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Breaking the librarian stereotype #iamalibrarian
by Clare Brown on November 9, 2016
Those social media fans amongst you may well recognise the hashtag in the title of this post - #iamalibrarian. Exploring this feed on Twitter enables you to see a small snapshot of the lives of librarians and information professionals across the globe - fascinating reading in such a varied and often misunderstood profession.
It seems that despite being one of the oldest professions, there is often a misperception and stereotype that a librarian only stamps books. We know this is not the case. A library is so much more than the physical space it inhabits, and the skill and value of a librarian stretches far beyond the loaning of a book.
“Google can bring you 100,000 answers, a librarian can bring you the right one”
And it is such a good feeling when people do ask and find we CAN help! We are living, breathing search engineers! #iamalibrarian #HEELKS
As Kaye says, librarians are search engineers. We are in the midst of an infodemic and search engines such as Google - invaluable as they are - tend to exasperate the misconception that technologically competent Millennials can do it all themselves. Whilst search engine results may be there in number, their quality, accuracy, relevancy and currency remain to be seen.
That’s where the librarian saves the day. We help navigate questionable information:
"Now, the job is helping patrons navigate superabundant information of wildly varying quality and uncertain provenance." #iamalibrarian https://t.co/9ZX03RzXHS
— DanaLibrariana (@DanaVLema) October 25, 2016
And find what’s important in and amongst the white noise:
Which is why clinical librarians are essential! We can help find the best evidence out there to help you keep up to date #iamalibrarian https://t.co/YMe0WP62Uz
— Emily Hurt (@EmilyHHurt) October 7, 2016
When librarians confound expectations
Despite the incredible value of librarians, the library stereotype means that scepticism and poor understanding continues to prevail.
When users and coworkers don’t believe in your skills:
@AngelaBetts7 yes, when that happens, you are a good librarian! I know, because #iamalibrarian
— Sheryl Ramer (@PodcastLib) October 27, 2016
When you bust a couple of misconceptions:
#iamalibrarian & I spent the day saving a burning PC and writing HTML code for another librarian, all whilst wearing jeans and NO tweed.
— Tom (@TommyMarkP) September 30, 2016
#iamalibrarian - student once said to me, "I didn't realise men could work in libraries - I thought it was just women"
— Tom (@TommyMarkP) September 30, 2016
Or when someone learns that there’s so much more to your role than first perceived:
#iamalibrarian and I also spend most of my days fielding questions about how many books I stamp
— Rosie Scallon (@rosiescallon) September 30, 2016
Wait, what do librarians really do?
We’ve challenged the lack of knowledge as to the value that librarians and libraries bring, we’ve explored some of the ways that librarians have surprised sceptics, and considered a handful of the challenges librarians across the board face each day in fighting for their budgets.
What about what librarians do on a day-to-day basis? By now we are more than aware that it stretches far beyond the perceived stamping and lending of books.
From offering invaluable guidance:
#iamalibrarian today i helped newbie researchers check their idea is new, advised newbie reviewer on lit search, went to pub, watched #gbbo
— Judy Wright (@jmwleeds) September 29, 2016
To helping save lives:
#iamalibrarian and today I am checking the budget report and helping out dementia team by finding info to reduce falls
— Heather Steele (@HeatherBake) September 30, 2016
Whilst some are working with technology to create something new:
#Iamalibrarian and today I'm working on a PHP script for a web application to submit user registration data to the Alma API.
— Simon Barron (@SimonXIX) September 29, 2016
And others aren't even using books:
#iamalibrarian and I work to make sure that NHS staff have access to the best evidence. Sometimes I go all day without touching a book.
— Rachel P (@archelina) September 29, 2016
They have recently been fighting for marginalised communities:
Signed up for webinar on dismantling institutional Racism in your library for later this week. Hoping for some tactics on how I might be able to put ideas to paper. #iamalibrarian
— Stefanie Maclin-Hurd (@srmaclin) June 22, 2020
Why should you be a librarian or information professional?
The most common theme that comes up time after time again, speaking with librarians in person, via Twitter or elsewhere is a passion for the unknown day - not knowing what will happen or how the day will pan out, only that they will surely discover and learn something new.
The best part of being a librarian is constantly learning new things. Being a subject librarian is the 🐝's knees #librarylife #iamalibrarian
— liz (@kittyBBQ) October 4, 2016
No two days the same, each more rewarding than the last. Constantly surprised, constantly inspired #iamalibrarian
— Joanne Cousins (@JoanneCousins) September 29, 2016
Adaptability has been on everyone's lips during the recent pandemic. Professionally we are working as best we can, or planning for a time when it is safe to return to a public service space. Our public, our communities, our organisations are relying on our rapidly evolving creativity to imagine a future in a changed world.
No one adapts quicker. You see someone walking towards you and you have no clue what they will ask. Love the challenge! #iamalibrarian https://t.co/W9HldagDUu
— Dawn Finch (@dawnafinch) September 29, 2016
It seems that librarians from all sectors - public and private - are united in a passion for what they do and why they do it. It is this zest for learning, discovering and sharing new information that transcends roles and industries to unite all those that say #iamalibrarian.
Tell us, why are you a librarian? How have you broken the stereotype?
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