03.20.08

Reader’s Advisor Online

Posted in Uncategorized tagged at 8:17 am by librislib

As a new librarian, it is often difficult to start a new job, learn the culture, and stay on top of everything “library”…knowledge needed especially for those of us staffing the Reference Desk. I spend a lot of time scanning blogs, subscribing to hundreds of feeds via Bloglines, to get as much information as I can so I am ready when that question comes from a library user. To make this task easier I found Reader’s Advisor Online, originating from Libraries Unlimited Genreflecting series. Not only do the multiple authors make known some of the best resources and reads out there, but there is a “weekly update, from a scan of more than 100 blogs, newsletters, magazines, newspapers and television” for those of us too short on time to scan everything ourselves. Check it out! Where do you like to look for current information pertinent to libraries and their users?

01.21.08

Salary negotiation

Posted in Uncategorized tagged , , at 9:26 pm by bluestockinglibrarian

How does one negotiate salary when no guidelines are listed in the want ad?

Background:  I’ve got another interview this Friday, this time for a Circ Supervisor position at a small liberal-arts college in a semi-rural area about 15 miles from a fairly large city. No salary range was listed in the job ad. Even though the job is a supervisory one (in charge of managing the 15 student assistants at the circ desk), no MLS/MLIS is required and library experience is only “preferred.”

In the interest of preparedness, I am assuming the planets will align and am forging ahead with salary research.  Being the good little aspiring librarian that I am, I tried looking up the job title on salary.com, but found no exact match for the college’s general area.  Is there an art to adding one’s experience to the job description and coming up with a magical salary number, or should I just ask for $5k more than what I’m making now (as my boyfriend suggests!)?

In any case, it hardly seems fair to not publicize salary requirements–or even a range!–in the want ad.  All the power rests with the hiring institution!  Which, I’m sure, is entirely the point in this situation.

01.09.08

Make it twopence

Posted in Uncategorized tagged , , at 8:21 pm by bluestockinglibrarian

So I’ve got an interview for a part-time (15-25 hour/week) “library associate” position next week. Even assuming I get the job, it’s a 45% pay decrease from what I’m currently making–and I’m not making all that much. I’ll be able to keep my current job even with the reduced hours.

So my question is (again assuming I get the job): is it worth taking the position to get the experience even with the drastic cut in pay? I would ask for the least amount of hours so I could earn as much as possible. It’s not like I would be unable to pay my bills, although with this being the post-Christmas season my credit card would really prefer me not to take a pay cut.

What do you think?

01.04.08

Penny for your thoughts?

Posted in Uncategorized tagged , , at 10:16 pm by bluestockinglibrarian

It’s late and I can’t remember the listserv I read this on (NEWLIB? REFLIB?  NEXGENLIB?) , but in any case it has been mentioned somewhere that job applicants with public library experience are at a disadvantage when applying for academic library positions.

Now I wonder:  does this mean the person who hopes to work in an academic library (me!) shouldn’t apply for public library positions in the meantime to gain experience?  Is public library experience really worse than no experience at all?  Why is working in a public library considered a disadvantage in the first place?  Am I missing something?

Please tell me what you think!

12.08.07

job search, n. see: endless frustration

Posted in Uncategorized tagged , at 10:52 pm by bluestockinglibrarian

The false “librarian shortage” has been discussed, at length, in many forums. What surprises me is how little this dichotomy between theory–a vast pool of aging librarians retiring as we speak–and reality–very few jobs open to the new librarian with little experience–is being addressed in practice.

As I have very little relevant experience (a year spent working in the archives as an undergrad and a volunteer at my local public since October) and no masters as yet, I have tried to make up for my lack of practical knowledge about the profession through the wonders of the internet. I’ve paid my dues and joined the listservs of the ALA New Members Round Table (NMRT), my state library association, and I Love Libraries, as well as subscribed to any number of library-related blogs and discussion lists, both general and ones geared specifically towards new librarians. I’ve visited the job sites of the ALA, Library Journal, etc etc.

While they’ve all been extremely helpful in educating me about many aspects of the career, its quotidian functions, how to format my resume and what questions to ask in an interview, one thing I haven’t seen is a concerted, organized effort to make up for this gap between the “librarian shortage” tales being circulated by–library schools? the ALA? the media?–and the lack of jobs for inexperienced librarians, well-paid or otherwise. Without experience, it is difficult (impossible in some places) to find a job. Without a job, though, from whence the experience?

Volunteering obviously suggests itself. For the working person, though (and aren’t most of us?), this is automatically limiting: my public library is open only two evenings a week. I’m glad of any help I can get, but a few hours a week won’t go far towards that experience requirement in the job listings.

I am not willing to lose a day’s pay in order to volunteer, much as I need the experience and want to help my library. However, if I received some sort of experience credit that employers recognized as being comparable to a paid job, I would certainly reconsider. I realize that many library schools require their students have an internship/practicum before receiving their degrees, but even these are proving insufficient to graduates. And what options are there for those of us not currently enrolled? I know I am not the only degree-less one trying to find a job.

What would be interesting is development of local (or even regional) directors or online bulletin boards in charge of matching the student/aspiring librarian with libraries/librarians needing help… for some sort of experience credit. The NMRT has an excellent resume-review service and a mentoring program, but the mentors are only for already-hired librarians; what about a combination of the two services, mentors who inform their protegees of local public libraries in need of shelf-readers, sign-makers, Web site revampers? Academic libraries needing temporary reference librarians? Positions that last longer than the standard quarter- or semester-long internship or practicum. And in exchange the needy student or aspiring librarian gets something concretely “experience” to put on their resume.

I’ve applied for an internship at my state library, but as far as I’m aware, there are no other such opportunities within a reasonable driving distance. Perhaps I haven’t been listening long enough. Maybe, because I live in a state devoid of schools with library programs (and their attendant pools of jobless, newly minted grads), such measures aren’t believed to be necessary. Am I wrong? Are there untapped resources out there I am unaware of?