Skip to main content
Drexel Library Libraries Home Button Drexel Health Sciences Search Services Get Help About Drexel University


Archives


About this Blog

Search this Blog:


Quick Search

August 17, 2010

LIS Job Hunt Secret Ingredient

When LIS graduate students ask me about job-hunting, they are all guaranteed to hear one piece of advice in common, regardless of their professional goals.  “Are you a member of the X association?” (where X=the professional association that best matches their desired field of employment).  This advice is based on more than conjecture.  Time and time again, I have heard stories where a key factor in a graduate’s successful job hunt was related to their association involvement, such as:

  • a contact made at an association event,
  • a reference supplied by a mentor or senior colleague with whom candidate had done association committee work,
  • the fact that a candidate’s resume showed a history of professional association involvement opened doors.

Today on the way to work I heard yet another anecdote from a recent graduate who’s job hunt I have followed over the past year.  The back-story is that she had an art history masters degree before starting at Drexel’s iSchool. She had also volunteered for a nonprofit art-related vendor for the duration of her time in graduate school. Unhappily, her volunteer work did not translate into a full-time offer after graduation. So graduation was followed by a period of fielding resumes while holding down a full-time tech-support position at a university library in the area.

To make a year-long story short, she finally connected with a university library that was seeking a visual arts subject specialist librarian. In addition to her stellar self-presentation and highly relevant second masters, what she said turned out to be the clincher was her longstanding participation in the arts librarian association ARLIS.  The person who had the position before her was also active in ARLIS. From the sound of it, her hiring committee saw her continued participation in ARLIS – even when she was not directly employed in that specialty – as a distinguishing mark of professionalism, and a good indicator of her potential for success in the position.

What? You want *more* specific details about how association involvement helped? OK, here is the lowdown.  By going to local chapter meetings, attending the national conference, and even just reading the listserv, she gained a lot of knowledge about the highly specific field of art librarianship.  So when she was asked to give an interview presentation on the role of the arts librarian in a research intensive university, she was already well versed in the major issues and had lots of specific stories to draw on as examples.  This helped  tremendously, not only with landing the job, but also with setting her up for success once she starts her position.

So there you have it. Another warm-fuzzy story about why every LIS graduate student should keep active in their preferred association. Please recall – most offer student memberships at a steeply discounted rate!  Check out this starter list of associations for more ideas if you’re not already involved!

Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under: Library Science — Tags: — tjs49 @ 9:16 am


December 15, 2009

Interview a librarian about their career track

Interviewer: Michael M. – Library Science Student
Interviewee: Tim Siftar MS-MSIS – Reference Librarian for Education, Information Science & Technology (IST) at Drexel University’s Hagerty Library
Date December 5th 2009

Michael’s assignment: Interview a librarian to learn more about one career-track or specialty within the profession.

MM: Can you describe your role as an academic reference librarian for me?

TS: Every academic librarian role is a little different, depending on the institution. Sometimes the role I have is called a “subject librarian.” Regardless of the title, my main responsibilities include the following:
a.) Reference
b.) Instruction
c.) Collection development (in 3 subject areas)
d.) Outreach & liaison (to three colleges within the University: the School of Education, the College of Information Science & Technology, (where I took my degrees) and the Goodwin College – Drexel’s evening college).

Depending on the size of your institution, the academic librarian role may include additional roles or specialize in just one of these. I’ll describe each of the areas individually.

Reference involves scheduled shifts on the Library’s main reference desk where I handle walk-up traffic dealing with any time of question that may come along. That could include anything from showing a patron how to use the copier, to helping a student shape their research topic, and determine the best sources and strategies for searching. Clients from the colleges I support also email, schedule consultations or drop in to see me at my office. In addition, I help support the instant messaging “virtual reference” service with hours during the day where I respond to questions that patrons type into IM screen embedded in our library’s webpages.

Instruction involves getting up in front of students, anything from general orientations for freshmen in ENGLISH101, to highly specific instruction of PhD’s on a single database or tool, or searching within a specific subject literature. Some of this occurs online via webinars for distance learning students, and occasionally gets archived for re-use later. Instruction also includes work to highlight our best resources via our pathfinder web pages or “research guides.” I have a goal to create one for every degree concentration offered by the colleges I support, and they always need updating, so there’s always something to do.

Collection development includes evaluating and purchasing to support our book or online collections within the subject specialties that I support. I act as the “curator” of these subject collections, with a budget to spend each year to an extent that aligns roughly to the level of degrees Drexel awards. In other words, I spend more to build a deeper collection when we offer higher degrees in that area.

And last but not least, the outreach, or liaison role is what keeps the library in the eye of our user community, and also gathers feedback that we use to keep our services relevant. To a large degree this involves promoting new library resources and my own existence in the process.

