staff - Public Libraries Online https://publiclibrariesonline.org A Publication of the Public Library Association Wed, 27 Jul 2016 18:22:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.5 I’m Not Actually a Librarian: Human Resources Director https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2016/07/im-not-actually-a-librarian-human-resources-director/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=im-not-actually-a-librarian-human-resources-director https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2016/07/im-not-actually-a-librarian-human-resources-director/#respond Wed, 27 Jul 2016 17:06:30 +0000 http://publiclibrariesonline.org/?p=9875 Ever stop to think about what a “human resource” really is? Your library runs on them! And it’s the human resources director’s job to negotiate the tricky task of keeping all employees, managers, and the government happy with each other.

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Ever stop to think about what a “human resource” really is? Your library runs on them! And it’s the human resources director’s job to negotiate the tricky task of keeping all employees, managers, and the government happy with each other. From the moment you start working at the library until years after you’ve parted ways, your human resources director makes sure your job goes smoothly so you can concentrate on your public. Here’s how:

Hiring

Whether your library has its own human resources office or goes through your local government, finding the right employees is the one of the most important building blocks of a good library system. Human resource directors are in charge of not only advertising open positions and overseeing the application process but also discussing and negotiating the best hiring practices for the general system. Is your library going through hierarchy shakeups, rapid expansions, a wave of retirements? The human resources director works with upper management to negotiate the right solutions and coverage for upcoming changes.

Salary and benefits

If you enjoy pay raises and health insurance, thank your human resources director. Each year they research the best-case scenarios your library can afford: They perform salary studies of libraries of similar size and ranking, stay updated on your third-party insurance company for any hikes in price or changes in coverage, find more perks to share with all employees, and keep your best interest in mind way beyond your open enrollment period.

Government regulations and library policies

The human resources director acts as advisor, instigator, and administrator for any changes he or she sees need to be enacted in the library. The Affordable Care Act, for example, has gone through hundreds of changes both big and small—but all significant—since being signed into law. Your human resources director tracks each nuance and how it applies to your library so you don’t have to. They bring the same level of attention to detail to every bit of legislation that’s used to regulate your part of the employee industry, including whatever notice, paperwork, and permissions are legally needed. Library policies also fall under this scrutiny. Any changes to how your library works goes through the human resources director to make sure it’s airtight, legal, and exactly how the library wants to operate.

Employee relations

We realize that 98 percent of your coworkers are awesome and you wouldn’t part with nine out of ten them. Right? Well, for those 2 percent or one out of ten who rub you or the public the wrong way, don’t get along with their supervisor, or act as antagonists instead of the model public servants your library needs, the human resources director has you covered. They know how generous to be with second chances, how to coach supervisors on molding major changes in an employee, and when it’s time, legally and professionally, to let someone go. They are there to cushion the blow of leaving staff, referee interpersonal conflict, and make sense of hiring and discrimination regulations.

Human resources directors may seem out of touch, behind the scenes of everyday life facing the public, but trust us—they have your, and all your coworkers’, backs.

Follow me on Twitter! @BookStaxxMG

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FEATURE|Give Staff a Break this Summer https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2016/05/featuregive-staff-a-break-this-summer/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=featuregive-staff-a-break-this-summer https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2016/05/featuregive-staff-a-break-this-summer/#respond Wed, 18 May 2016 16:55:01 +0000 http://publiclibrariesonline.org/?p=9154 Incorporate Seasonal Employees and Volunteers for Efficient Library Staffing

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About the Authors
JESSICA LINK is Volunteer Coordinator and CHRISTINA RIEDEL is Downtown Branch Supervisor at Cedar Rapids (IA) Public Library. Contact Jessica at linkj@crlibrary.org. Contact Christina at riedelc@crlibrary.org. Jessica is currently reading The BFG by Roald Dahl and A God in Ruins by Kate Atkinson. Christina is currently reading The Third Wave: A Volunteer Story by Alison Thompson and Just Being Audrey by Margaret Cardillo.

Originally published in Mar/Apr 2016, PUBLIC  LIBRARIES,  VOLUME 55, NUMBER 2.


Jessica is currently reading The BFG by Roald Dahl and A God in Ruins by Kate Atkinson. Christina is currently reading The Third Wave: A Volunteer Story by Alison Thompson and Just Being Audrey by Margaret Cardillo.

