Lisa A. Raney

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Cincy Ephemera, a new Tumblelog

Posted by lisaraney on June 21, 2013 at 1:55 PM Comments comments (0)

I've recently started a new Tumblelog, called Cincy Ephemera. I'll be posting unique, unusual, funny, or other neat things I find in my library's collection. The goal of the blog is primarily a selfish one - I want to have all of these finds in one place for my reference -- but the format of a Tumblr blog makes them available for others to easily view.

For now, Cincy Ephemera consists of number of images I've saved from old local newspapers. I stumbled upon these a few days ago while looking through microfilm with the intent of finding information for our patrons. These images, ads, and articles jumped out at me, so I took the few extra seconds and to send them to myself.

Other things will be added as time goes by and I unearth more treasures.

Post-Grad School: The First Eight Months

Posted by lisaraney on June 21, 2013 at 1:35 PM Comments comments (0)

As can be witnessed in my previous blog, this year been a whirlwind. These past few years have been a whirlwind, especially now that 2.5 years have passed since I have graduated from library school, and in that time I have sent out hundreds of cover letters and resumes. I may still be on my search for my full-time job as a librarian, but so far it has allowed me the opportunity to take advantage of many experiences that I may not have otherwise had the opportunity to experience.

Today, I am pulling together projects and documents I have done in the past. In the process, I have stumbled upon a list I compiled of some of the things I did in the first eight months after I graduated from library school, aside from the requisite cover letter and resume writing. I had mostly forgotten about most of these things, and these are mostly things that I no longer list on my resume because it would be too lengthy!

Post-Grad School: The First Eight Months

• Volunteered as Archives Assistant at Lexington History Museum 1/2011-3/2011.

• Moved from Lexington, KY to Cincinnati, OH 3/2011.
• Worked as a Softlines Merchandising and Customer Assistant at Sears, 6/2011– 6/2012

• Volunteered at Homework Central's Brain Camp and as a tutor in Homework Central twice a week from 6/2011 – 8/2011.
• Started working as a Homework Help Aide at the Northside Branch of the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County in 8/2011 (until starting my current position).

• Attended Special Libraries Association (SLA) Resume Program on 7/21/2011 at Rookwood Commons.

• Organized and hosted yard sale: researched, created and posted flyers, contacted friends/neighbors, organized, priced, and cleaned items, set up for sale, sold items, and cleaned up after sale.

• Organized a meal train for grandmother: researched meal train and other options, researched her dietary restrictions, created meal train plan and page catered to her needs, and distributed this information to friends and family.

• Babysat for young nieces independently and cooperatively on a semi-regular basis; organized activities including those leading to increased literacy, and provided discipline when necessary.

• Assisted in care of elderly and disabled grandmother: getting her off dialysis bus, assisting with meal preparation and miscellaneous chores.

• Attended Webinar sessions including Careers in Federal Libraries,Accidental Governmental Librarian, and sessions on searching for genealogical sources.

• Prepared bibliography of disability-related resources.

• Provided informal instruction on use of Internet and Internet searching techniques for family members.

• Provided career resource assistance for college-bound cousin.

• Created and maintained a professional Twitter account.

• Created a professional website on webs.com.

• Began a running and yoga regimen.

• Planted a vegetable garden and 2 trees.

 


The Whirlwind of 2013

Posted by lisaraney on June 21, 2013 at 11:45 AM Comments comments (0)

Things have been a little busy since arriving back in town from ALA's Midwinter Meeting in January: almost as soon as I set foot back in town, most of my free time was devoted to an interview process with an out-of-state library in addition to extra hours I had picked up in my library's Outreach Department and later, my own department, as well as providing weekly tutoring at Chase Elementary. This spring and summer has been largely devoted to volunteering within my community and learning about entrepreneurship and starting a small business. I am preparing to offer freelance information services when I return from the ALA Annual Conference in Chicago in July.

To expand a little on the above...

The interview process that I referred to above culminated with me being flown to the university for an on-site interview. It was very exciting, and a great experience during which I met some very friendly people. However, it was not meant to be, and so I remain in Cincinnati working in my part-time position in the Genealogy and Local History Department.

I primarily put together deposit collections in the Outreach Department -- some of the larger ones were 300 and 190 book deposit collections for correctional facilities, and there were also some smaller teacher collections and collections for convents.

In my own department, we spent the spring adding more points-of-interest to our Panorama, and currently have a very fun exhibit in our Rare Books and Special Collections room of prints displaying new "American Style" from the turn of the century, especially many produced by Currier and Ives. I proofed many of the new Points of Interest and the labels for the exhibit, spent a great deal of time helping to fine-tune our Veteran's History Project by fact-checking and verifying information for close to 400 vets, putting together countless binds and tracking down missing periodical issues, and have been busy checking in the hundreds of books we've received to the department in the past few weeks!


