Hi Patrick,

I would suggest:
 -1- Yes, stay in libraries! We always need more technically skilled people.
 -2- Find some librarians who are in positions that appeal to you with whom you 
can do informational interviews. Ask them what their work is like and how they 
ended up there.
 -3- Collect position descriptions and job ads for jobs that sound interesting 
to you. Electronic Resources Librarian jobs have been plentiful lately, and 
this work might align with what you'd like to do (i.e. providing access to 
electronic resources, with lots of trouble-shooting and potentially some 
information architecture).
 -4- Take some library school courses. Start with whatever library school is 
closest to you and/ or cheapest. You might get hooked! OR you might realize 
that you'd prefer computer science, information technology, or an adjacent 
field.
 -5- Offer to do unpaid volunteer work. Maybe shadow a librarian in IT or 
Technical Services for a couple of hours per week. For a lot of technical jobs, 
there are things that you can only learn on-the-job, that you just can't learn 
from tutorials and classes.

Luke



________________________________
From: Code for Libraries <CODE4LIB@LISTS.CLIR.ORG> on behalf of Patrick 
Pletcher <000000e4f601e659-dmarc-requ...@lists.clir.org>
Sent: Thursday, December 15, 2022 17:09
To: CODE4LIB@LISTS.CLIR.ORG <CODE4LIB@LISTS.CLIR.ORG>
Subject: [CODE4LIB] Circulation clerk learning to code.

Hi, this is my first time posting to a list like this. I am a circulation clerk 
who is learning to code at freecodecamp.org. Right now I am studying html and 
css, but I plan on going through all the lessons on the website. I enjoy 
working in libraries, and I also enjoy writing code. I am not sure where I am 
going with this. Do I stay in the library field, or do I go off in a completely 
different direction? I would appreciate your input. I think I would like best 
to work for a company that provides access to eBooks or audio books. I like 
print, but I don't see people using ink printed on dead trees 50 years from 
now, with all of the environmental issues the planet is facing.

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