Category Archives: cpd23

cpd23 Thing 12 – Putting the social into social media

The next Thing on the list feels somewhat redundant — we’re discussing social media. Twitter, covered in Thing 4, is the social media venue that I use most in relation to libraryland. I made a brief foray into Google+ (discussed a bit in Thing 6), but found a lot of overlap between what I saw on twitter and on G+. And, well, there is only so much time in the day to spend on social media!

Another venue that I don’t think I’ve mentioned before is ALA Connect. Of course, that one is through ALA, and you probably have to be a paid member to access it. I tried it out a bit this spring and wasn’t really impressed with it – not much activity, most of the discussions that I found were over a year old. But, I signed up for an ALA NMRT committee (Liaison Coordination and Support) this year, and we are using ALA Connect for our communications. So we’ll see how that goes!

by hanspoldoja on flickr

The cpd23 post for Thing 12 outlines several benefits of using social media, along with a list of questions to address. They hit the major benefits, as I see them. So I’ll just jump into the questions!

can you think of any disadvantages?

I can’t think of anything I would list as a disadvantage, but there are a few risks to be aware of. Of course, you can wind up falling into your twitter stream and spending far more time there than is really healthy. It’s there to enhance your other professional activities, not come before them.

A related risk is winding up in information overload, feeling like there is just so much to keep up on and like there’s not enough time for it all. It’s ok to not read everything. It’s ok to weed your list of people that you follow. It’s ok to not be on every social media site. I follow some people who seem to be doing well in their full time jobs while being active on twitter and Google+ and update their blogs regularly… My puppy forbids me to even try that! As I mentioned above, I tried Google+, but I think for now I’ll stick with focusing on only twitter and blogging, realizing that I will only read a small portion of the tweets in my stream most days.

It’s also important to not let social media get in the way of face-to-face networking. I love seeing people tweet about conference presentations that I can’t attend, but hope that they’re not missing out on the chance to chat with the person sitting next to them in order to type those tweets!

has CPD23 helped you to make contact with others that you would not have had contact with normally?

Not as much as it could have if I had been better about searching out cpd23 blogs. I usually read a few posts about whichever Thing I’m sitting down to write about before I actually start writing. So, in that sense, I’ve read and sometimes commented on blog posts written by people I probably wouldn’t have encountered otherwise. But I’ve been in and out of town this summer, not able to get into any kind of routine, so I haven’t been good about keeping up with those blogs that I’ve wanted to follow.

did you already use social media for your career development before starting CPD23? Will you keep using it after the programme has finished?

Yes and yes! I talked about how I started getting involved in twitter and why I love it in Thing 4.

in your opinion does social networking really help to foster a sense of community?

by Mykl Roventine: Out & About on flickr

That depends on how you use it. You can create a strong sense of community via social media. You can also be a disconnected, passive observer, feeling no more sense of community than you do with your local news reporters on tv. You can aim somewhere in the midddle, or you can go back and forth, being active when you have time and silent when you’re too busy to join in the conversations. The choice is up to you!

* Word cloud above is from daniel_iversen on flikr.

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cpd23 Thing 10 – Library Roots/Routes

Why did I decide to become a librarian, and how did I get to where I am? This week’s cpd23 topic overlaps with the Library Routes Project, so I’ll add a link there one of these days!

Unlike many who want to become librarians, I didn’t do so because I love books. Don’t get me wrong, I love my books, but there are plenty that I don’t care for. So that’s not much motivation to push me to librarianship, where I’m ethically obligated to ensure that a wide variety of viewpoints are included.

I also can’t really point to any profound experience as a child at a public library. I was raised by a single father who worked physically demanding jobs, so weekends usually involved him lying on the couch in pain while my brother and I went out to play or ride bikes or whatever. He feels guilty now that he didn’t take us to the library more often, but he was doing the best he could to raise us with a fairly low income and very little outside support.

No, I decided to go into librarianship because I love academic research and teaching. I guess you could call me a failed academic. I have at times described myself as a refugee from a PhD program.

