Showing posts with label resources. Show all posts
Showing posts with label resources. Show all posts

Friday, 15 June 2018

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Jun 15 2018 - 8:30pm ET

TOPIC

Engaging with the Profession

I thought it would be nice for us to have a chat about how we engaged with the profession and share our resources for doing so!


PLEASE REMEMBER THAT WE'VE CHANGED THE TIME TO 8:30PM ET!



While you're here please consider checking out our new feature for 2018: #LISPROCHAT Reads, our professional development book club. The next book club session will be running next Monday, June 25, at 8:30 pm ET.


QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.

Q1 What resource(s) do you use for keeping up with current events/trends in libraries? What do you like about that resource/those resources?

Q2 What resource(s) do you use for library job hunting? What do you like about that resource/those resources?

Q3 What other library-related blogs/websites do you follow/visit?

Q4 What methods/tools/platforms do you use for making connections with library people & keeping those connections active?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 8:30 PM ET NEXT MONDAY, JUNE 18 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Monday, 7 May 2018

#LISprochat lead-in - GUEST HOST topic & questions for Mon May 21 2018 - 8:30pm ET

TOPIC

Mindful practice in librarianship


We have a guest host for this month's regular chat session. Allow me to introduce you to Amanda M. Leftwich. Amanda is the Head of Circulation & Cataloging at Lansdowne Public Library. She received her MSLS from Clarion University of Pennsylvania and BA in Art History from Arcadia University. Her research interests are aromatherapy, mindful practices, racial equity in librarianship, and collection development.

Amanda has kindly suggested some additional resources for you to check out as well:

  1. Lisa Moniz & Richard Moniz. The Mindful Librarian: Connecting the Practice of Mindfulness to Librarianship. 2015. Chandos Publishing.
  2. Michelle Reale. Becoming a Reflective Librarian and Teacher: Strategies for Mindful Academic Practice. 2017. ALA Editions.
  3. Kristin Mastel and Genevieve Innes. “Insights and Practical Tips on Practicing Mindful Librarianship to Manage Stress.” Libres: Library and Information Science Research E-journal 23, no. 1 (March 2013). Available at http://www.libres-ejournal.info/372/. 
  4. Melanie Greenberg. The Stress-Proof Brain: Master your emotional response to stress using mindfulness and neuroplasticity. 2017. New Harbinger Publications.
  5. Kendrick, Kaetrena Davis. "The low morale experience of academic librarians: A phenomenological study." Journal of Library Administration 57, no. 8 (2017): 846-878.
  6. Rohan Gunatillake. Modern mindfulness : how to be more relaxed, focused, and kind while living in a fast, digital, always-on world. 2017. St. Martin's Griffin. 


PLEASE REMEMBER THAT WE'VE CHANGED THE TIME TO 8:30PM ET!



While you're here please consider checking out our new feature for 2018: #LISPROCHAT Reads, our professional development book club. The next book club session will be running next Monday, June 25, at 8:30 pm ET.


QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.

Q1 Have you ever heard of mindful practice in librarianship? What are your views on mindful practice in librarianship?

Q2 What strategies do you use to deal with stress and/or conflict in your day-to-day work life?

Q3 Should practical tips on mindfulness be taught in library schools and librarianship as a whole?

Q4 What resources or advice to have for people interested in starting mindful practices?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 8:30 PM ET NEXT MONDAY, MAY 21 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Tuesday, 12 December 2017

LISProchat Reads the #LISprochat #BookClub - NEW FEATURE ALERT! - Starting January 2018!

LISprochat book club header
book image via Dave Dugdale


As mentioned at the end of last night's chat, Leigh and I will be introducing a new feature starting with a trial run in January. We're hosting a book club! And you're all welcome to join us!

WHAT?

A book club! On Twitter! Where we read and discuss books to help us with our professional development in library land!

WHERE?

On Twitter, using the same hashtag we use for our chats! #LISprochat.

WHEN?

We'll announce the upcoming book in the last chat of the previous month and then have the discussion on the last Monday of the month regardless of whether it's a normal #LISprochat day or not.

WHY?

For a few reasons, Leigh and I thought it would be fun to have a book club. I mentioned that I was giving myself a new reading goal to try and read 1 professional book a month, and this is a good way for me to motivate myself to meet that goal through accountability!



January 2018 Book Selection




This will be our inaugural book and discussion, the chat will take place on Monday, January 29, 2018, at 8:30 pm.

Title: Out Behind the Desk: Workplace Issues for LGBTQ Librarians
Editor/Author: Tracy Nectoux (Editor)
Publisher: Litwin Books, LLC
Date Published: 2010/1
No. of Pages: 294
Synopsis via Goodreads:

Out Behind the Desk: Workplace Issues for LGBTQ Librarians is an anthology of personal accounts by librarians and library workers relating experiences of being gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered, or queer at work. A broad spectrum of orientations and gender identities are represented, highlighting a range of experiences of being and/or coming out at work.

Sunday, 23 April 2017

#LISprochat lead-in - topic & questions for Mon Apr 24 2017

via Giulia Forsythe

TOPIC

Libraries, LIS pros & the Open Movement


I’m currently taking the Introduction to OERs course that Library Juice Academy (#LJAOER) offers because Open Educational Resources and the Open Movement, in general, are becoming big topics of conversation in my workplace and in my entire province. Given the discussions happening in my course I can tell it’s happening elsewhere too so I thought we could have this week’s chat be about the open movement and libraries. Our inspiration article/source, therefore, is The Open Movement: What Libraries Can Do a 2015 conference presentation by Sheila Corrall. Another source you can check out is my Notes from #ONOERlibrarians day @ Ryerson University during the one-day conference I attended in March.

