Clickers:
http://www.vanderbilt.edu/cft
http://www.educause.edu/ir
http://www.qwizdom.com/ (The Q4 specifically)
Coverage of the annual conference of the Massachusetts Library Association
http://www.vanderbilt.edu/cft
http://www.educause.edu/ir
http://www.qwizdom.com/ (The Q4 specifically)
DEFINING NEGOTIATION
Interesting statement from Sullivan: "It's only been in the last five years that I have started to see staffs in libraries as a team, really focused on service to the constituency."
This observation seemed extremely important. Seems that libraries need to work as teams more than they did in the past, since it is less likely to have departments doing individual tasks.
Sullivan recommended that "Behavior that happens outside of the group is harmful to the team and should be addressed. Outside conversation against the team is behavior that is harmful to the group. "
Sometimes we just "accept that we disagree" but sometimes we need to understandthe underlying causes of disagreement.
Conflict and How to Deal Constructively with it:
Steps to Constructive Resolution of Conflict:
1. Focus on the issue, not the personalities.
2. Avoid blaming and pointing fingers.
3. Manage your emotions.
4. Use empathy to understand the other party's position.
5. Take the time required to work through the issue.
Thoughts from Sullivan: "We need more play in our libraries."
"Pose the question in your library: What are we here together to do?"
"In a team, the synergy, becomes a way of working together."
"Collaborative comes out of the meaning of co-labor, working together."
"Where am I spending my time, where are you putting your effort?"
"We have a basic need to connect to other humans."
The group took some time to consider what they want to negotiate in the future.
Final thoughts:
There needs to be a place to communicate.
"Email can ruin your day." It is important to use it as a tool for facts and try to avoid emotion.
Face to face conversation is important.
If we do use email. Stop, read, and edit.
Ex: "Reference upstairs and Children's Room upstairs sharing the computer facilities is an important issue." This is a situation with which many can identify and perhaps negotiate.
This was a very valuable session and an important skill for library leaders, but the also provided a good list of suggestions for librarians, useful in many situations.
Katie pushed the group to not think sequentially as left-brainers. If we're going to survive as part of the movement out of information age into the realm of creativity - how can we get beyond describing ourselves in ordered, sequential terms? More responses:
One of the six senses Pink defines as integral to the Conceptual Age is Empathy. (Others are Design, Story, Symphony, Play and Meaning.)
Are we perceived by our users as empathetic? How about the librarian action figure? Why did we embrace it? Because of the irony of it or because it's true?
Is empathy different from warm and fuzzy?
Where are we as supporters of the quest? How are we going to redesign our spaces to articulate what we really do?
Dr. Lesley Farmer, California State University
Teens' Information-Seeking Behavior
Choosing Web Sites According to Teens
YA Internet Truisms
What is Reference Service to a Teen?
What Teens Want
Co-constructing with Teen Brains
Using the Whole New Mind
Start Where Teens Are
Practice Reflective Learning: I-Search Projects
Final Thoughts
Posted by Kathy Lowe