As an undergrad, I fell in love with anthropology. It’s this wonderful holistic field, where you don’t just talk about (for example) psychological factors and then test “subjects” in a controlled lab setting. Anthropologists talk about psychological factors in relation to cultural factors — religious background, gender identity, racial identity and related power relationships, socio-economic status, and on and on. As an undergrad, I did some pretty specific, in-depth research, but that was framed by classes in which I was still getting a well-rounded four-fields (cultural, linguistic, archaeological, and biological) education.

Me and another student threshing rice while on a field trip with our language training program in Indonesia

Plus, it’s exciting. I focused on cultural anthropology. That meant a year or two of fieldwork, living in some unfamiliar culture and learning a different way of life. By the time I graduated with my BA, I had decided that I would work toward doing my fieldwork in Borneo, living in the jungle with a bunch of egalitarian horticulturalist head-hunters.

On the other hand, once you embark upon a path to becoming a PhD, you are expected to develop tunnel-vision. No more being a generalist, you must become an expert in a tiny little piece of the field. The days of anthropologists making their careers by going in and describing some previously un-contacted culture are long gone. It wasn’t enough that I wanted to learn about the indigenous religious practices of the Iban — I needed to develop a far more specific question, pinpointing one small aspect of one piece of their religious practices. That tunnel vision is not nearly as exciting as the holistic overview! Oh, and somewhere along the way, I fell in love and built a long term relationship, which makes that trek to the other side of the world for a year or two a bit less appealing!

So, I got a Masters and started on a PhD in anthropology before deciding to go do something else. It was a long process — anthropology was a part of my identity, and I was afraid that dropping out would disappoint some people that mattered a great deal to me. Along the way, I had some pretty cool experiences — the best was going to Indonesia for an in-country language training program.

While trying to figure out what else I could do with my life, I decided to try out a couple of library science classes. They didn’t bring some earth-shattering epiphany, but they were interesting. It sounded like a good way to go — working in an academic library would keep me comfortably located in academia. And, for all that some people complain, the job market for librarians is phenomenal compared to the market for anthropology professors!

I hate to admit that for the first year and a half of my MA in library science program (and it is an MA, not a MLS, Mizzou likes to be different!), I saw it mostly as a fall-back position. I was pretty well burnt out on real grad school, but library school was like being back in undergrad! Where I was used to writing a 20-30 page research paper for my required courses, I was back to writing 5 page double-spaced papers! Where I was accustomed to slogging through two to five 30-ish page articles for each class period, I was back to reading just a couple of 2-5 page articles! A really long one might be 10 or 12 pages. So I slacked off. It was so easy. Without the rigor I was used to, it just didn’t feel as serious. I did have a couple of more rigorous classes last fall, but those were electives, not the required “core” courses.

Mizzou Columns & Jesse Hall, by DylanBConnell on flikr

If you’re interested in the program and how it compares to what you went through, we had to complete 42 credit hours, including 16 hours of required courses plus a 2-3 credit hour practicum aka unpaid internship. You can zip on over to my coursework completed page if you are interested in seeing the sorts of classes I took and the major assignments for those.

Of all the classes I took, the practicum was my favorite. If you’re still in school and have the option, even if it’s not required, I highly recommend doing a practicum/internship. That’s really where it went from being just more classes and more (shorter) papers to write to being something fun that I really am excited about! Maybe it wouldn’t make such a difference if you already have a library job, but even then, it’s a chance to try out some other aspect of librarianship.

Now, I look back and wish I had been more active in the library science student organization. I read blogs like Hack Lib School and realize how much more I should have been doing all along. Luckily, I discovered it this past spring, before I was completely out of school!

I officially graduated this summer on July 29, 2011. As for what’s next, well, I hope that it won’t be too much longer before I can tell you all that I’ve got a job! Until then, well, I’m keeping on keeping on. How about you?

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cpd23 Thing 9 – Evernote

This may be colored by the fact that I’m behind on the cpd23 program, but I’m having a hard time convincing myself to spend much time trying Evernote. I’m just not clear on what it would add for me in terms of organization.

The cpd23 blog presents Evernote as solving a specific problem:
“You want to be able to make comments on webpages and archive them along with your own notes so that everything is all in the one place and easy to access.”

