Getting older, better

I was delighted to find out that I have been named one of the 2013 cohort of LMU’s Senior Vice President Fellows Program. It’s designed to let us “explore how leaders in colleges and universities exercise constructive influence to help institutions achieve their mission and goals.” I’m in a group of five fellows, and paired with our Senior VP mentors, we total ten. We’ll be meeting and traveling together throughout the year, reading quite a bit. There are a couple of mini-retreats each month, with themes like “inclusive colleges and universities,” “leadership epistemology.” I’m honored to be part of this group and will enjoy working with my mentor, the university’s CFO. I’ll be doing this in addition to my regular duties at the library. Time management, FTW!

At my eye exam yesterday I mentioned that I’ve started to hold my phone at a little bit of a distance now when I text, so I was instructed to get a pair of glasses to use when I read (“cheaters”). That should really come in handy with all the reading I’m about to embark on with this fellowship program. Our first mini-retreat is at the end of January; required reading is four articles and two book chapters.

"cheaters"

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staying current without being overwhelmed: my approach to reading the library literature

RSS has enabled me to read more widely than ever, allowing me to view tables of contents of all different kinds of scholarly journals and blogs. i’ve added a bunch to my RSS feeds about management and leadership in the last couple years, as i begin to think about my future place in librarianship. this delightful technology has allowed me to fill my google reader account with more than fifty feeds that i’ve organized into a folder titled “scholarship.” life gets busy, you know, and i’ll sometimes look at my google reader and there will be hundreds of entries waiting to be read. it’s overwhelming. “declaring RSS bankruptcy” is a real thing, and i’ve been prompted more than once to click on “mark all as read,” and just wait for the google reader to fill up all over again. that approach is pretty common, i’d guess, and it doesn’t really help me stay on top of what i really want to be informed about. i’ve created a little cheater folder to help myself.

i titled a new folder called ” * MUST READ scholarship” and put the ten RSS feeds for journals/blogs i can’t live without into that folder. because the folder title begins with an asterisk it is the very top folder in my google reader, which means i see it first when i go into the reader. if there’s content there, i read it and feel like i’m current with what i absolutely want to know about. if i have time then i’ll head over to my regular “scholarship” folder and read through the other forty or so journals/blogs.

it’s a small thing, for sure, but it’s really helped me manage what was quickly becoming a depressing situation.

if you have tips/tricks for how you manage the wealth of literature reading possibilities, please share in a comment.

Posted in articles i'm reading, organization tips | 6 Comments

Monkey Day 2012

Monkey Day comic strip

Since one can celebrate Monkey Day however she wishes, you may want to consider celebrating by organizing your office! Giving gifts is also nice; I hear that monkeys who work in libraries especially like chocolates.

See my previous Monkey Day celebrations: 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008, 2007.

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@IkeaMonkey

Yep, he’s for real and he’s adorable: @IkeaMonkey

ikea monkey

http://www.thestar.com/news/gta/crime/article/1299804–monkey-found-on-the-loose-at-north-york-ikea-store

UPDATE 12/10/2012: memes collide at http://www.buzzfeed.com/lyapalater/everything-you-need-to-know-about-the-ikea-monkey

 

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fog on the bluff

Loyola Marymount University sits up on a bluff near the ocean, permitting beautiful views of the basin of Los Angeles. Since it’s so close to the ocean we often get fog in the morning and wind in the afternoon. Here’s a couple pictures of our foggy morning today.

The William H. Hannon Library:

library in morning fog

A shot from the library, of Palm Walk:

Palm Walk

See some of my other Instagram photos at http://instagram.com/orgmonkey or on flickr at http://www.flickr.com/photos/orgmonkey/.

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known problems with e-resources/e-services, no longer a secret

in an effort to be more proactively communicative about e-resources and e-services with our library patrons we have moved the previously password-protected contents of our internal wiki page, “technology issues/updates (databases)” to a publicly-available website, http://library.lmu.edu/gethelp/e-resourceknownproblems/. there aren’t many issues, which is fabulous, and the assistant to our systems librarian will update the hand-coded html page for us. win-win!

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