For public service staff, summers at the library are both exhilarating and exhausting. The increased demand for library services coupled with the excitement of the summer reading program are a welcome reassurance that libraries are still active hubs for literacy, lifelong learning, and community connections. However, with limited staffing budgets, libraries find their staffs stretched thinner than ever during the busy summer seasons.

In summer 2014, the Cedar Rapids (IA) Public Library (CRPL) an­ticipated this stretch of staffing resources more acutely than ever before. That May, CRPL was operating 94,000 more square feet than the previous summer after reopening its main facility follow­ing a devastating flood in 2008. Having also opened a full-service branch on the growing west side of the city, the library doubled its operational hours to two 68-hour facilities. With the addition of only thirty-five new part-time employees totaling 665 staffing hours, the library needed to implement a new staffing model to meet the demands of the library’s first summer in its new home.

Two new sources of human capital were developed to supple­ment the library’s traditional staff: (1) seasonal employees (seasonals) and (2) volunteers. Goals for the new staffing model were to alleviate the burden on staff, enhance the organization’s capacity to connect with the community, and expand outreach opportunities.

The following outlines how the library identified seasonal and volunteer roles, developed hiring and training processes, engaged community volunteers in new programs, and provided existing staff with training to facilitate a smooth adoption of the new staffing model.

Incorporate Seasonals: The Right Dose of Help at the Right Time

The specific purpose for the development of the temporary seasonal position was to decrease excessive demands on public service staff and provide additional programming support during the busy summer season. By working openly with the library’s union steward, library management was able to facilitate a shared understanding that these temporary roles would provide better fiscal solvency to protect funding for traditional, year-round library positions. The union steward also helped library management address limitations on tasks that the union felt would not be acceptable for seasonals to perform. This collabora­tive process expedited the implementation of seasonals while preventing grievances and adhering to the spirit of the union contract.

FEAT_link_riedel_image1

Two seasonals and a volunteer work alongside two traditional staff members to assist customers at CPRL’s summer reading kickoff party in May 2015. Seasonals and volunteers provided approximately 20 percent of the library workforce each week in the summer of 2015. (Photo by Cedqar Rapids Public Library)

FEAT_link_riedel_fig1

Figure 1. Using the week of June 14-20, 2015 as an example, the chart below shows the number of hours worked and percent of the total workforce hours by CSAs, shelvers, seasonals, and volunteers at CPRL.

As a department within the City of Cedar Rapids’ local govern­ment, CRPL utilized a similar seasonal employee structure as their peers in the parks and recreation department. The positions were hourly, non-benefited roles and were not included in the library’s union. In 2015, the cost per hour for a seasonal employee was $8.25. The average cost of a traditional public service employee was $23.46 per hour (the cost of a full-time, benefited customer service associate (CSA) averaged with a part-time, non-benefited shelver). From a cost-savings perspective, this saved the library more than $43,800 in staffing expenses in the summer of 2015.

Determine Library Needs with Staff Input

Staff from all departments conducted a needs assessment to determine which summer-based tasks would benefit from additional seasonal assistance. This process of identifying library needs was critical in establishing staff support for working with the new seasonal staff.

Staff identified such core work compo­nents as helping with library events and programs; staffing the summer reading registration desk; providing logistical assistance and supervision to external customers utilizing library spaces (e.g., weddings, graduation parties, fund­raisers); assisting staff with outreach programs; shelving media and children’s materials; providing general customer assistance such as giving directional infor­mation, helping customers use the self-check stations, and assisting customers with basic catalogue searches. Seasonals did not have access to the library’s ILS system. This limitation helped allay staff concerns about customer confidentially and data integrity.

In year one, the library hired five sea­sonals that could work up to forty hours per week. At the end of the summer, it was determined that the library had too many seasonal positions and most were not working the full forty-hour schedule. In the following year, the library reduced the number of seasonal positions to four. All seasonals worked nearly full-time over the course of the summer. Adapting the hours of seasonals on a summer-by-summer basis—and even a weekly basis within the course of the summer—provided the li­brary with a level of flexibility that was not easily managed through a more traditional staffing model in a unionized environment.