I can’t say that I’ve ever had that problem. I organize webpages in my bookmarks folders efficiently enough that I’m not sure how Evernote would help me. Instead, I think it would be more likely to add extra work and information overload. On those occasions when I need to save a copy of the site as-is, I simply print to .pdf format and store it in a relevant folder on my computer. I find that easier than the prospect of having to go into a program and access the copy there.

For notes to myself and other files that I want to store “in the cloud”, there’s always Dropbox.

So, for this week, unless you can convince me that there is something awesome about Evernote that I’m not seeing, I’m going to slack off and skip this new program. Once I transition from full time student to full time librarian, I may come back to it if it seems like it would be useful then… For now, though, I would need a bit more convincing!

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cpd23 Thing 8 – Google Calendar

Calendar Card - January by Joe Lanman on Flikr

This week’s theme is tools to keep you organized. We start off with Google Calendar. This one is not new to me. It’s a handy tool when it works. On my desktop, it’s great. When I want to access it from another computer or laptop, it’s great. As a grad student, I haven’t really had any reason to make it public. However, I’ve seen it used well in libraries to keep folks updated about summer and holiday hours, special events, and so on.

Benefits aside, I don’t generally use it. Why, you may ask? Because I have an Android phone. For some odd reason, Google products and Android (owned by Google!) do not always play well together. They offer a dedicated app for gmail, but it’s terrible about actually syncing. It does eventually sync, though.

The Droid Calendar app also has problems with syncing with Google Calendar. I had trouble with this back in January – after entering all of my due dates and other important events for the spring semester into Google Calendar on my desktop, it wasn’t showing up on my phone. After a while – I want to say a day or two, but it may have only been a couple of hours – I started looking around online for an explanation. The solutions I found involved wiping all of the stored data for the calendar app so that it would do a fresh sync, downloading everything anew. Definitely not worth the effort normally, but I did it since I had just invested a good bit of time entering all of that info!

Before writing this today, I tried adding a couple of things to Google Calendar on my desktop to see if it would sync correctly on my phone. After close to a half hour (refreshing my widget and going into the calendar app every 5 min. or so), it still was not showing up. I finally found a solution. I had to go in to Settings –> Accounts and select my gmail account… Then click to manually sync the accounts. Not nearly as much of a hassle as clearing all of the app’s data, but more trouble than it’s worth.

I hate to admit it, but this is one area where MS Outlook beats Google. During my practicum, I had an email account with that university; it was one of those hosted on Outlook corporate accounts. My Droid calendar and third party calendar widget synced beautifully with that Outlook account. I entered it into Outlook on my desktop, hit “refresh” on my widget, and it appeared on my phone — which is how I think it ought to work!

I’ve searched around to see if I could find some setting that would explain the difference. I haven’t found one yet. My data settings are to push notifications through if I’m on wi-fi, and as far as I can tell, that should apply to all of the accounts listed on my phone. If you know of one that specifically causes the Google accounts to not sync in the same way as other accounts, please tell me!

I find it odd that Google would not do a better job of streamlining their products. Gmail should work better than my other email accounts and apps on a Droid phone! Google Calendar should sync more seamlessly than other cloud based calendar options on a Droid phone! If I didn’t already know that Android is a subsidiary of Google, I would totally assume that Droid is a Microsoft product trying to marginalize Google products!

Moving forward, I can’t say whether I will use it more, since I’ve found the way to make it sync, or whether I’ll use some other calendar option. That’s likely to depend on how things are done at the library where I get a job. If I wind up in a setting where everyone uses Google Calendar, I will likely complain a lot… Or maybe I will find some setting that is the cause of this whole problem and feel really silly for having so much trouble with it. If I wind up in a setting where everyone uses Outlook, that’s what I’ll use.

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cpd23 Thing 7 – Face to Face Networks

So, the next item on the agenda for cpd23 is to consider f2f networking, specifically in the context of various professional organizations.

During my first year of my library science program, I was not very good about getting involved. Now I’m kicking myself for that! I lived in Columbia, MO, where my library science program was based. I missed out on a lot of opportunities to get to know my classmates and attend various workshops, talks, and Missouri Library Association meetings.

Last summer, we moved to Clarksville, TN, because my husband got a job here. I love that I had the option to move wherever we needed to go and still finish my program, but it definitely highlighted the f2f networking opportunities that I took for granted (and failed to take full advantage of) while living in Columbia.