QUESTIONS


We post the questions here in advance of the chat so you can decide whether or not this topic is of interest to you and/or prepare your answers in advance.


Q1. What do you already know about the open movement? (e.g. Open Access, Creative Commons, Open Data, Open Source & OERs)

Q2. Is your library/are you specifically already involved with any part(s) of the open movement? Which parts? What are you doing?

Q3. What do you see being the role of libraries and library professionals being in the future of the open movement?

Q4. What suggestions/resources do you have for library pros looking to learn more about/get involved with the open movement?


PLEASE CONSIDER JOINING IN ON TWITTER AT 9 PM ET MONDAY, APRIL 24 USING THE #LISPROCHAT HASHTAG. 

Monday, 19 September 2016

#LISprochat follow-up - How to write good customized cover letters


In case you missed it, on the Monday September 12 we had a #lisprochat session about how to write great, customized cover letters to help you in your job search. As you can see from the above tweet that was posted by someone with experience hiring in libraries during the session, customized cover letters can do a lot to get you noticed. I decided that instead of just doing a Storify of the chat session I'd write a blog post wit tips, examples and resources, sprinkled with a few of the tweets that particularly caught my attention during the chat.

Tips & Examples


How important is a customized cover letter in earning you an interview spot? Well, here's some perspective from another library hiring manager in last week's #lisprochat:

Now granted that is just one hiring manager's perspective, but the body of writing on the topic (as you'll see if you check out the resources below) says that this is the prevailing attitude, so don't take the chance. Write a customized letter. Here are my top 5 tips for how to go about doing that:

  1. Don't worry if you can't find the hiring manager's name(s): Seriously, it's not important or expected that you address the hiring manager(s) by name in your letter. You just want a professional, respectful salutation. Examples that work: Dear Hiring Manager / Dear Hiring Committee / Dear [Insert Hiring Manager's Job Title Here]
  2. Be sure to answer this question - "Why should the hiring manager be excited to hire you?": Writing a cover letter doesn't have to be rocket science, your whole purpose in a cover letter is to explain why you specifically would excel at this specific job. How do you do this? Use the job posting to pull out some of the main responsibilities and construct a narrative that highlights your best accomplishments in these areas.
  3. Avoid cliched statements: If you're putting statements like "I am the most qualified candidate for this position..." or any variants of that - these statements make you sound cocky and out of touch because you literally have no way of backing them up. Some things you can say instead: "My experience and background in x and y make me a strong candidate because..." or "I feel that my background makes me a strong candidate for joining your team because of x and y" or something along those lines.
  4. Make the content unique: The information you include in your cover letter should not also be found in your resume, don't repeat yourself like that. You want to use your best and strongest and most relevant accomplishments in the cover letter. Your cover letter is to flesh out what's in your resume and really show the employer how what you have done can apply to them. What's the best way to do that? Well my trick is to look at each point of the job posting and try to figure out if I have 3 related accomplishments. From those 3 I take the strongest and highlight it in my cover letter and then the other 2 are on my resume to support that first one. There are other ways to do it of course, but that's my tip for you.
  5. Remember to make it readable: What I mean by readable is, don't make it overly formal. Inject your own personality and writing style otherwise you run the risk of coming off as robotic and not genuine. This is your first chance to introduce an employer to your unique voice so make the most of that. How? Well like I said, use your personal writing style, for example, in my writing I have been known to throw in asides in parenthesis, I've also happened to do that in a few cover letters and then been complimented on those cover letters (your mileage may vary on that, but that's the point, it's all down to the individual). The best example of how to do this I can give you is to link to a great, personality filled cover letter that someone submitted at Ask a Manager: "here's another example of a great cover letter."

Resources


Here are some of my preferred resources for tips on writing really great cover letters that will help you make it to the interview stage.

  1. Ask a Manager The thing that I like best about Alison Green's advice is that she's no nonsense. She gets right to the point and she's very specific. This is legit advice from someone who has many, many years of hiring experience and still actively hires people. She definitely knows what she's talking about. I've been using her advice since 2010 and she's never steered me wrong.
  2. Open Cover Letters What makes Open Cover Letters really interesting as a source of advice is that you're getting to see real cover letters that library and information professionals have used. Not just any cover letters either, but cover letters that resulted in the applicant getting to the interview stage. There are letters for all sorts of different specialties within the LIS industry on this site.
  3. The Daily Muse Unlike Alison Green you're not getting tips directly from a hiring manager on The Daily Muse but what you are getting is well researched pieces from Freelance writers who specialize in career related writing. This is a site that puts out a lot of content and in my experience I've always found it to be good quality advice that jives with stuff I'm seeing on places like Ask a Manager and Evil HR Lady.
  4. The Savvy Intern This is a blog whose target audience is current students and recent grads who are looking to get their first professional job, the title really should be the giveaway on that. I started following the blog when I was in Library school but I continue to follow it because their content, especially as it relates to job applications is usually still pretty on point and still just as useful for someone applying to their fifth job as much as their first so I've been known to share their content on my Twitter and Facebook feeds. In fact our cover letter #lisprochat last week was inspired by them.

When I asked in #lisprochat what people used as their go to resources for advice on writing cover letters we got a few more sources not listed above:

One caveat to remember when using Job Centers and other people, always double check their advice. Not all job centers give good advice and not all people know what they're talking about. If you can get someone who has experience hiring, or someone with experience researching the topic of writing cover letters that's probably a good person to ask for advice.

Now, on that note - go forth and write great cover letters! Good luck job seekers!