Consider Employee Traits, Timelines, and Training for Successful Onboarding

Key characteristics sought in applicants included schedule flexibility, ability to adapt to a wide variety of duties, and personal initiative. The library has had considerable success hiring seasonals that work within a school system during the academic year. These seasonals quickly and capably related to all age groups and worked exceptionally well with youth. They also successfully worked indepen­dently, freeing up staff for other work and minimizing the need for constant supervision. Mature teens and collegiate students on summer break have also been reliable, hardworking seasonals.

Seasonal positions were posted with an “open until filled” end date. This al­lowed the library to continue to gather applicants after positions had been filled—a tactic that proved useful in year one when a seasonal left employment early in the summer and the library was able to quickly backfill the position from a pool of applicants.

The hiring timeline included a two-week training period for orientation and training as well as hands-on learning. Acknowledging that the library learn­ing curve is steep and that working with the public creates many unexpected scenarios, training focused on educating seasonals on how to access resources when challenges presented themselves: asking fellow staff members or referenc­ing manuals, posters, or cheat sheets. Trainers encouraged seasonals to seek support, thus alleviating concerns that they had to “know it all” for a temporary role with a limited training period.

Engage Volunteers: Community Partners with Purpose

For some libraries, incorporating commu­nity volunteers into their summer reading program might be standard practice. For CRPL in 2014, however, this represented a cultural revolution and a seismic opera­tional shift.

After a twenty-year hiatus, the library’s volunteer program was launched in the spring of 2013. In its first year, the volunteer program successfully brought on more than 180 volunteers in many different operational roles. Staff quickly embraced volunteers stuffing summer reading prize envelopes and counting heads at programs, but concerns were still prevalent that volunteers shouldn’t provide direct customer service.

In the summer of 2014, the library began partnering with community vol­unteers to provide customer service in support of the library’s summer reading program. These new volunteer roles have focused on three areas: program promo­tion, the summer reading registration table, and summer meals outreach.

Volunteers Promote Summer Reading in Schools

A common concern at CRPL was the lack of resources to promote the library’s sum­mer reading program in schools. Recog­nizing staffing limitations and opting to approach the challenge from a different angle, the library responded to the need by tapping into short-term, project-based volunteers.

FEAT_link_riedel_image2

Volunteers promote the library’s summer reading program at an elementary school. Volunteers presented information about the library to over 3,900 students as part of Day of Caring in May 2015. (Photo by Cedar Rapids Public Library)

The catalyst for the project was the community’s existing United Way Day of Caring, an annual event that connects local corporate employee volunteers to nonprofit agencies in one-day service projects. Through Day of Caring, the library recruited and trained corporate volunteers to present a short skit and deliver summer reading promotional materials to area schools. In May 2015, twenty-four volunteers visited more than 3,900 students in eleven schools. Since its inception in 2013, the Day of Caring summer reading outreach project has made it possible for the library to promote its summer reading program to more than 9,000 students in a fun, interactive way.

Volunteers Lead the Summer Reading Registration Table

Historically, the summer reading regis­tration table was staffed entirely by paid library employees. In the summer of 2014, volunteers covered the desk a total of 181 hours each week. This translated into a savings of more than $4,600 per week compared to the prior year (based on the cost of a full-time, benefited CSA averaged with a part-time, non-benefited CSA). Additionally, this allowed the library to reallocate these highly trained staff members to provide more customer service in other areas. This transforma­tional shift in the library’s staffing model was made possible due to three main ar­eas of support: (1) partnerships, (2) effec­tive volunteer training, and (3) dedicated resources to volunteer management.

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A volunteer registers customers for the 2015 summer reading program. (Photo by Cedar Rapds Public Library)

Cultivate Strategic Partnerships

In its first summer working with volun­teers CRPL developed partnerships with the Foster Grandparent Program and the AARP Senior Community Service Employ­ment Program to work with dedicated older adult volunteers. These volunteers were the foundation of the library’s new volunteer role at the summer reading registration table. They quickly demon­strated to staff that they were a reliable workforce, capable representatives of the library’s values, and passionate about engaging young readers. Culturally, these partnerships led the way to thoughtfully expanding volunteer roles in providing direct customer service.

Develop Effective Training

As a short-term, summer-only volunteer opportunity, the summer reading reg­istration table was an ideal fit for youth volunteers, educators on summer break, families looking to volunteer together, and collegiate students. However, given the short timeframe of the opportu­nity, the onboarding process for these volunteers had to be quick and efficient to maximize their gift of time and promptly meet the library’s immediate needs. Volunteers needed to understand the library’s overall philosophy in working with the community, the structure of the summer reading program, the basics of good customer service, how to trans­fer customers to staff, and how to use the technology required for the online summer reading program registration process.