Then, I started looking in to joining the Tennessee Library Association and found a deal! As a student, I could do a joint TLA / ALA membership form for a whopping $35! Yes, please!

The TLA annual conference was in March. It was in Murfreesboro, around an hour drive away – which was good, because I couldn’t afford a hotel stay. I finished my practicum literally the day before the conference opened, so I was able to hitch a ride with someone I knew from Austin Peay for one of the days. That worked out really well, because I had someone to sit with in the key note and knew there would be at least one familiar face in the conference center! I went back again the next day, but drove by myself that time — handy excuse to stop and do some shopping in Nashville on my way back!

Overall, I didn’t get a whole lot out of the conference. I attended sessions, but didn’t do much in the way of networking. I met one person who was finishing up her library science degree at University of Tennessee at Knoxville. We follow one another on twitter and chat back and forth occasionally, which is awesome. But I think I would have made more contacts if I had been able to stay overnight and attend the more social events.

A couple of months later, by a stroke of luck, I wound up getting funding to attend the ALA Annual in New Orleans (also known as #ALA11). Woohoo! By this time, I had been spending more time on Twitter. As I mentioned in my earlier post about Twitter, this made my ALA11 experience much better. Face to face networking is much easier when you can walk up to someone you recognize from an online network and use that for your introduction! On the down side, I spent more time doing social stuff than attending sessions… In the future, I plan to work on finding a better balance.

After I got home from ALA11, I signed up on the New Members Round Table form to volunteer for a committee. Not much has come of it yet — I got a response and was added to the Liaison Coordination & Support Committee, but that’s all I’ve heard so far. Of course, it is summer and it hasn’t been that long since the conference, so I’m not complaining! The conference got me excited to sign up to become more involved, but I can’t say more about the outcome of that yet!

Overall, I’ve learned a few lessons:

  • If you’re going to an ALA Annual and can only afford 3 nights at the hotel, wait to show up on Friday or even Saturday. I arrived on Thursday and had to leave before some of the sessions that I really wanted to attend. On the other hand, I was early enough to go to the NMRT Conference 101 session, where I ran into some folks I know from twitter, so that part worked out!
  • If you live in a city with a lot of librarians and networking opportunities, take advantage of it! And if you live in an area where there aren’t a lot of events and happy hours to attend, go make use of twitter and save up to go to conferences when you can.
  • Find balance. I know some librarians were out until 1 or 2 am, then showed up for the 8 am sessions… I don’t know how they do it, because I sure can’t! And, attending a conference in a city like New Orleans makes it even harder — in addition to networking and attending sessions, you have to make time for sight-seeing as well! I haven’t gotten this one down yet, but I’m aware that I need to work on it.
  • Get involved to get more out of it. I haven’t done a lot yet, but I did work the welcome desk for the NMRT Resume Review Service for an hour. One hour isn’t much, but I got to meet a few people that I wouldn’t have otherwise met and I definitely count it as one of the more productive parts of my conference experience!
  • Membership is expensive for professionals, especially once you add ALA plus ACRL membership, plus your state and regional library associations, plus one or two other relevant organizations. But student memberships are cheap! So if you’re still a student, go sign up for as many as may be relevant to what you want to do! Take a shot and see which ones offer more bang for your buck, so that you can make a more informed decision once you graduate and membership becomes expensive!

Overall, I think that getting benefits out of attending conferences is an acquired skill, particularly if you want to balance networking with learning from informative sessions. It takes a few conferences to get it down — so start early, while you’re still in school! But they offer some pretty valuable opportunities if you learn to make the most of each conference experience.

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cpd23 Thing 6 – Online Networks

This week we’re asked to consider online networks, including social and more professional options. Starting with two of the big ones, I must agree with the statement that “Facebook is the backyard BBQ; LinkedIn is the office” (Reid Hoffman, founder of LinkedIn, quoted here). I’ve also tried to get into using LISNPN and Google+.

