#librarians

Duckbilled Plattypus.pattykimura@beige.party
2026-01-02

@bweller On my 6th Birthday, eons ago, my birthday request was to get my own library card, not use my Mom's or older siblings. You had to be at least 6 years old to qualify AND be able to sign your name in cursive. I practiced for weeks. My whole family came for the event. Then came the fateful day. The Librarian sat me at her desk, asked me some questions, and then handed me the blank card to sign and a pen. I started off well, but then, in a panic realized I had started "Uh oh! Too big!" I was running out
of line. I was near tears. Kindly, she told me to turn the card to complete my signature up the side. SIX BOOKS! Each week I could take out my own six books!

In my 30s, a different librarian looked skeptically at me when checking out books and told me that my signature didn't match my card. Lol.

#library #librarians

Winter Reruns: “We’re Hiring a Person, Not a Robot”

I’m taking time off! I’ll be back with new content in February. Take this survey to share your opinions about what would be most helpful/interesting.

While I’m out, I’m running a selection of Hiring Librarians’ greatest hits and most reviled posts. This is the second most viewed of any survey response, 2012-2025. The anonymous respondent filled out my Original Hiring Librarians Survey on March 2, 2012, and the post originally ran on March 13, 2012.

I’m not really certain why it has so many views. It’s quite early on in the Hiring Librarians timeline, so the only thing I can think of is that this post was what folks grabbed when they first started sharing the website with others. Hiring Librarians went from very few views in the first month of existence (Feb 2012) to a whole gosh darn lot of views in the second month (March 2012). But it also was a good 2-3 years before the peak views of 2014-2015, so I’m not sure that this theory is correct.

There are a scant handful of comments on the original post, including one from me before I understood that hiring for fit is a concept that often reinforces our profession’s implicit biases and white monoculture. In case you don’t know, hiring for fit is uncool. See more here:

Cunningham, Sojourna, Samantha Guss, and Jennifer Stout. “Challenging the ‘Good Fit’ Narrative: Creating Inclusive Recruitment Practices in Academic Libraries.” In Recasting the Narrative: The Proceedings of the ACRL 2019 Conference, April 10–13, 2019, Cleveland, Ohio, edited by Dawn M. Mueller, 12-21. Cleveland, Ohio: ACRL, 2019. https://alair.ala.org/bitstream/handle/11213/17632/ChallengingtheGoodFitNarrative.pdf

This anonymous interview is with an Academic librarian who has been a hiring manager and a member of a hiring committee at a library with 0-10 staff members.

What are the top three things you look for in a candidate?

1. Do their skills match what we’re looking for?
2. Will they fit into our culture?  Do they play well with others?
3. Do they appear smart enough to learn what they don’t know?

Do you have any instant dealbreakers, either in the application packet or the interview process?

Application packet: poor grammar or spelling, not matching the cover letter/resume to the position.  To be honest, most cover letters are boring – they all sound the same.  Add some personality, use some humor.  We’re hiring a person, not a robot.

Interview process: nervous gestures/laughter/habits.  We just disregarded a candidate because she began the answers to every question during the phone interview with a squeaky “sure.” Dressing inappropriately.  We’re located in a northern climate with lots of snow – don’t wear high heels.  I know you want to impress but practicality is the best image to put forth.  Investigate where you’re going – is it hot?  Cold?  Windy?  Plan ahead; it proves you’re paying attention.

What are you tired of seeing on resumes/in cover letters?

The same old boilerplate language: “I look forward to hearing from you;” “I believe I would be a good candidate because . . .” etc.  Be a real person.  Stand out.

Is there anything that people don’t put on their resumes that you wish they did?

Not resumes but I wish cover letters addressed why someone chose this profession in general and this position in specific.  Everyone “just wants a job,” but why should we give you this job?

How many pages should a cover letter be?

√ As many as it takes, but shorter is better

How many pages should a resume/CV be?

√ As many as it takes, but keep it short and sweet

Do you have a preferred format for application documents?

√ No preference, as long as I can open it.

Should a resume/CV have an Objective statement?

√ I don’t care.

If applications are emailed, how should the cover letter be submitted?

√ I don’t care.

What’s the best way to win you over in an interview?

Be articulate, intelligent, funny.  Demonstrate you can fit into a small library, be a team player.  Be honest.

What are some of the most common mistakes people make in an interview?

Being surprised at basic questions.  If the position is Public Services in an academic library expect to be asked about information literacy assessment, teaching approaches, etc.
Being unprepared.  If you’re doing a presentation using your own technology make sure it works beforehand.

How has hiring changed at your organization since you’ve been in on the process?

It hasn’t.

Anything else you’d like to let job-seekers know?

We’ve hired many times since I’ve been at my institution and the one thing every person who landed the job had in common is that they had personality.  Don’t be afraid to laugh, make a joke, ask a stupid question.  As I said above, we’re hiring a person, not a robot.  Let us know who you are.  That’s just as important as what you can do.

One thing I forgot to add – another piece of advice: be assertive.  Don’t say “I think I’d be a good fit” or “I believe I can do the job” etc.  Say “I can” and “I know.”  Show confidence even if you don’t completely believe it.  It’s a tired old saying but still true – if you think you can you will.

