Upgrade to Pro — share decks privately, control downloads, hide ads and more …

Trouble Your Magic: Technical Services is Advocacy

Trouble Your Magic: Technical Services is Advocacy

Scarlet Galvan

June 04, 2019
Tweet

More Decks by Scarlet Galvan

Other Decks in Education

Transcript

  1. Trouble Your Magic: Technical Services is Advocacy Scarlet Galvan |

    Collection Strategist Grand Valley State University Libraries Association for Library Collections & Technical Services
  2. About me! Broad background in technical services and adjacent areas

    like usability and systems. Current: Collection Strategist at Grand Valley State University. Previous: eResources Manager at Brown University Library; Systems Librarian at SUNY Geneseo. 2 Hosted by ALCTS: Association for Library Collections and Technical Services
  3. 3

  4. 4

  5. What is technical services? Ask a patron what ‘the library’

    is, and they’ll most likely answer something we do! 5
  6. Questions to consider • What are the hidden rules of

    this work? • Which entities define those terms and rules? • What would it look like to break or change the rules? • How can you use this information to advocate? 9
  7. 11

  8. 12

  9. 14

  10. 16

  11. 17

  12. 18

  13. 19

  14. 20

  15. 21

  16. 22

  17. 23

  18. 24

  19. 27

  20. Licensing crash course! • Non-disclosure agreements • Indemnification • Arbitration

    (get advice on this) • No, you can’t audit our computers and labs • License modification • Breach notices and communications This is useless without adequate staffing 28
  21. 31

  22. 32

  23. Education • Office hours and open houses. • Reading groups

    and appeals to authority. • Short ‘symposium’ style discussions of projects. 34
  24. Finding allies • Who publishes in Open Access journals? •

    Who are the other ‘maintainers’ in your community? • Try channels for communications and assess their effectiveness. • Emails typically do not get people to do things. • Who else in your org is done being ‘nice’ instead of kind? • Promote your own work and the work of allies. 35
  25. Addressing resistance • ‘Safe space’ for failure. • No, you

    can’t break it. • Mapping processes out as a group. 36
  26. “We are all coming to the table today knowing that

    everyone did their best with the knowledge and the resources that they had at the time. Now that we have new knowledge and resources we are going to reevaluate the process to ensure we are still making the right decision.” --Ask A Manager commenter, Ocm in the wild
  27. If you are a supervisor… • Delay or schedule your

    emails if you respond to them off-hours. Sending emails outside of your regular schedule creates the expectation that your staff will do the same even if you explicitly say otherwise. • Don’t apologize for taking sick or vacation time. • Don’t let your staff apologies for it either. • It’s okay to ask for education. My best bosses do this. 38
  28. Disrupt a bully! • “What do you mean by that?

    / “What I’m hearing you say is…” • “Did you know [protected group subject to blanket statement] is covered under Title IX?” • Appeal to competence even if it doesn’t exist. “You’re usually so thoughtful! I’m sure you didn’t mean to say/imply…” • If safe to do so, invoke invisible diversities. This takes practice. Add salt to taste. 39
  29. 40