Facebook

Oh Facebook. You lured me away from My Space, despite being far less customizable. I was once one of those geeks that had added html coding to totally customize my MySpace with an awesome background and color scheme… But Facebook was only for people affiliated with universities at that time. And all of my friends were on there (I was in grad school at University of Virginia at the time), while only some were on My Space. Of course, probably within a year of joining FB, I learned that Murdoch, infamous owner of Fox Noise, had bought My Space — I cannot in good conscience contribute to his mission, so I deleted that account. Yes, politics killed that social network for me.

Facebook has definitely been like a backyard BBQ for me. It’s where you chat with friends (only those I’ve met in real life, though), reconnect with high school friends, see pictures of your friends’ new babies, find out what ever happened to that old boyfriend, get invited to events… I even used Facebook to send invitations for my wedding reception!

In the past year, I’ve started following a few professional pages — ALA, Library Journal, etc. And I’ve joined a group for LIS students at my university. Unfortunately, because of the way I’ve interacted with Facebook since I first joined, these efforts to bring professionalism into that realm have largely flopped.

To get more out of Facebook professionally, I would need to completely change the way I behave on there… OK, “behave” might not be the best word, since that suggests that I currently behave badly! But I have it locked down tight, so that only the most limited amount of info is visible to those who are not friends. My posts there are generally silly personal posts about my dogs, rather than anything professionally interesting. And, I do tend to show my political colors a bit more on there than is professionally appropriate (especially during a job search!). I like having that backyard BBQ space to post those links and vapid comments.

LinkedIn

LinkedIn is a totally different vibe. You are on display, there to see and be seen. Where Facebook wants to know your interests, favorite tv and movies, and so on, LinkedIn wants to see your resume.

It works for what it is. I carefully crafted my profile, though it says I’m only 90% done… It wants me to import my resume, though I’ve already done that, then had to fix the errors it added! The big problem for me, though, is that very few of the people I know professionally are actually on there. I’m guessing that the few who are on there joined for the same reason I did — added visibility in the job search. As such, they’re not particularly active now that they have jobs!

One somewhat useful feature that I’ve used has been the groups on LinkedIn. I haven’t done as much as I could have with that, though, and the ones I have joined don’t seem incredibly active. Of course, that’s in comparison to Twitter, where I can rarely keep up with the stream of new posts & links!

LIS New Professionals Network (LISNPN)

I learned about this network when it was featured on the Hack Lib School blog. I must admit that I joined, posted in the “introduce yourself” forum post, and have rarely remembered to check back. I should try to be better about checking in and posting there, but we’ll see how that goes. In addition to the forums (which have been my focus when looking in the past), they have a blog and a list of downloadable resources that seem to cover a range of topics that new professionals may encounter.

Google+

If LinkedIn is the office, Google+ is the office water cooler. So far, most of the people in my circles are people that I also follow on Twitter. And I definitely have not optimized my experience there yet — with all the traveling and whatnot that I’ve been doing since it opened, I just haven’t had time to do much with it yet.

However, I think it will be a nice middle ground between the stuffy “show me your qualifications” feel of LinkedIn and the casual, personal, backyard BBQ feel of Facebook. Like with Twitter, you get a mix of personal and professional, except in a slightly longer form than Twitter’s 140 character limit allows for. It’s also nice that comments on posts function more like what I’m used to on Facebook — they appear below the post and are visible whether I know/follow the commenter or not.

At this point, I think that I will likely shift the time spent on Facebook and LinkedIn to Google+. I have been kind of fading out of Facebook for a while, so it’s not a radical departure caused by the shiny new network. The real competition for my attention will be between Google+ and Twitter… So we’ll see how that goes!

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cpd23 Thing 5 – Reflective Practice

The past few weeks have been pretty crazy for me, and so I’m falling behind on the cpd23 program. Let’s see if I can catch up!

The next thing on the list is reflective practice. I’m finding it a bit early in the program to do much new reflection. I feel like half of the earlier things have been reflective posts — introducing myself and reflecting on why I am participating and what I want to get out of it, then examining my personal brand and reflecting on ways to improve it.

Greenaway (1995). Copied from cpd23 Thing 5 post

Following the do – review – plan cyclical model posted on the cpd23 post, I had started blogging already, reviewed how that was going so far, and set a plan for improving the areas I want to work on (the reasons I’m doing cpd23!). Similarly, since I am currently searching for a job, I’ve been working on improving my personal brand. So Thing 3 was more reflection and a bit of planning. I’ll review the progress I made on those after I’ve had time to do a bit more!

