Sunday, July 26, 2009

IST 511, Day Five, The End

I am happy to be finished with my first three-credit course for my MLIS. I had a fabulous time, but it was also intense, so it's nice to be back home and able to decompress.

The week culminated in a poster session, where our groups presented posters on issues in librarianship. Our group researched virtual reference--providing reference services by email, Internet chat, text message, etc. as opposed to the more traditional in-person and telephone reference services--and here we are with our poster. Shout out to Laura, Lisa, Jesse, and Jason!



What I really enjoyed about the poster session, much more than I'd expected, was speaking to presenters from other groups about their topics, such as the Dewey Decimal system vs. other classification systems in public libraries and allowing potentially controversial outside groups to use public library space. Since the poster session was an hour and a half and each group member presented for half that time, I didn't get to visit every poster--and unfortunately I only had time for a quick drive-by of the winning group's poster, which was about e-books. The winning group can submit their poster to the ALA conference, and if it's accepted the iSchool will pay for some of their travel expenses, so I'm very happy for them and I hope perhaps I'll see their poster again soon, and for more than a few seconds!

After completing my residency, I'm really glad I decided to go to Syracuse, and I'm looking forward to the next two years (or so) of classes. One thing I really appreciated about both 511 and 601, but especially 511 because it related specifically to libraries, was getting an early glimpse of what it's like to be a professional. This probably sounds silly to people who go to school to, you know, get jobs, but from my perspective, as someone who's always loved school just a little too much, graduate programs in the humanities have great appeal to my inner nerd who loves to read books and think deep thoughts, but they never trained me in the same way to be a professional--professor, because that's probably what you're going to be if you get a PhD in religion or classics. I never saw myself as a professor or scholar at the beginning of grad school the way I see myself as a librarian now. It's exciting, and a little frightening at the same time, but mainly exciting.

I have a few weeks' break before I begin classes this fall, but I intend to keep up this blog through my iSchool career and beyond, and I might also comment on a backlog of "fun books" that are waiting for me.

Thursday, July 23, 2009

IST 511, Day Four

So in an earlier post I briefly mentioned the potential conflict between intellectual freedom and my concerns as a parent. My daughter isn't even two yet, and aside from randomly grabbing books off the shelf when we're in the library and carrying them around because she does that with everything, she hasn't shown any interest in inappropriate materials. So I have a while before I worry about whatever content she might come across in her reading. But I am a moderately protective sort of parent and have certain values I would like to instill in my child and all that, so this is on the far horizon for me.

According to the ALA Code of Ethics, librarians are supposed to provide equitable access to all library users and safeguard their rights to privacy and confidentiality. There's nothing in the statement about minors. There's also no way the ALA can defrock or disbar you, and there will clearly be cases when the code of ethics will conflict with the interests of parents, the community, the library's own interests (what happens when the person who wants you to ban a book also controls your funding?), the law, and so on. At first the contrarian in me wants to rebel against this code, and it's not just because I'm a parent (because, let's face it, I was a contrarian before I was a parent). I am not, and I doubt any librarian really is, a librarian first and foremost with no other allegiances. We have other bonds, to our families, to other members of our community, to our local and national governments. We're each at the center of a unique web of obligations and have to figure out how to negotiate them for ourselves. Each of us holds our own unique middle ground, and nobody else can stand there with us. So I am glad the code of ethics is there, to provide the full force of its pull in the tug of war between intellectual freedom and whatever struggles against it. I hope I can always uphold it, and one reason I look forward to academic librarianship is that the university is the ideal environment for free inquiry and I'm proud to be a part of that pursuit.

This all plays into my fascination with first amendment issues. Until now I've mainly been interested in the religion clause, but it is interesting to see how intellectual freedom, the corollary to freedom of speech, plays out in the world of librarianship. Sometimes I get caught up in the debates, but for the most part I enjoy considering issues from all sides and chilling in the big gray areas.

