Thing 3 - This is a little but more difficult than the last task.
I wouldn't have given much thought to having a professional brand before now.
I did set up a LinkedIn profile a few years ago but never really used it.
I have resurrected it and added a few more details to it today.
I suppose I thought it would only be useful if you were looking for job but it seems it has other uses too such as networking and keeping up to date with what other people are doing in their workplaces and what kinds of continuing professional development others are doing.
I had a look at about.com as well but I think keeping one profile up to date is enough for my needs at the moment.
Monday, 27 July 2015
Monday, 20 July 2015
Thing 2 Why I became a librarian
When I think back about what made be decide to become a
librarian, it is hard to pick an exact reason or moment.
I wasn’t a person who always wanted to become a librarian. I
was someone who never really knew what they wanted! ‘I don’t know’ was always
the answer when people asked me what I wanted to do when I finished school.
I knew I liked reading, languages, geography and felt that
maths and science subjects were more of a challenge for me. I managed to cut
out lots of career options by trying to avoid those that involved maths and
science!
During my Leaving Cert year I did a lot of thinking about
what I would do after school and what course would be a good course, an
enjoyable one and also one in a field that I could see myself working in for the rest of
my life.
At the time, I had no concept of changing career throughout
your life, I had this idea that you picked something and stuck with it. So as a
result I couldn’t make my mind up, I felt I was too indecisive and couldn’t
possibly pick a definite course, so I put Arts down on my CAO form. Firstly, I
knew that this way I could continue to study subjects I liked at school such as
Geography, and secondly it would buy me some time to make my final decision
whilst still earning a degree.
It was while I was picking my subjects for Arts in the first
week of college in UCD that I first heard of the subject ‘Information Studies’. This was a ‘shopping around’ week where you
could go to lectures in all subjects until you decided what you wanted to do. Up
until then, I had given no consideration as to what course you would need to do
in order to become a librarian.
I remember the lecturers in the first week talking about
information society, the internet (it had not at this stage become the part of
everyday life it is today!) organising information and presentation of
information and I liked the sound of it,
I thought that this was something I would like to study.
Further into the course, the lecturers mentioned that
information studies was a branch of library science and I began to think about
it as a career option.
I thought about when I was child, one of my pastimes was
reading, my mother brought me to the local library every week as a child. I have great memories of babysitter club book and children's' crafts and cookery books. I read quite a lot, I liked English in school as well and
I always had a thirst for learning. I also felt that I was always one of those
people who ended up helping everyone with their homework and essays and felt I
had the patience to be a librarian! I decided that this would be a good fit for
me. I got some experience in a college library before embarking on the MLIS, which I really enjoyed. I knew then that I would liked working in library/information environment.
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