However, I have been falling behind on following the program. So I suppose I’ll reflect on that a bit! I’ve been traveling like crazy. I left for the ALA Annual conference shortly after my first cpd23 post. I returned home for 3 days to spend time with house guests — my dad was here to pet-sit my three dogs, and he brought my 11 year old ADHD nephew along. My husband had to attend an in-service training day with the school district (he’s a high school science teacher), then we boogied on out again to take my nephew home then go visit my in-laws. We got home from upstate NY, and I was off again for something else. So I could probably get away with blaming my hectic travel schedule…

Really, however, I’ve been less active on twitter and had a hard time posting here because I’m focused on searching for a job. I’ve had a few things to get excited about (and yes, each phone interview, or even each time Google analytics shows that someone from a location where I’ve applied for a job has spent a couple of minutes on my site, is cause for excitement!). But, I’m not sure what is acceptable to say online — is it ok to gush about getting an interview, even if you don’t say where? Obviously you don’t say anything specifically identifying or negative, but if I say that a phone interview with X went well, will that hurt my chances of getting a phone interview with Y? Where exactly is the line?

Since I don’t know where the line is, and since each person will likely draw it in a slightly different location, I’m avoiding saying anything. Which is REALLY HARD! I know that some folks out there have gotten really weary of searching for a job, so maybe the whole process is no longer exciting for them. But it’s still early for me. Plus, I tend to annoy my husband with my optimism that things will work out as they should — for example, that rejection may not be cause for celebration, but it left me open to find a job that will be a better fit, where I will be happier in the end! So, right now at least, I find it hard to imagine not getting excited about each step in the process.

On the other hand, as with many of life’s more exciting things, it’s also kind of terrifying! It’s hard not to get my hopes up after what felt like a really good phone interview, but I’m really trying to just take it as it comes. Just because I’m optimistic that things will work out as they should doesn’t mean that things always go my way — that rejection still sucks, even if it did leave a window open for a better opportunity! And that means spending a lot of time burying my head in books and games to keep from getting my hopes up too much or over-analyzing every interaction with a potential employer.

So how do we plan from here? Everyone, cross your fingers that my search will be over soon, so I can start gushing about my wonderful new job! Moving to things I have more control over, well, I’m going to make an effort to check in on twitter a couple of times a day, even if I only re-tweet a couple of good posts. And I’m going to try to get caught up on this week’s cpd23 Things. And, of course, I will continue to try to post more comments on blogs. Finally, when the new Dresden Files book shows up next week, I plan to go AWOL on here again for a day or so as I devour that… Gotta have some balance, right? :)

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cpd23 Thing 4 – current awareness

I’m a bit late in posting Thing 4 for cpd23. I thought I would get to it last week, while visiting my mother in law, but I spent more time than expected gardening! She loves when I visit in the summer, because I’m happy to do the weeding and mulching work that her own kids dislike. So now I’m home and playing catch-up!

twitter

I discovered twitter this past spring, while preparing for my comprehensive exams. At the University of Missouri, our comps are basically a take-home exam. The 4 questions are released on a Saturday morning, then we have until Sunday evening of the following week to write about 6 pages (double spaced) addressing each topic. They gave us hints at the beginning of the semester, though, and one of the topics was current trends with e-books. One of the suggested resources to start reading up on the topic was a post on No Shelf Required.

If a blog is the suggested starting point, I thought that other blogs and maybe a few twitter accounts would be good to follow. I started with @LibraryJournal, @ALA_LITA, @librarianbyday, @LISNews, & @ALA_TechSource. Holy cow, I was amazed at the quality of information I found through those initial accounts! So, I kept with it after my comps were over, and have gotten increasingly active since the semester ended.

My one regret with twitter was that I made the mistakes that the wikiman warns against in 3 essential things to do AS SOON AS YOU JOIN twitter… I kept the egg avatar for too long, then used a photo of my dog for my first personalized avatar. I was slow to post a bio. And I took a while to start posting, and when I did, let’s just say that my first posts were not ones that would inspire me to follow someone…

One of the great things that I’ve discovered on twitter, aside from lots of wonderful people to follow, has been #libchat. Follow the link to find out how it works, and set a reminder to show up on Wed. Sometimes it’s very helpful, sometimes the topics are ones that I can’t really comment on, but it’s always educational!