The library utilized its existing bimonthly new volunteer orientation to provide volunteers with the basics of library operations, values, customer service skills, and team expectations. Additionally, staff developed training for the summer reading registration desk volunteer role that (1) outlined the pur­pose and structure of the summer reading program, (2) trained volunteers on how to register participants and update their reading progress, (3) provided hands-on practice sessions in the registration software with test-participant data, and (4) answered frequently asked questions from customers about the program. With several trainers and flexible staffing, train­ings were booked as frequently as needed and included multiple new volunteers per session. This made for a swift onboard­ing process for new volunteers during the busy summer schedule.

Invest Resources in Volunteer Management

Cultivating partnerships and onboard­ing new volunteers takes time. Since developing the volunteer program in 2013, CRPL has strategically dedicated resources to volunteer management in­cluding a full-time volunteer coordinator and a part-time administrative assistant. The return on this investment per week in the summer reading registration table volunteer role alone was 181 volunteer hours for fifty-nine staff hours in 2014.

Understandably not every library can staff a volunteer program to this level, but identifying a point person (staff or volun­teer) to cultivate community partnerships and manage the process of bringing on new volunteers will have a significant return on the time invested.

Volunteers Run Summer Meals Outreach Program

In addition to supporting the library’s tra­ditional summer programming, volunteers also made possible the launch of a new summer outreach program in 2015. In partnership with other local organizations hosting a free children’s lunch program, the library developed a pilot outreach pro­gram to take its resources to children with barriers to accessing the library.

Led by the library’s AmeriCorps VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) member, five volunteers brought books and LeapPad tablets over a twelve-week period to a community center that served a free lunch to neighborhood children. More than 290 children received over 440 books donated by the Friends of the Cedar Rapids Public Library and used more than 4,350 minutes of tablet time at the off-site location.

A survey of children participating in the program reported that

  • 52 percent did not have a library card;
  • 88 percent were not registered for any summer reading program; and
  • 81 percent did not participate in any other library programs outside of the summer meals outreach program.

Barriers existed on both sides of the equation for these children; they couldn’t get to the library and the library’s staffing limitations prevented the development of new outreach opportunities. Due to the expansion of library outreach by the VISTA member and the volunteers, these children were able to access many of the library’s resources in their own neighborhood with essentially no additional library costs.

Support Staff—Build on a Strong Foundation

Since opening two new facilities in 2013, the library had strategically realigned its staffing resources for more effective scheduling based on circulation statis­tics, door counts, program attendance, and computer usage statistics. Through automation and streamlined processes, the library had already implemented efficiencies to better balance task-based operational duties and provide active customer service. Many of these prior adaptations also led to the successful ad­dition of seasonals and volunteers.

Create a Flexible Staff with Cross Training

CSAs are the majority of the library’s public service staff. The CSA role is a generalist position and covers all library depart­ments and service desks, back of house duties, phone service, and programming at both locations. By cross training CSAs, the library developed a flexible pool of resources to accommodate shifting needs within all departments at each library. This allowed for more rotation during shifts which gave staff variety in their work day and opportunities to work both behind the scenes and with the public. The general­ized workforce fostered an inclusive, team-focused working environment that shared knowledge, resources, and job duties—a prime environment for incorporating new seasonal and volunteer roles.

Facilitate Consistent Training for New and Existing Staff

Over the course of three months in 2013, the library added thirty-five new em­ployees to its thirty-three existing public service employees. The experienced staff played a key role in designing and deliver­ing a robust training program. Addition­ally, trainings were developed for existing staff to accommodate new facilities and processes as well as reinforce consistent training across the organization.

In 2013, the library developed a new training program with several modules and training checklists. The trainings in­cluded a refresher on standard processes and procedures; an overview of core competency requirements; and messag­ing about the library’s mission, vision, and values. A variety of training methods were employed including self-guided reading, informal check-ins with trainers, formal training sessions, and hands-on practice.