On a lighter note, we also talked about professional organizations. In the past I've attended annual conferences for the American Philological Association (the other APA, the one that doesn't have a maddening citation style, not that I'm bitter) and the American Academy of Religion, both of which are small beans compared to the ALA, which has TWO annual conferences, plus various divisions with their own annual conferences, plus regional organizations with THEIR own annual conferences, plus other specialized organizations like the American Theological Library Association with THEIR own annual conferences. And everyone who goes to these conferences knows the point is to 1. present scholarship 2. get free stuff from vendors 3. drink and 4. hook up. Well, some of us are happily partnered and not interested in #4, but free stuff and drinking? Several times a year, in some of the country's most fabulous metropolitan areas? I'm there. Here are some librarians in my hometown at the 2007 ALA Midwinter conference.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

IST 511, Day Three

I was looking forward today, because this afternoon we got down and dirty with real-live books at the Bird Library. We began our tour in the basement of the library, where Peter Verheyen, the head of preservation and conservation, showed us books from the library's circulating collections in the process of being repaired. A lot of this was at least vaguely familiar to me, since I spent a year as an undergrad repairing books at the undergraduate library at the UW. Conservation is not really something you get an MSLIS to do, so I am probably not going to be playing with the books, but as Verheyen's colleague David Stokoe pointed out, you're not supposed to read the books you're fixing, and I'd want to do that. Stokoe, upstairs in Special Collections, showed us some older books he was working on, including a sixteenth-century English translation of the New Testament from the Vulgate that predates the King James by a few decades. You can tell from the fact I was reading the book instead of examining the restored binding that maybe conservation is not what I'm called to do anyway.

Then Professor Ken Lavender took us on a "romp through the centuries," really the millennia, because it began with a cuneiform tablet. And those gorgeous illuminations in medieval Latin texts were not left out. This one, from the Le Louchier Hours, is amazingly vibrant in person.



Given my interests in classics, early Christianity, and old stuff in general, it should come as no surprise that special collections is an area I'd like to explore, and I'm hoping to take Ken Lavender's preservation course at some point when I can be on campus and play with the books.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

IST 511, Day Two

Today we learned about intellectual property and copyright law, which made me realize I probably shouldn't have posted that YouTube video yesterday, technically. Oh, look over there, a purple unicorn! Hopefully that distracted the lawyers.

Our guest speakers were John Schuster from Morrisville State College and Jan Fleckenstein from the Barclay Law Library here at Syracuse. John had a really interesting career path, starting out as a philosophy grad student (!) before going to library school and working for about 15 years for a database vendor as an instructor, traveling around the world to train customers, before taking a job in his hometown at the Morrisville State College library. Jan has worked in law libraries for 25 years and has finally decided she's at the point in her career that she needs a law degree, so she's working on her J.D. now. So I took away a couple of pieces of advice from their talks:


  • Learn how to learn, because you'll be learning all through your professional career.

  • You can leverage one subject specialty into other subject specialties. Both of them started out somewhere other than where they expected to end up. Jan pointed out that even an undergraduate background in a specialty area can serve you as an academic librarian, so with my masters plus ABD I should be on the right track. And John ended up teaching philosophy at Morrisville, as well as talking philosophy for four hours when his boss interviewed him for his previous position.

  • Be prepared to teach, because you'll be teaching patrons even if you're not doing formal instruction.



I'm tired and I've still got stuff to do, so if you think this post needs more cowbell, here you go.

Monday, July 20, 2009

IST 511, Day One

I have been running full speed for nearly 14 hours, so this is not going to be much, but here are a few things that stuck with me from my first day of IST 511 (or the first day of our residency, since we've been working online for several weeks):

One of the public librarians who spoke today, Kate McCaffrey, worked in a prison library for a couple of years. My husband and I just watched all five seasons of The Wire over the course of a few weeks a while ago, and I was reminded of this scene:



We're told that as a result of presentations from librarians who work in all different kinds of libraries, which will be happening all week, there's a good chance we'll change our mind about what kind of librarians we want to be. I am still pretty convinced I want to work in an academic library, but after today I think I'd rather work in a prison library than an urban public library!

I bring my laptop with me but try not to use it during class because I know I'll get distracted, but I'm always writing down links I want to investigate later, such as:



I'm glad I have a few weeks after this class to decompress, because I feel like I'm getting stuffed with ideas and areas of interest I want to explore (not to mention I visited the Syracuse rose garden yesterday and now want to learn all I can about roses!). I'm really enjoying the class so far, even though I've been going pretty much nonstop for fourteen hours.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