More to come about my adventures in community work later!


What We Talk About When We Talk About Libraries

Posted by lisaraney on October 11, 2012 at 4:55 PM Comments comments (0)

Just a brief update since I haven’t had one in a while. I’ve moved house recently so I have been focusing on getting settled. I am fortunate to live with very intelligent people at this time – two engineers and an anthropologist – and they help motivate me to continue to do my best. Last night, one of the engineers, the anthropologist, and I had a conversation that bounced between library advocacy, education, sociology, and political theory. This interdisciplinary approach is something that I think is missed a lot in discussions I hear about libraries and library science.

Libraries do great things and serve many roles. That cannot be denied.

 

And, this is a very critical time for libraries as usage continues to increase as budgets and staffing is on the decline across the board.

But, librarians need to be at the table everywhere -- not just in libraries or at library conferences, but meeting our members or patrons everywhere we go. This means in the grocery store, on the bus, and at non-library conferences.

After all, the first two of the policies included in the ALA Library Bill of Rights call for a diverse collection, “presenting all points of view on current and historical issues.” The next two are concerned with intellectual freedom: the third calls for a resistance to censorship and the fourth calls for collaboration with anyone who is engaged with resisting any threat to “free expression and free access to ideas.” The fifth calls for equity of access – in that everyone has a right to use the library. Libraries are for everyone.

 

The sixth policy reiterates the library’s role as a space – ensuring that spaces and meeting rooms are available to the public, again regardless of beliefs or affiliations.

So why this overview?



I think sometimes these things overlooked on all sides – by librarians, paraprofessionals, library workers, administrators, the library board, and the general public. Libraries are for everyone, and they represent many different voices and backgrounds. We aren’t big buildings with books, CDs, and libraries that only offer service to librarians based on one viewpoint. And, a big part of what we should be doing is collaborating – yes to help ensure intellectual freedom and challenge censorship - but also to add more to our conversation. There is so much more to talk about when we talk about libraries.

 

Loose Lips Sink Ships

Posted by lisaraney on August 18, 2012 at 2:30 PM Comments comments (0)

Picking up extra hours at work the past few weeks has given me the opportunity to spend more time working on my off-desk duties. One of these involves assisting one of the librarians in my department with our library’s contributions to the Library of Congress’ Veteran’s History Project. What I’ve been doing so far is watching oral history interviews that we've collected from area veterans and creating recording logs before we send them off to the Library of Congress. It’s a pretty straight forward task, but involves paying close attention to details along with analysis and research.


I was not exactly thrilled going into this project. Watching videos from men who have gone to war, wielded weapons, and possibly taken other peoples’ lives was not something that was on the top of my priority list. I am a pacifist, and one of the things I’ve always felt very strongly about and is still a large part of my life is to be a peacemaker. Make love, not war, and all that. This made me an oddball history major in college, being more interested in the sociological and cultural underpinnings of events while the majority of my classmates would pore over the intricacies of wars and military history. This aversion may have had something to do with being dragged out to numerous military and aviation museums, sites, and bases as a child, but I digress.


However, I knew that regardless of my personal feelings, I could do the work and would do a good job at it. That was a non-issue. And I knew, from my training in history, library science, and archives, that it is incredibly important to document the individual stories of those who have witnessed events firsthand while they are still alive to tell them. It gives a broader scope of history and I feel validates the experience of each individual veteran. It gives a more authentic account of the events rather than what's in the history books.  


What I did not expect was to enjoy it as much as I have been. These oral histories are incredibly important and I'm finding it very moving to watch them. There is so much humanity in them, as well as a whole heck of a lot of history. I hope everyone gets a chance to hear them, even if just one. And on that same note, I hope these are the last stories anyone ever has to tell about going to war. Some of the things I learn are truly heartbreaking that at times I have to press pause and take a breather before finishing the segment.

 


There was a WWII Air Forces vet who talked about segregation, not being promoted, and having guns pointed on him by his superiors during target practice simply because he was the “wrong” color. Another one is not an interview, but a documentary created by a vet, using footage shot while stationed in the China Burma India (CBI) theater during World War II as the backdrop to an incredibly informative story. The vet whose interview I’m currently working on has a lilting Scottish accent and has me amazed by all he’s seen by the age of 18, first with the British Merchant Marines and then with the U.S. Navy in World War II.


Some vets whose videos I've worked on so far:

Morgan Russell Deane
Victor M. Shepherd, Jr.
Herbert Blasberg
David Alfred Murray


I will soon be helping out with video editing in addition to my work with the oral history interviews. This project is important and necessary, and has given me perspective from both a personal and professional standpoint. I never say never because I don't like unnecessarily limiting myself, and this project is definitely proof of that. There is value and chance to growth to be found just about anywhere if you only open yourself to it.

