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The best laid plans of mice and Meredith

By Meredith Farkas | August 5, 2008

It’s amazing how I manage to delude myself year after year. Every spring I make a list of projects I want to get done in the summer when I “have more time.” And every year, I barely get through any of them. This year I was really optimistic about what I could accomplish and I’m very disappointed with my progress. I’m either overly optimistic or I really don’t learn anything from history.

I’ve been the Head of Instructional Initiatives for four months now and I’ve really been enjoying the new position. I’m also the liaison to the social sciences, which is the largest division at the University by far. It’s brought a bit more stress and a lot more work than I had before, but I’m loving the new challenges. I get bored pretty easily, and this is definitely a huge job with lots of different elements that will keep me on my toes for a long time.

Here’s what I was able to get done this summer:

Here are a few of the things that… well… didn’t happen:

It’s hard to believe that the students will be back in a week and a half and the onslaught of instruction will begin soon after. I had wanted to be a lot more prepared for it, but there are only so many hours in the day, and the best laid plans often go awry thanks to hard drives failures, proxy server meltdowns, student access issues, Voyager upgrades, and really tough research questions. C’est la vie.

Topics: MPOW, Work, instruction, librarianship |

13 Responses to “The best laid plans of mice and Meredith”

  1. Janice Beal Says:
    August 5th, 2008 at 8:28 pm

    Meredith, not sure here if my comments are welcome or helpful, but please feel free to contact me if I can be of any assistance.
    cheers,
    Janice Beal (former head of public services, Kreitzberg Library, Norwich University)

  2. Meredith Farkas Says:
    August 5th, 2008 at 8:56 pm

    Thanks Janice! Definitely welcome and appreciated. I may well take you up on the offer — especially with LibQual looming!

  3. Janice Beal Says:
    August 5th, 2008 at 9:44 pm

    Hang in there, under Ellen Hall’s very able directorship, you are doing the very best you can do. I am always available to give what advice and encouragement I can. Please be in touch.
    cheers,
    JB

  4. moonflowerdragon Says:
    August 6th, 2008 at 5:10 am

    I look forward to hearing how the revamped “Rook Tours” pan out.

  5. Amelia Luzzi Says:
    August 6th, 2008 at 8:09 am

    I had a scavenger hunt as a part of one of my library inductions at Uni (I say “one of” because my university had about 100 libraries). It was surprisingly fun, and I took inspiration from it for a series of inductions I delivered for a high school library. One word of advice - be prepared for the students to make a complete mess of the sections they have to scavenge in. Other than that, as far as I could tell it was a really successful introduction to the library, and way less boring than what we had done previously.

  6. Meredith Farkas Says:
    August 6th, 2008 at 9:08 am

    Good to hear that, Amelia! I’m really looking forward to giving it a try this year and will definitely be prepared for students to make a mess of things. :)

  7. Alison Says:
    August 6th, 2008 at 1:16 pm

    If your library is anything like mine, every sign that goes up looks different, depending on who makes it and how much time they have. One thing that I have done (I’m the PR librarian at MPOW) is to try to make sure that the signs I put up have a consistent look to them. Getting someone to make a quick, elegant template in Word that can be passed around might help in a small way. At the very least “template” discourages the application of random clip art. ;)

  8. Genevieve Williams Says:
    August 6th, 2008 at 1:42 pm

    I hear ya on trying to get way more accomplished than is feasible. My summer project list looks more like what one could expect to accomplish in a year, I went out of the country for two weeks in June (plus ALA), and I’m getting married a week before the students return to campus! At some point one has to be realistic about what one can accomplish in a given amount of time…

    On the marketing/PR front, I really am liking the How-to-Do-It Manual on library PR, from Neal-Schumann. Some of it’s repetitive if you’ve worked in public relations before, which I have, but I’m getting a lot of use out of it as I plant seeds for better promotions at my library.

  9. shinylib Says:
    August 6th, 2008 at 8:02 pm

    Holy cow, Meredith! That list of things you accomplished so far this summer is fairly impressive. This summer I’ve managed to accomplish daily bike riding and 4 hours of reference a week. :D

    I’m glad to hear you’ve found an able and tech-savvy recruit for the DL position. I know what you mean about tutorials, etc. Ownership is a natural impulse, but it’s great that you’re self-aware enough not to sabotage the great work I’m sure she’ll do!

  10. Robert Teeter Says:
    August 8th, 2008 at 12:47 am

    Meredith,

    Don’t beat yourself up. It sounds as if you got a lot accomplished this summer.

    I sat up when I ran across your reference to Google Books in your discussion of weeding/archiving the 100-year-old books. I may be a bit sensitive at the moment, since I’m reading Radical Cataloging, which includes Dr. Thomas Mann’s essay, “What is Going on at the Library of Congress” (available online at http://www.guild2910.org/AFSCMEWhatIsGoingOn.pdf)

    I’ve been reading your blog for a while now (and I’ve seen you speak at a conference), so I trust your good sense enough to believe that you are not making weeding/archiving decisions based solely on whether something is available on Google Books. Having something on Google Books is not a substitute for having it on the shelf, where it can be found with other works on the same subject (serendipity) and browsed in ways a PDF cannot. (See Mann’s essay if you have not read it already.)

    On the other hand, I realize that:

  11. Laura H. Says:
    August 8th, 2008 at 8:03 am

    I don’t have very much to add - I just wanted to say that I can sympathize! There’s so much more that I wanted to get done, and there are only about 3 weeks until classes start.

  12. Meredith Farkas Says:
    August 8th, 2008 at 11:38 am

    Robert, as you guessed, my comment on Google Books did not mean that I was using that as a weeding criterion. However, having something in Google Books is fantastic for our distance learners when some of these older books are in special collections and can’t circulate. It allows them access to something they’d not have been able to read otherwise. For someone who serves students of History, Google Books is a brilliant tool — though no replacement for one’s print (or purchased/leased online) collection.

    We definitely can’t keep everything that has been purchased in the past, particularly if it does not serve the students and faculty of today. When one sees a book that is over 100 years old, has perhaps circulated once (or less) in that time period, is brittle, is not a candidate for special collections, really wouldn’t serve students doing research today, and isn’t a key text from the period, then it doesn’t make a lot of sense to keep it.

  13. valerie Says:
    August 11th, 2008 at 2:08 pm

    Any chance that you might share some of that ‘instruction menu and learning activities for English 101′? It also sounds like it may work for other faculty … valerie