A critical component of the trainings was the creation of staff experts known as mentors. These experts received in-depth training on targeted areas of library service including library card making, processing incomplete materials, meeting room reservations, and so forth. Mentors then led individualized trainings for new hires and refresher group trainings for ex­isting staff. This promoted staff leadership and created a team of experts that could assist new staff with unexpected ques­tions in real time on the service floor.

The consistent training model ensured that staff at all levels understood the library’s processes and culture, and enhanced a peer-supported atmosphere. In turn, volunteers and seasonals ben­efited from the staff’s overall uniformity in answering questions and modeling the organization’s culture.

Communicate New Roles and Responsibilities

As the library added seasonals and volun­teers to its traditional staffing structure, it was crucial to outline and communicate the roles and responsibilities of these new team members. Job descriptions and duties lists were developed and shared for each volunteer role and for the seasonal positions. Information about these new positions, along with a summary of the summer reading program and related events, were presented to staff in various trainings, meetings, and written com­munications. This set the stage for the new staff hired in the fall of 2013, many of whom had not worked at a library before nor experienced the crunch of a summer schedule at the library. These trainings also allowed staff to ask questions and gave library leaders the opportunity to address concerns.

In 2015, based on feedback from the previous year, library leadership used multiple means of communication to address any overarching questions from the first year of the new staffing model. Primarily, traditional staff questioned what volunteers and seasonals were to do during less busy times of their shifts. For seasonals, a poster outlining differ­ent tasks that could be completed during slower shifts was posted in staff areas. For volunteers, training was provided to both staff and volunteers that detailed what was and was not permissible at the summer reading registration desk when volunteers were not helping custom­ers. Explanations were given to help all parties understand why there were differences in expectations for volunteers versus for staff: length of service and shifts, cross-training limitations, primary focus of duties, and physical limitations. This clarification of volunteer roles and the reasoning behind them helped better communicate expectations and guide­lines to both volunteers and library staff.

Conclusion

Over years, the tremendous stretch of the library’s diminishing staffing resources during its busy summer season had resulted in an increased demand on per­sonnel. Since integrating volunteers and seasonals with the library’s skilled staff, CRPL has cultivated a better balance for staff during its peak season, thus empow­ering the entire workforce to stay more energized and evenly engaged through­out the year.

Library leadership has been transpar­ent with traditional staff that the intent of the new staffing model is to supplement its professional staff during the library’s summer season. While not a replacement for professionally trained and compen­sated staff, volunteers and seasonals are a creative and resourceful way to economi­cally and effectively provide additional assistance to staff and customers. The strategically aligned work of CRPL’s staff, seasonals, and volunteers has enhanced the organization’s ability to make connec­tions with the community and expanded library services to children with barriers to accessing its facilities.

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Leaks or Bursts: Managing Feelings in Workplace Communication https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2015/10/leaks-or-bursts-managing-feelings-in-workplace-communication/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=leaks-or-bursts-managing-feelings-in-workplace-communication https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2015/10/leaks-or-bursts-managing-feelings-in-workplace-communication/#respond Tue, 06 Oct 2015 18:48:30 +0000 http://publiclibrariesonline.org/?p=7113 In this post (the second in a series) I am focusing on communication via the book Difficult Conversations: How to […]

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In this post (the second in a series) I am focusing on communication via the book Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss what Matters Most  by Stone, Patton, and Heen. The authors do an incredible job of breaking down the elements of difficult conversations and offer some very practical steps on how to approach all types of conversations. I will focus on Chapter 5: “Have Your Feelings (Or They Will Have You).” I should admit I chose this topic to purposely challenge myself. The Feelings Conversation is not an easy one to have. Talking about feelings while I’m supposed to be working goes against my nature. This book helps.

Leaks or Bursts
Feelings are going to come out whether they leak out or burst forward. Some of us keep feelings inside and they leak out in other ways. Some can’t help but burst with emotion at times, which isn’t always helpful. The Feelings Conversation is designed to prevent the leaks and the bursts. By following the techniques, you will find value in examining, assessing, and expressing your emotions.

Scenario:
You’re talking to a direct report about a change in procedure. This change will help save time and money, but your direct report isn’t into it. Instead of talking about the feelings behind the conversation you walk away. Now you’re annoyed your colleague doesn’t want to change and your co-worker’s annoyed you don’t care about her point of view. While we can easily focus on the business side of this–you want the change and you know it will work out–we have to change our focus in order to help the organization.