 

A Librarian in the Genealogy Department

Posted by lisaraney on July 19, 2012 at 3:50 PM Comments comments (0)

I've been in the Genealogy and Local History Department for about a month now. One thing I can say is that it keeps me on my toes: I have a variety of responsibilities which is something that I enjoy. Plus, we have at least three card catalogs in my department.


I have scheduled desk hours and scheduled hours in the Cincinnati Room. When I'm on desk, I'm answering phone and e-mail reference. I use electronic resources (databases and internet) and our extensive collection to answer genealogical and local history questions. And I really do use all of these. I’m finding myself going between our Ancestry Library database, Google, city directories, and running down in the stacks for yearbooks and other materials - often times in a single day.


The Cincinnati Room is where our Rare Books and Special Collection is housed. This role is more structured, as I follow standards and procedures for rare books and fetch items from our rare books when needed. Of course, sometimes patrons just come in to view our exhibits. Right now we have an exhibit on music competitions/choir games to accompany the World Choir Games. Exhibits are rotated quarterly, but the jewels of the room are the Audobon elephant folio and the panorama.


The panorama is a series of 8 daguerreotype photo plates taken of Cincinnati in 1848 by Charles Fontayne and William Porter. It underwent conservation work in 2006, and during the process the images were digitized. One of the things that impresses me most is that these images can be enlarged up to 32x its original size without losing their clarity. We have the original daguerreotype plates on display along with a touchscreen monitor where visitors can enlarge any part of the image. Reference librarians added points of interest to the image, which adds historical context. You can view it here, though some of the plates are much darker on the site.


My off-desk duties include assisting the librarian who is in charge of our library's contributions to the Veteran's History Project. I've been creating video logs of oral history interviews we've collected. I'm also in charge of checking in books to the collection and will soon be working with periodicals and serials.


Genealogy is a very interesting field, but a tough one because it takes a lot of curiousity, thoroughness, thoughtfulness, and persistence. This is important in all reference work, to be sure, but the sources used in genealogical work are not as cut and dry as a lot of other research. A lot of our collection isn't in the open stacks, some isn't in our catalog, and it's all over - literally. Some of the questions are easier than others (for i.e. "Can you scan and send me pages 401-402 from such-and-such book" v. "Can you tell me when my family moved or something else with this little information that I have?") A lot of what I've been doing is trying to rewire my brain to think of all the possible places something could be. There are a lot of inconsistencies due to human error, human flaw, some things indexed, some things not, some things we have and some things that other places have.

 

 

 

Alternatives in Print: A Review

Posted by lisaraney on July 13, 2012 at 12:20 AM Comments comments (0)

I've been having an ongoing conversation with another SRRT member about reviving the Alternative Media TaskForce as mentioned in my last post, and we've also been discussing the Alternatives in Print site made available earlier this year. He suggested that we look over the site and see if there are any areas might need to be improved, and the following is what I wrote him.

This is my first site review/critique so it is very informal. As a note, the site is very helpful if you are looking to diversify your collection. It is just a bit tedious to have to visit each individual publisher’s site as I've mentioned in my review:

Here are a few things I came up with when I was looking at the Alternatives in Print site. One thing that jumped out at me is that the searchability could be improved. Right now it appears it is only indexed by title and subject. When I search for a topic such as "anarchism", I am returned with presses that publish titles about this topic. From there, I have to go to each individual press's website to find materials about this topic. I think that it would improve usability tremendously to index the items based upon topic and include a keyword search that will retrieve individual items, though I realize that this would take a bit of time and manpower.


Under the "Front Matter" section of the site, information about the criteria for inclusion in the database is included - which I found particularly useful. It is important to note that AIP isn't balanced - books and titles are included for their political left bent ("for example, sustainable development, punk, social justice, gender studies, race relations, Third World studies, anarchism, or alternative globalization"). This whole section is pretty thorough if you haven't already looked at it. Although this is Alternatives in Print, I don't think it would hurt to include links to resources of Alternatives not in Print on the site (web resources and databases).

 

Print Trade Publications

Posted by lisaraney on June 18, 2012 at 7:45 PM Comments comments (0)



I was reading the new Information Outlook yesterday and while I was impressed by an article on embedded library services, I started to consider the relevance of print trade publications in the digital age. News updates in particular seem outmoded. They become outdated as soon as they are written, which are often months before the magazine goes to print. 


For instance: there is a bit in the May/Jun issue about the pressure on Harvard to embrace open access back in mid-April. Harvard did in fact embrace the open access model before the month was up, and I tweeted an article about it on April 24. Reading this news update in Information Outlook two months later is a blast from the past – but feels like it's something that happened 2 years ago instead of 2 months ago.