And, as long as I’m raving about twitter, I discovered yet another wonderful benefit while at the ALA conference. I was a newbie, first-time attendee. I also didn’t know anyone else in person who was going — as a distance student, I don’t really know my classmates, and as a full time student, I don’t have co-workers to catch up with. But, right off the bat at the very first session I attended (NMRT’s Conference 101), I was able to connect with a few people I knew from twitter, and met others at later events. As I’ve said before, those few familiar faces in the crowd made the conference much better for me — it became a friendly place instead of an overwhelming experience.

So, if you’re not there yet, go join! Find interesting people to follow and post interesting stuff (re-tweeting interesting articles counts if you’re not sure what to post!). Some people talk about following etiquette — should you follow everyone who follows you? I don’t, and I recommend that you don’t either. It’s easy to get into information overload, and you don’t want to miss interesting posts or conversations because they’re being drowned out by 4-square check-ins. Follow people that are posting interesting things. If someone follows you, but their feed is full of check-ins, try back a week or two later — maybe they do post interesting stuff regularly, but you looked while they were at a conference or otherwise traveling. But don’t feel like you have to follow everyone that follows you, because it’s easy to get overloaded, which makes twitter a chore instead of a useful tool.

RSS

This one is somewhat new for me. Yeah, I know it’s been around a long time, but I organize my bookmarks well enough that it’s not much of a bother to go to each site. I did set up a google reader feed to try it out, with the added benefit that I could also keep up on my blogs via my smartphone.

Unfortunately, I’m finding it a bit of an overload right now. I went to the ALA conference, then came home to a crazy house (my dad was here to dog-sit, and brought my ADHD nephew along!), then left again 2 days later to visit my mother-in-law… So let’s just say I’ve gotten a bit behind! Right now, my new post tally is at 95, which just seems overwhelming. I will probably break down and just mark those all read so that I can start fresh, but I haven’t done so yet — I just might miss some really excellent post that way!

I am curious how RSS feeds work with analytics. I have google analytics on my site, and I really like seeing how many people have viewed my page and where they are located in the world. Can you find this information if they are reading via a RSS feed?

Pushnote

I’ll admit that I haven’t tried this one. I’m not sure I want to download another add-on for my browser. More importantly, though, I’m skeptical that it will be worth it. The description doesn’t really appeal to me. The cpd23 blogs that I’ve seen that have discussed it didn’t change my mind. I’ll try to update later with some links (they’re bookmarked on my husband’s laptop, and they’re not home right now!), but the reactions seemed to be “meh” at best, and pretty critical at worst.

Google+

I’m adding this one, since it came out just a week or so ago. I’m not sure what to think of it so far. I’m somewhat reserving judgment until I have a chance to read more about it. However, from just playing with it a bit, I’m not sure what it adds to my online experience. It seems like just another Facebook, except that 98% of the people in my circles are people I follow on twitter… So we’ll see how this pans out, but it might take a bit to get me to be really active on G+.

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cpd23 Thing 3 — personal brand

The cpd thing for this week is to examine our personal brands. This is something that I’ve been trying to keep in mind for a couple of months now, since I am searching for my first library job. In fact, that was my reason for setting up this webpage/blog.

One of the hardest parts of setting up this site was deciding on a name. Is it better to go with just my name (fitting for the CV section) or to come up with a more creative name? As you can see, I decided to just go with my name, but now I’m wondering if that was a poor choice. At the ALA conference, I met someone who is also doing the cpd23 program, and she said she looked at most of the blogs but skipped all of the ones where people just used their names as the title. Is this the common reaction or do most people not care either way?

Moving on to the activity portion of thing 3… I have Googled myself regularly since I started thinking about starting to apply for jobs. Though Google is the most popular search engine, I recommend also trying Bing or Yahoo — they bring up some different results than what appears on Google. All three of those search engines illustrate the value of having an uncommon name — the first 3+ pages are all me, except for the occasional whitepages listing.

