Categories
Libraries

ALA recap

A major part of my experience at the ALA conference this year was realizing that I really missed my friends from library school, and that we all have a lot to share with each other now that we’ve been apart for awhile. Some are well-established in their first post library school job, others are looking for the second job or still looking for the first one. Most people who graduated in 2007 fall into the first category– those who graduated in 2008 or 2009 in the still looking category. Hooray economy.

The other part of my ALA experience was being able to go on Facebook and Twitter on my iPod Touch. I was a “millennial” in action, I guess. Don’t tell anyone my favorite things to do on my iPod really are reading Sherlock Holmes stories and playing solitaire. You’ll blow my young person cred– though hanging out with my 19 year old sister reminds me just how old I am… Anyway, the point is I tried to tweet what sessions I was at, so you might have seen that. But I have an orange notebook in which I keep my professional development notes, so that’s where the good stuff is. Here’s what stood out– I did other stuff as well.

Saturday AM:
First Year Experience session. Basically don’t be mean to your incoming students and be student-centered. Also be aware of those who are first-generation college students. My current employer I think does a really good job with all this stuff, particularly with course-integrated library instruction, so this session was more about noticing what’s already working. One of my colleagues who went to this session agrees with me.

Saturday PM:
Advice to Job Hunters in a Recession. I handed out programs and chatted with attendees. One of my colleagues did a write-up for Library Journal, so I will point you to that: Tactics for Job Hunting in Hard Times.

Sunday AM:
Preparing Yourself to Teach. This session was presented by several people I know very well, including one former colleague, so I knew the presentation would be good. I teach both post-secondary and first grade students, and the advice would work for both. I got a lot of great tips from this session for how to go into teaching knowing how you’ll know if the students are getting anything out of it. Also there was some advice on how to motivate students, and how to use the classroom as a stage.

Sunday PM:
New worlds for collection development. There were two parts of this. First, how to educate yourself into being a better collection developer/how to develop in an area you don’t know a lot about. Second, throw out all the old rules. Have the attitude of an entrepreneur in your collection development. Remember that it’s a social activity– you won’t know what people need unless you actually talk to them. On the other hand, own and possess as little as possible. Figure out ways to get the collection through ILL/the cloud of ownership. Even a suggestion that the ARL libraries should be buying everything and the smaller libraries should be helping them pay. We’ll see.

Monday:
I didn’t really go to any sessions seriously. I tried, but the lure of Mexican food, the cooking pavilion, and random hallway encounters was so much stronger. And isn’t that what conferences are all about?

Categories
Libraries

ALA this weekend

This weekend is the American Library Association conference, which luckily for my budget is being held in Chicago this year. I’ve gone once before, and I’m excited to go this year with some knowledge of what I’m getting into. Which is, basically, thousands and thousands of librarians doing their librarian thing– walking around in sensible shoes and having conversations about how they are organizing their time. It’s lots of fun. This time I plan to go to more sessions and meet more people than last time I went, but also spend some time socializing with my library school friends who will be in town.

I will be doing some microblogging, so check the sidebar if you want to see what I’m up to.

Categories
Internet Libraries

Back from vacation

I went to New York City last weekend, and then came down with a cold. Airplanes and lots of walking can do that.

I’d never been to New York City before, but always have been a fan of the city. Finally going there was incredibly exciting in the way that going to a long admired place always is- seeing the places you’ve read about, living the local lifestyle, and finding out things you didn’t know or expect. I’ll put up some pictures once I manage to reboot my life from being sick and at the same time working a lot.

On a completely different subject, this post by Meredith Farkas describes my feelings exactly. This post is about the dangers of relying on free or outsourced web 2.0 applications for important library functions, and I would suggest that it applies equally to individuals. If you completely rely on other companies or people for your technology solutions, it’s more likely than not that you will run into trouble. The lowered learning curve of web 2.0 is great for starting out, but if it really does get to the point of being essential, it’s a good idea to educate yourself about ways that you can take control of the technology. Maybe it’s putting it on a local server rather than a remote server, backing up data, or coming up with a Plan B for what you’ll do without that service.