With technology enabling people to receive news at lightning speed, it beins to feel like IO and other print trade publications (and more than likely non-trade publications also) are lagging behind the times.


From another angle, perhaps IO includes these updates for those who may have overlooked key bits of news. In this case, it would be helpful for the editor to include an update. I am assuming by the print trade magazine model that readers will have to wait until the next issue - in August - to hear about Harvard's commitment to open access.

I'd love to hear some more thoughts on this. 


photo credit: me, edited in instagram photo app.

General Updates

Posted by lisaraney on June 18, 2012 at 7:30 PM Comments comments (0)



Hello world! My apologies for the lack of updates the past few months. I have finished out my Homework Help Aide position for the school year, have been interviewing a lot, and have been helping my best friend plan her wedding (which is just two weeks away!). 


My big news is that I will be starting a new position in a week. I’m very happy to be staying with the library system I have been with since last year – but will now be working with genealogy and local history collections. The position is right up my alley, owing to my undergraduate degree in history, experience working with archival collections, and experience conducting genealogical research in my free time. I’m excited about the opportunities for collaboration with other departments and organizations throughout the city, special projects (the big one is the Veterans History Project), and increased responsibility that come with this position. I’ve also been hearing great things about the department as a whole and look forward to writing more about this position and projects in the near future.


I have been focusing a lot on my career and professional interests lately. I left my weekend retail position in order to look for a part-time job where I can utilize my reference and research skills since my new position in genealogy and local history is part-time. I started volunteering for Radical Reference, and am working with another SRRT member in an effort to resurrect the now-defunct Alternative Media Task Force. I won’t be able to make it to ALA Annual due to the aforementioned wedding, but will be at Midwinter 2013 in Seattle. It is my hope to have something for AMTF planned for MW13. 


I’ve taken a much-needed “staycation” this past week aside from wedding-related outings. This has consisted of doing some of my favorite things: catching up on reading, cooking, yoga, jogging, painting, playing guitar, and spending time with friends and family. My next projects to tackle are working on my portfolio, adding more projects to this site, and compiling information on best practices in reference services – especially applying critical theory to information services.


photo credit: me, edited in instagram photo app.

Day in the Life

Posted by lisaraney on February 25, 2012 at 2:50 PM Comments comments (0)

This past week was a fantastic work week, with Thursday being the icing on the proverbial cake. Because there are so many different roles a librarian plays, no day is ever the same. I find this to be especially true in public libraries.

Some background: I have my MLS, but currently work 3-hourshifts in a literacy outreach position with children. I help with homework,interact with the children through educational and fun games, pose a question each Thursday for discussion and/or written reflection, and assist the Children’s Librarian with weekly programming. Since I am embedded within the children’s space in the library, I often get pulled away by library patrons and will help them with reference questions if I am not working with a student. There's a lot of flux in this position, but it’s something that keeps me on my toes and allows me to interact with the community. It also gives me unique insights into the user experience.

 

On Thursday, I started my shift by chatting with two of my regulars who were already sitting at my regular table when I walked in. One of them showed me her report card, and I noted that she had brought her grades up in two classes and is now rocking all A’s with the exception of a B in Music. They left soon after, and from there I assisted a child with the Early Literacy Station.Because there were no children in my area other than the one on the ELS, I decided to do a quick sweep of the library and found a student who needed help with math. We read over the instructions and went over the example problem a few times. From there we walked her through a few problems until she started to get a hang of them (V=Bh).

 

After that, I returned to the children’s area and started a student on a Spiderman jigsaw puzzle. I checked up on the girls with their homework (math finished, science not), and waved goodbye to one of my regulars as she left for the day.

 

I was pulled away to help a child find and unlock the bathroom. When he came back up, I spoke with his mother and discovered that he had homework that he needed help with. It was a double-sided worksheet on which he had to circle triangles and circles. When we finished the homework, we started working on the Spiderman puzzle that the child I had worked with earlier hadn’t had time to finish.

 

Another boy joined us. He was focused on cutting out and assembling a paper bus, which he later gave me as a present. The three of us chatted and discussed my Thursday question of the day.

 

I spent the good part of the next hour going back and forth between helping the boy with his jigsaw puzzle and his brother who was using the Early Literacy Station, helping him close out of games and providing instruction on maneuvering the mouse.

 

That made up the rest of my afternoon - except for when I assisted the boy who had earlier been cutting out buses. He needed help on the computers, too.

 

Somewhere in those three hours, I had the opportunity to meet one of my regular student’s older sisters, had brief conversations with library patrons and co-workers, and read an Encyclopedia article about cephalopods.

 


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