> > On Feb 17, 2023, at 10:01 AM, Wu, Jingjing <jingjing...@ttu.edu> wrote: > > Everyone needs to keep learning, either new technologies or knowledge about > libraries. I wonder how many people with technology backgrounds but no > library experience will apply for a "Systems Librarian" position.
I suspect that it won’t be that many unless they find it via a keyword search, as most IT people wouldn’t know what a ‘systems librarian’ is. But all of this discussion makes me think-- is there a need for some sort of primer on what a systems librarian should know? Either coming from the librarian side of things, or from the IT side. I suspect that much like ‘programmer’ or ‘sysadmin’, there’s a rather wide range of what skills and knowledge are actually required. The smaller the shop, the more likely that you’re going to need someone who’s a Jack-of-All-Trades instead of a specialist in ILSes. I would think it might be worth finding / writing some introductory information on ILSes, FRBR, MARC, and whatever else those who actually work in libraries think would be useful (LCSH? DDC? SRU? CQL? I’ve never worked in a library) Is this something that we could partner with the Carpentry folks for? And as had been mentioned already, terminology can be a huge problem. I was working in science data archives, and even between science disciplines we had incompatible use of terms. Add in the library/archives folks and the compsci/HPC folks and it’s general chaos to try to have conversations. A decade ago, I put together a glossary of problematic terms, either defining them in a way that everyone could agree to, or flagging the ones that will lead to misunderstanding: http://virtualsolar.org/vocab Unfortunately, I got bogged down in other projects and laid off (then brought back as an independent consultant) without ever formally publishing it. I don’t know if there’s would be a good way to do this virtually… I basically wrote down every term that I thought was weird (didn’t know it, seemed to be used differently than I was used to), then presented a poster at a meeting, and let people add terms and definitions. After a couple of years of this, we seemed to reach an equilibrium. We could do part of it with shared online documents, but there was a lot of interviewing people to tease out exactly what they thought was wrong with my definitions. -Joe (Civil Engineering undergrad, but worked in IT during the early days of ‘the web’, then got roped into working as a programmer/sysadmin/dba for a science data archive, and got an Information Mgmt degree (but took library classification type stuff for my electives)