What’s the worst could happen? So, I hold in my emotions. Who cares? The pitfalls of holding your feelings in are:

  • detachment from coworkers
  • tension throughout the workplace
  •  aggression in tone, body language
  • hindrance of your ability to listen
  • misdirected aggression can be perceived as sarcasm

What’s the best that could happen? You begin to create a culture where feelings are expressed without judgement. BUT you can’t just start going around dishing it all out all the time. Follow these steps:

Sort out your feelings  (Protip – Use a feelings inventory to help).

  • Accept that feelings are normal and natural and everyone has them (this can be very hard for some)
  • Don’t be a speedbump, allowing other people’s feelings to always go before yours
  • This is about you, and shouldn’t be a blame game

Negotiate with your feelings (my favorite part!) (Protip – The authors compare this to walking around your feelings as if they are sculptures in a museum.)

  • Your feelings follow your thoughts, so be clear on what you are thinking and why.
  • Ask some questions: What is my story missing? What is another explanation? What is motivating me? How did I contribute to the situation

Describe the feelings (Protip – Start a lot of conversations with “I feel”)

  • Hopefully, negotiations went well and now you can talk about your feelings in the context of the problem/situation
  • Establish a judgement free zone – don’t evaluate each other’s feelings!

Stone, Patton, and Heen end the chapter by talking about acknowledgement which is an important concept – read the chapter for more information!

More Resources:

Needs inventory: https://www.cnvc.org/sites/default/files/feelings_inventory_0.pdf

Free course on emotional intelligence at Coursera: https://www.coursera.org/course/lead-ei

Stone, Patton, & Heen (2010). Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss what Matters Most. Penguin Books.

 

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Thousands Enjoy Public Library Stories https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2015/08/thousand-enjoy-public-library-stories/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=thousand-enjoy-public-library-stories https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2015/08/thousand-enjoy-public-library-stories/#respond Mon, 10 Aug 2015 21:21:51 +0000 http://publiclibrariesonline.org/?p=6809 If you’re looking for a place to read and share great library stories, Gina Sheridan has you covered with her Tumblr, I work at a public library.

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Have you ever had a person in your library act so strange, you could barely believe it? Or a person who said something so nice it left you smiling for the rest of the day? If you’ve ever found yourself wanting to share a weird, funny, or sweet story about your library with everyone you know, there’s a Tumblr for that – I work at a public library.

I work at a public library was started by librarian Gina Sheridan in 2010 as a way to remember and share the interesting encounters she had at her library. Before long, she had shared the blog with other librarians who in turn shared their own stories to add to the site. Now thousands of readers, from librarians to library lovers, read and share these stories on Tumblr.

Posts to the site are filed, in true librarian fashion, into various categories based on the Dewey Decimal System, including “028.9 Reading Interests and Habits,” “302.2 Miscommunication,” “745.5 Found Objects,” and “808.879083 Children’s Humor.”

Recent submissions have included humorous word mix-ups:

Same, Not the

Patron: I need books on gynecology.

I begin to walk to the section.

Patron: Yeah, I really want to know about my ancestors.

I quickly change course.”[1]

And adorable children:

Blues, Library

A little girl was taking her time picking out books when suddenly she sighed heavily.

Girl: Coming to the library makes me sad.

Me: Oh dear! Why does it make you sad?!

Girl: Because it reminds me of school and school is out and I miss it terribly.”[2]

Sheridan says that I work at a public library gets about ten story submissions per week, some of which go up right away if they catch her interest. Not every story makes it to the site, though; Sheridan works to give the blog the right tone.  “I work at a public library isn’t about making fun of people or venting about work. It’s meant to be an objective celebration of the mundane–a reminder to stop and observe the weird and wonderful things that happen every day in a place where everyone is welcome,” Sheridan said.[3]

I work at a public library book

Fans of the site can also find great library stories in print in Sheridan’s 2014 book I Work at a Public Library: A Collection of Crazy Stories from the Stacks, which features some popular stories from the Tumblr blog but is comprised primarily of book-exclusive stories from Sheridan’s library life.

Sources:

[1] I Work at a Public Library. Accessed July 10, 2015. http://iworkatapubliclibrary.com/.

[2] ibid.

[3] Sheridan, Gina. E-mail interview by author. July 10, 2015.

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