On Google, most of the results on the first two pages are items that I’ve posted since starting to think about my personal brand — content on this site, twitter postings, my LinkedIn profile, etc. On Yahoo, there is more of a mix, including a classmates.com listing from several years ago (I directed people to my myspace page to see info without having to pay for access!) and a profile on a jewelry makers network that I haven’t touched in close to a year. I don’t mind these — if anything, the jewelry makers network one shows another side to me.

However, the one result that pops up near the top on Google (and 5th on Yahoo) that I wish I could get rid of is a ratemyprofessors.com listing from when I taught an intro level anthropology course. That class was a learning experience — I was nowhere near prepared to teach a 200 person lecture course when I got that assignment. So I probably shook like a leaf for the first month or so of teaching, and I stumbled on several points throughout the year. For example, exams were often a fiasco — until I did it, I had NO IDEA how difficult it was to write a good exam question! Then try writing 50 of them! Some always turned out to be bad questions that I had to throw out.

More importantly, each class included a huge range of students, from the freshman who was taught creationism in high school biology (not slamming anyone’s beliefs, but this does not provide a foundation for understanding paleoanthropology and hominid evolution) to the freshman who had AP evolutionary biology in high school to the senior anthropology major who realized that this basic intro level course was required to graduate… So it was incredibly challenging to figure out how to do a lecture that balanced the needs of so many students, and it’s easy to find yourself either talking way over some peoples’ heads or boring others to sleep.

So I did my best, I learned a lot, but I got a lot of negative reviews because I struggled. And that sucks. Especially when I want to get a job doing information literacy instruction.

If any of you know how to knock such a big site out of the results, I’d love to hear it! I don’t know whether this one result is hurting me or not. If anyone is looking at it, hopefully addressing it here will mitigate the negative?

Otherwise, I feel pretty good about how my personal brand is developing so far. To improve, I need to blog more regularly and comment more regularly on other blogs, and generally maintain a steady level of activity. Any other suggestions?

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cpd23 Thing 1

Catchy title, right? Hopefully as this goes along I’ll get more creative! (It doesn’t help that most of my brain is focused on getting ready for ALA at the moment!)

So, 23 Things for Professional Development starts this week. If you’re not familiar with it, it’s a free professional development course — follow the link or scroll down to my earlier post about it for more information.

First item on the agenda: why are you participating in the program?

I decided to participate for a few reasons. First, I’m finishing up my last semester of library school and starting to apply for jobs. Of course, part of that process involves realizing the skills still left to learn! It helps that I’m finishing up my last two credit hours by doing independent study — only taking 2 credit hours that don’t involve discussion board postings has left me feeling like I have lots of free time to fill! OK, I’m kidding, since I’m also searching for a job and planning to go to the ALAs and visit the in-laws within the next month… But realistically, it’s good to continue learning new things. So I’m looking forward to learning new tools and rounding out my mad library skillz.

Secondly, I’d like to get into the habit of blogging more regularly. As a new blogger, I’m not always sure what to write about. More importantly, as an almost-done library student, I’m still soaking up what’s going on and applying for jobs. So following a structured program of things to blog about will help me get into a regular pattern. With any luck, I’m hoping to have a job before the program ends, so that should provide me with plenty of new ideas once the program ends! (*Wish me luck!*)

And, finally, I’m hoping to connect with more librarians. I’ve been attending library school online for the past year, since moving for my husband’s job. He’s a high school science teacher, so he can follow me anywhere once I get a job, but he was looking for his first teaching job at a time when Missouri was laying off teachers and cutting budgets left and right. So we expanded the search and landed about an hour northwest of Nashville, TN. I love that online classes meant that I could continue in my program and move out of state if needed, but it’s hard to feel connected to my degree program from this far away. I’ve gotten somewhat active on twitter (though I follow along more than I tweet), which has helped me stay connected to library-land. But I’m hoping that blogging will help build more and deeper connections.

So I’m hoping to learn some new online tools and meet some wonderful people. Sounds like fun to me!

If you’re stopping by to check out other cpd23 blogs, drop a note to say hi! If you landed here on accident and happen to be a librarian, check out the program!

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