#academic #careers #coverletter #Employment #Hiring #interviewers #interviews #JobInterview #jobs #librarians #libraries

Brian Hunter, 1984, Asst Librarian, Slavonic Collections, London School of Economics
2025-12-20

What a busy and impactful year we had!

The 2025 Annual Report highlights significant advancements in metadata, open infrastructure, community collaboration, and long-term sustainability. doi.org/10.64000/hsdpk-8cm70

#Crossref #metadata #research #funders #librarians #community

Crossref's 2025 Annual Report is out. From metadata and Research Nexus vwork to infrastructure modernisation and community growth, it captures a year of delivery and change. https://doi.org/10.64000/hsdpk-8cm70 #Crossref #metadata #research #funders #librarians #community

2025-12-17

Hey, Fedi friends. We're in the process of winding down operations for the year so we can close our office and give our staff a break for the holidays.

...but! We'll be keeping an eye on our account here, so if you have questions about our resources or need any help, please give us shout. (We know overworked teachers may be doing prep for next year over the holidays and we don't want to leave you in the lurch!) We might be a little slower to answer than usual but we are always happy to hear from you and we're thrilled if we can connect you with the resources you're looking for.

We hope you get a bit of time to rest and recharge at the end of the year, too. ❤️

#Education #Homeshooling #Edutooters #Families #Parenting #Libraries #Librarians

2025-12-16

In junkets I can never afford and wonder how they got my email: Google is having one in Vegas for their #AISlop and #sloperator cloud tech. At about a grand, LOL, not happening for this poor librarian.

I am sure one or two of my hot shot brethren will be there though.

#librarians #tech #ItinerantLibrarian

2025-12-16

The Bowen Island Library is the best. They sent me a holiday card. I thought I couldn’t love them more. #libraries #librarians #BowenIsland

A holiday card featuring the Bowen Island Public library in a snow covered scene with the Text happy holidays from the Bowen Island Public library
2025-12-15

> Librarians Are Tired of Being Accused of Hiding Secret Books That Were Made Up by AI gizmodo.com/librarians-arent-h

This says it all: "Many people really believe their stupid chatbot over a human who specializes in finding reliable information day in and day out."

And as Ron White said, "you can't fix stupid."

#books #reading #AISlop #tech #libraries #librarians

A photo of stand up comedian Ron White, a while middle aged man with blonde hair. He is smiling and holding a rocks glass filled with ice and whiskey.
When I was young, I'd walk to the library and take out a few books. The librarian would save grocery bags for readers like me. I'd take them to my mom's office and sit in the back room after school, eat saltine cracker packets, and read these colorful pages with a huge grin on my face.

The librarian showed me these books (Stephen Cosgrove). She is one of many librarians who built in me a strong and diverse love of reading. This was the first librarian who made a difference in my life. She helped build the whimsy, the sleuth, and the horse-love into me. The year was 1998.

Thanks to librarians every day. A true cornerstone of society. Literature is life.

#literature #booklover #librarians #cosgrove #serendipity #90s
2025-12-12

DOI suffixes may include several approved special characters, but they should never end with one.

End-of-string punctuation often prevents correct resolution. This month's ticket explains what characters are allowed and how to construct stable DOI suffixes. tinyurl.com/3ydap2kh

#metadata #research #funders #librarians #community

Ending a DOI with a special character can cause it to fail when resolved. This month's ticket covers the allowed characters for suffixes and the key rules for constructing valid identifiers. https://tinyurl.com/3ydap2kh #metadata #research #funders #librarians #community

Joshua Chalifourowlyph@cosocial.ca
2025-12-12

Hello #librarians working with universities / higher-education. Has your library undertaken a major transition in the way it operates? I'd like to hear about peoples' experiences in which their library changed its model of dedicated subject/liaison librarians to a model such as a team-based one, functional one, etc. For example, was it a positive change for the community? Are you more or less able to be effective in your work? How did workloads change?

2025-12-11

Not all DOI-like strings are real. This month's membership ticket explains how to identify legitimate DOIs, check prefixes, and spot misleading lookalikes. Learn how to verify them and why accuracy matters for the research ecosystem. tinyurl.com/sh2su6er

#metadata #research #funders #librarians #community

Fake DOI-like strings are increasingly common. Learn how to check whether a DOI is valid, how prefixes work, and more. https://tinyurl.com/599yk8yv #metadata #research #funders #librarians #community

ALA Editions | Neal-Schumanalaeditionsns@glammr.us
2025-12-11

Get a discount code for 50% off "The Big Sourcebook of Free and Low-Cost Library Programming" at the ALA Store! It's waiting for you in the December issue of Libraries Rock Worlds, the ALA Editions monthly newsletter that gets you up to speed on the latest publications and happenings from around ALA. tinyurl.com/3yxhr2kh

#library #librarianship #americanLibraryAssociation #librarians #librarywork #libraryworkers

promo graphic for "The Big Sourcebook of Free and Low-Cost Library Programming"
2025-12-10

Just when I think #AISlop can't go any lower, and this is the #tech that #academia and #HigherEd, including #librarians who should know better, are rushing to embrace enthusiastically.

> If you could speak to your dead grandmother forever, would you?
independent.co.uk/news/world/a

#Death

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