MM: It sounds like social skills play a big role in your position?

TS: Most definitely. There are some roles in the library that are not “customer facing” but reference is not one of them. It requires astute interpersonal skills to deal with patrons especially at the reference desk. The role also demands a measure of teamwork among colleagues to deliver consistent service. And it also takes a flair for reaching large audiences via various marketing channels to do the outreach.

MM: What did you do prior to this academic librarian position?

TS: I came on the job market after earning both the library science and the information systems masters degrees from Drexel’s College of IST  during the mid-1990′s, just as the info-tech boom got started.  My first few professional jobs were more about content, but in IT-oriented settings. None was inside a library per se, and included titles such as “analyst,” “project manager” and “knowledge manager.”

MM: How did your previous corporate positions differ from your academic role?

TS:Well, the clientele and sorts of research certainly differed along with the service expectations. And the pace and work environment, communication and management styles differed between organizations as they always do. But the main difference was the depth of the projects I took on, and my employer’s commitment to deepening my subject expertise. In corporate, the deadlines and evaluations all seemed to focus on the short term. In academia there’s a long-term commitment to librarians developing a subject expertise that I just didn’t see in the corporate sector. By the same token, Drexel University is on the corporate end of the spectrum of universities, as far as being a private institution and extremely entrepreneurial. Our organization is probably more fluid than many. But at least I’m assured that my role is valued and is not likely to be outsourced or redefined into a pigeon-hole that’s far-removed from job I was initially hired to do. That’s the one challenge with those “information specialist” jobs that occur outside the library – you have to be more intentional at defining your professional identity and the value you deliver to your organization. That’s not generally questioned in academia.

MM: How do you think the role of the academic reference librarian will change in the future?

TS: The trends I see all indicate that the future of the academic reference librarian will be characterized by a closer working relationship with faculty collaborating on learning objectives. I see this in any number of areas, from librarian consultations required on the course syllabus, IM services “embedded” inside online course shells, to librarians grading the quality of the references in student research papers. At Drexel we’re working with some newly added staff to deliver a menu of short instructional videos for faculty to use at the point of need when their students face specific research challenges. Having collaborative arrangements that get us closer to the core teaching mission of the university is really the best way for me to deliver value as a professional. It also assures that we don’t become a generic commodity that can be just as easily replaced by a call center operator in Mumbai.

MM: Given the increasing prevalence of online tools, do you think there will come a day when librarians are no longer needed?

TS: I think just the opposite. Given the increasing prevalence of online tools ASSURES that librarians will always be needed. We increasingly act as curators, arbiters of what is good, orientation providers and advocates for users. There is a fair amount of behind-the-scenes work that still needs to take place.

MM: What advice would you have for someone in library school such as myself about preparing for a librarian position?

TS: I’d say “embrace change” while still holding firm to the core identity that librarians have always had – service orientation, communication skills, staying close to the user needs.

Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under: Library Science — Tags: , — tjs49 @ 5:31 pm


November 24, 2009

E-Book Expo: Lyrasis Panel Discussion (archive)

Last Friday, I was very pleased to participate as part of this panel discussion being held by Lyrasis at the Harrisburg University of Science and Technology in Harrisburg Pa. The ambitious hour-long agenda covered many aspects of working with e-books in libraries, featuring just five minutes from eight different speakers and several excellent questions from participants.

The outline of the speakers and topics ran more or less as follows:

  • Timothy Cherubini (Lyrasis): Introductory remarks “E-books are back!”
  • Nancy Adams (H’bg Univ of Sci & Tech): Process of beginning to explore e-books; features and functionality
  • Tim Siftar (Drexel Univ): Collaborating with faculty to promote e-book use, e-books as textbooks
  • Becky Albitz (Penn State Univ): E-book adoption challenges
  • Mary Sue (OCLC): How do users find e-books?  MARC, persistent URLs, OPAC, federated search, google
  • Cynthia Cleto (Springer): E-book business models (subscription, perpetual, pay as you go), DRM
  • Jackie LaPlaca (IGI-Global): DRM, licensing (including SERU), library/publisher communication
  • Lou Mutty (Books 24×7): Marketing your e-books (early adoption, help pages, etc.)
  • John McLaughlin (Cengage): Beyond the PDF (new technology, functionality & social media)

Here’s the link to the archived webcast. Please note that the archive is viewable on the Eluminate platform and requires an updated version of Java to run, ie – you will be prompted to run the plugin when clicking this link.

I would enjoy hearing any comments you have.

