but it has been over 2.5 years since I was last in a classroom (and that was with third graders) so it is good go over a lot of these things again and to learn to apply them to Information Literacy specifically. Our final presentations are a lesson on any IL topic that we choose. I’m thinking that mine will likely be on selecting and evaluating data sets. In the meantime, we are to give a short presentation on a non-academic topic at our next session and I need to pick a topic for that…any ideas?

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Disclaimer

This blog is just my musings on various topics, often library-related. Opinions expressed here are my own, and do not reflect the opinions of my employers.

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