IST 601 Reflections

Today I finished an intensive two-day, one-credit course, IST 601: Information and Information Environments. Part of the intent of the course, as our professors emphasized, was to communicate the iSchool's expectations for us for the rest of the program. A lot of us haven't gone to grad school before, or been in school for years, and even those of us who are lifelong students (ahem) don't necessarily know APA style, or how a library science paper differs from a humanities paper. I found the wording of the paper assignment rather frustrating and spent Thursday (I admit it, I wrote it on Thursday) banging my head over it before I came up with a topic and wrote it, but I'm glad I did because we got prompt feedback and I have a better idea of what kind of writing I should be producing from now on. I also had the best group experience ever. I've always dreaded group projects because there is the inevitable weak link, the inevitable dithering around for hours deciding what you're going to do and talking about it ad nauseam instead of just doing it, and so on, but our group worked efficiently and we did a great job on our presentation, considering the time constraints, as did the other groups in our section. I am used to hiding away in my little cave and pounding out my innermost thoughts, as I'm doing right now, but group work really can be rewarding, and it also teaches you to work with people, which is what everyone has to do, especially librarians.

At the end of class we were asked to write down a few things we've learned from the class, so here are my Few (Important) Things:



  1. Look for opportunities to innovate. If there was one word to sum up the class, it was innovation: when to do it, how to do it, obstacles to doing it...In a couple of years I'll be entering the profession full-time, and I hope to be the sort of person who sees opportunities for positive change and has the skills to propose and implement those changes. Innovation is not just about teh internetz and geeky gadgets (although those are cool), but about changing processes. I wrote down: "Be alert, not complacent, proactive, not reactive."


  2. I will always be learning: skills and technologies, not just book learning. I think I get to a point sometimes where I feel like what I know is enough: with HTML, Excel, and PowerPoint, for example, I have a basic knowledge of the software/language, and heck I've been using HTML for 13 years, but I haven't moved beyond the level necessary to do what I currently want to do. I should challenge myself to keep learning more about what I already know, as well as adding new skills to my repertoire. After all, at some point what I know will become outdated, and coasting on what I know now won't serve me in the long run.


  3. Be/model what you want your colleagues to do. We read an article about organizational change and discussed whether it's possible to change a negative, toxic work environment into a positive one, and after hearing some discouraging stories from people who work full-time now, mostly outside of libraries, I wondered whether it was really possible without the right management--because people know when they're being manipulated and you can't just trick them into having good morale when their managers don't model the same positive attitudes they're trying to convey. I am probably years away from library management if I ever get there and if I ever feel that's my calling. But it's likely I will be working with non-MLS staff even at the beginning of my career, and it will be important for me to model the kind of cooperative work model I want them to implement instead of just thinking that being a manager in whatever capacity gets me off the hook somehow. Actually, given my personality, I'm more worried about conveying no energy than negative energy, but there are a lot of ways to take that first statement I wrote.




This course has given me a lot to think about, and right now I feel like I could go out and change the world--well, after a good night's sleep, and if I didn't have to start IST 511 tomorrow. But I think it will permanently change the way I see processes, and my role in them.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Reader response: "Research"

The chapter "Research," by Ron Powell, summarizes the state of research in library and information sciences and briefly describes different methods researchers employ. This was a short chapter, and I found myself wishing that Powell had sacrificed a little brevity for the sake of exploring these methods in more depth and giving the reader examples of studies using each method.

It did pick up for me a little when Powell began to describe methods "more unique to the study of library resources and services" (173): content analysis, bibliometrics, and comparative librarianship. The first two methods in particular appeal to me for two reasons: first, they are more oriented toward texts than human subjects (there's a reason I wasn't a psych major), and second, they are by nature interdisciplinary; Powell doesn't give examples, but I imagine content analysis and bibliometric studies tend to focus on particular areas of knowledge, so the researcher will be able to investigate her field of expertise.

There are qualitative methods I wish Powell had described in more detail and, again, given concrete examples, because the terms sound familiar to me from my studies in religion: phenomenology, hermeneutics, reflexivity. I'm familiar with hermeneutics from my studies in biblical interpretation, but what does it mean to do a hermeneutic study in library science? I suppose that's why further reading is suggested at the end of the chapter.

I have to be honest and mention that "true" research is the reason I haven't yet finished my dissertation and why I'm not sure I want to be a professor; I love teaching, but I'm not sure I want to do scholarship. In my limited reading of library scholarship thus far, however, I think it's possible I'd be more interested in library research than humanities research, because it seems more pragmatic and concrete than the sort of scholarship I was doing as a religious studies student. Part of my journey over the next two years will be discovering whether this avenue of librarianship is one I want to explore.

Powell, Ron. "Research." The Portable MLIS: Insights From the Experts, ed. Ken Haycock and Brooke E. Sheldon. Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited, 2008, pp. 168-178.