Best,

Tim Siftar

Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under: Library Science — Tags: , , — tjs49 @ 5:04 pm


September 21, 2009

Comparison of E-Book Collections

E-Book Collections are taking off in libraries and private subscriptions, but how to they compare? What follows is a work in progress based on perceptions of the Librarians at Drexel University’s Hagerty Library of the e-book platforms we use. It was created for a presentation to faculty about the growing e-book options available through the Library as part of the Institute on Innovation in Training and Teaching conducted by the Drexel Office of Information Resources and Technology, September 10-11, 2009.  (starting at slide 72)

E-Book Collections

In a Nutshell

Pros

Cons


141 Medicine & Science Items Lots of core medical textbooks, good graphics & basic definitions

No downloads, hard to print, must be online to use.

8,284 Business & InfoTech Items in HTML
Depth of IT books in the “ITPro” collection.

No downloads, hard to print, must be online to use.

32,000 Items on All topics

Breadth of collection. “PDF-like” hi-fidelity.

No downloads, hard to print, must be online to use.

???

It’s free.

Some downloads, hard to print, must be online to use. Omits pages.

1,576 Engineering Items in PDF
Depth of data in the handbooks. True PDF’s are downloadable.
3,688 Engineering Items in PDF Depth of data in the handbooks. True PDF’s are downloadable.
18,643 Business & InfoTech Items in HTML

Breadth of collection . Not much else.

No downloads, hard to print, must be online to use.
923 InfoTech Items in HTML
Core IT manuals from all main publishers. Code search option. No downloads, hard to print, must be online to use.

Please help us evaluate Drexel’s electronic book collections and fill in the blanks below. Use the comment feature or email comments to siftar@drexel.edu.

Coming soon! A comparison of features in the following open-source EBook platforms…

ACLS Humanities Ebooks
Alex Catalog of Electronic Texts
Baen Free Library
Bartleby.com
Bibliomania
Eighteenth Century Collections Online
Free On-line Library
Health Information for International Travel 2008
Internet Archive Texts
Internet History Sourcebooks Project
Internet Public Library On Line Texts
Online Library of Literature
Perseus Digital Library
Project Gutenberg
University of California Press eScholarship Editions
University of Pennsylvania On-Line Books Library
University of Virginia Electronic Text Center

Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under: Faculty Only,Library Science — Tags: , — Dana Denick @ 2:01 pm


May 22, 2009

Information Systems & Technology Associations

Professional associations are good investments. Whether you are networking for a job, keeping skills up to date or just seeking the company of colleagues, your reward from participating will exceed your investment many times over. A recent inquiry about local Philadelphia area associations that focus on IS/IT related topics provided the basis for this post.

While I don’t mean to slight national associations, I have only included groups that I know to have an active chapter in the Philadelphia area, just as a way to illustrate the F2F aspect of association activity. Many of these have an affiliation with a national organization, while others are strictly local. Techies outside Philly can use this list to get ideas about groups that might exist in your area. Even if you do not live in an urban area, you I encourage you to explore ways to network with other IS/IT professionals who meet face to face even if you have to take the first step.

Just choose the place to meet, and a discussion topic for the first meeting and then post an announcement to Meetup or Craigslist.  Just DO it! I promise you will be rewarded many times over! As always, I welcome your comments or any additional suggestions for this growing list of Philly area associations.

Regards,
Tim Siftar

Acronym Name Comments
SIM Society for Information Management
“Delivering Business Value Through IT Leadership”
… a ‘by-invitation’ federation of senior information managers experienced in both information systems and general management.
NWCT Network of Women in Computer Technology … to advance careers for professionals in Information Technology through education, mentoring, and providing outstanding professional networking opportunities.
PMIDVC Project Management Institute Delaware Valley Chapter The PMI Delaware Valley Chapter will provide a forum for project management professionals to promote the principles of the Project Management Institute througth networking with other project management professionals, sharing project experiences, providing and receiving training, and supporting project management professional in their certification efforts.
PSSUG Philadelphia SQL Server User Group We are a community of SQL Server database professionals, meeting monthly in different locations throughout the Greater Philadelphia area.   We specialize extensively in SQL Server DBA, and Business Intelligence topics.
DAMA Data Management Group …If Services provide the “How”, it is the Domain Model that more importantly provides the “What”….
PKMG Philadelphia Knowledge Management Group KMG was formed in 1999 to provide a forum for understanding and applying the ideas of Knowledge Management.
PHLOUG Philadelphia Area Oracle User Group Share information with other Oracle User Groups. Network with other local Oracle users. Share hints and tips with fellow members. Learn from the exciting guest speakers at every meeting. Express your views and ask questions about Oracle technology.
PHLOUG
DBA
SIG
Philadelphia Area Oracle User Group DBA Special Interest Group Our SIG provides a forum of support and technology to Oracle database professionals at all levels. Whether you’re a beginner, or an expert, SIG strengthens community, increase networking, unveil the latest technology innovations, and reveal the techniques that turn novices into experts and experts into gurus.
PANMA Philadelphia Area New Media Association PANMA hosts networking and educational events, where we encourage the connections among our members, offer business opportunities and enjoy good times with friends. We are web designers, graphic artists, database developers, programmers, information architects, marketers and other professionals supporting the regional digital development community.
PAJUG Philadelphia Area Java Users Group The group exists solely as a vehicle for sharing information about Java and Java-related technologies among our members. Our speakers address a broad range of topics, with the common thread being that all presentations touch on an aspect of Java technology and the overwhelming majority of presentations get to the ‘code level’. The group currently does not allow pure product demonstrations.
? Philadelphia Drupal Group Join with other Drupalers from Philadelphia and southeast Pennsylvania, South Jersey and the Wilmington-Newark area! From open source hackers to themers to all-around web site developers, Drupal attracts people with a variety of interests and they’re all represented in our area. Come out to an event and meet others passionate about Drupal!
? Philly Net Squared

supporting the event:

Philly NetTuesday

Technology for social change, non-profits using web 2.0 to advocate for causes, changemakers spreading the word and hosting decentralized fundraisers through social networks like MySpace and Facebook — that’s what Philly NetSquared is all about!
? Philadelphia PHP Users Meetup Group Meet and learn from PHP developers in the Philadelphia area. Come to a PHP Meetup to exchange ideas and talk about code, architecture, innovation, and MySQL, LAMP, CMS systems like Drupal and Mambo/Joomla, open source web development in general. Anyone interested in PHP is welcome!
? Philadelphia Linux Meetup Group Meet other local Linux enthusiasts to talk about the latest news and software. To share tips and tricks especially in the areas of user applications and general computing…
SEOGrail Search Engine Optimization Philly Search Engine Marketing (SEM) is increasingly becoming the hub of the integrated marketing (online and offline) paradigm of e-age. Meet other local people who are interested in Search Engine Optimization (SEO) techniques and more general issues related to Search Engine Marketing (SEM). Gather and share advice and info on better ways to work with search engines and off course network and develop synergies.
? Philadelphia Standards Organization The Philadelphia Standards Organization is a grass roots collective of designers, developers, and internet consultants promoting the use of Web Standards through education and collaboration in the Philadelphia region. The Organization also strives to serve as a resource for the pursuit of best practices in the design and development of web sites and applications around the globe.
Facebook Twitter Email


May 11, 2007

Philly AIDS Library 20th Anniversary – 6/28

I’d like to let you know about the AIDS Library 20th Anniversary on Thursday June 28th. Very timely as June happens to be AIDS Education Month. Way back when in graduate school, I was classmates with Jenny Pierce, who is a Librarian at the AIDS Library. I volunteered at the AIDS Library for a time as well.

I probably don’t need to tell you about all of the important work that this group of people have accomplished in the past 20 years (www.aidslibrary.org).

(more…)

Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under: Library Science — Tags: , , — tjs49 @ 4:46 pm


May 3, 2007

Help rebrand the library profession

Six participants in this year’s Emerging Leaders program have been charged with creating or finding options for “rebranding the library profession in the digital world.” The Project KK group has crafted a survey intended to go out to as broad a spectrum of library professionals as possible to analyze current perceptions and future trends in librarianship. Find a couple minutes to take the survey….

(thanks to the American Libraries e-newsletter, May 2, 2007!)

Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under: Library Science — Tags: , — tjs49 @ 10:36 am


July 25, 2006

Impressions of SLA Baltimore Conference 2006

As an afterthought it seems to make sense to cross-post my entry on the DU SLA Student Chapter blog over to this one – just to keep everything in one place. I will preface my remarks by saying that while I’ve attended several SLA conferences as a day-tripper, this was the first time I stayed for the duration. The glamor of three days marching around the Baltimore Convention Center with so many other librarians, all wearing sensible shoes! ; ) Seriously – I enjoyed myself like a kid in a candy shop. And as always when coming back from a conference – it will be a challenge to apply what I picked up in a meaningful way. But as a first step, sharing it with others is always good.

So here’s the link to my comments written shortly after returning from Baltimore. Enjoy! – Tim

Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under: Library Science — Tags: , — tjs49 @ 3:20 pm


May 30, 2006

Rock & Roll Library (videos surfed from the web)

Like anyone else who was raised on a steady diet of Saturday morning cartoons, there’s a part of my brain that can’t help but respond to animations – even cheezy ones – even (oh no!) library skills instructional videos! Since this is a blog and I’m new to e-journalling I’ll fall back on the time-honored tradition of sharing confessions…

(more…)

Facebook Twitter Email
Filed under: Library Science — Tags: , — tjs49 @ 10:23 am


Copyright © 2012 Drexel University Libraries, 33rd and Market Streets, Philadelphia, PA 19104. All rights reserved   |   Privacy Policy

Powered by Wordpress Wordpress icon