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Starting a Mentorship Program for Academic Librarians

Starting a Mentorship Program for Academic Librarians. Rob Bremer Megan Lowe Mike Matthews. Who We Are. Rob Bremer: LLA Academic Libraries Section Liaison with ACRL-LA User Services Librarian, Louisiana Tech University Library Megan Lowe: Chair, Mentoring Committee

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Starting a Mentorship Program for Academic Librarians

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  1. Starting a Mentorship Program for Academic Librarians Rob Bremer Megan Lowe Mike Matthews

  2. Who We Are • Rob Bremer: LLA Academic Libraries Section Liaison with ACRL-LA • User Services Librarian, Louisiana Tech University Library • Megan Lowe: Chair, Mentoring Committee • Reference Librarian, University of Louisiana at Monroe • Mike Matthews: President, ACRL-LA • Information Literacy/Online Learning Services Librarian, Northwestern State University of Louisiana

  3. Lessons Learned from Assessment Part One

  4. Our Work to Date…LLA 2008 • Introduction of the “mentorship idea” at LLA March 2008 • Review of the Literature • Formalized mentorship programs exist in large academic library settings (Carnegie I or II) • Over-represented because of high profile institutions • Summative evaluations • Formative evaluations • Successful Mentee = Job Security • Smaller academic libraries • Variety of approaches, but mostly informal

  5. Our Work to Date…Environmental Scan • ACRL has programs for supporting new library managers/administrators…but not rank and file librarians • The Medical Librarychapter-wide mentorship program • Centrally organized but informal • New librarians are paired with more knowledgeable colleagues • Database of prospective mentees/mentors • Six-hour mentorship seminar for interested members

  6. Our Work to Date…Organizational • Convened two meetings of the ACRL-LA Executive Council (March 26 and June 18) • Decisions: • Who do we want to reach with this program? • For whose benefit is this program being created? • Whose blessings must we secure? (AKA: How do not ruffle the feathers of any Big Birds?) • What are the baseline expectations of this program?

  7. Déjà-vu All Over Again?

  8. Mentorship and the SLIS Students (2003) Is it time for history to repeat itself?

  9. Our Work to Date…the Survey • Partially modeled on the South Central Chapter of MLA mentorship survey of 2004 • For both mentors and mentees • Length of Service • Motivations of participants of mentors/mentees • Interests of prospective mentors and mentees • Define the viability and goals of the mentorship program • Do they already participate as a mentor/mentee at their home institution? Is it an effective program? • What are their common career goals and aspirations? • Are they able to perform the tasks of a mentor or mentee?

  10. Concerns • Would the success of the MLA chapter translate into results for Louisiana? • How would the success of a mentorship program be measured? • Academic librarians do not require CEUs (Continuing Education Units) to proceed in their career tracks. • Academic librarians must know a more generalized body of knowledge than medical librarians.

  11. Working Hypotheses • Older librarians will be retiring at an alarming rate; 79% will retire by 2024 • Younger librarians need guidance in the cultures and philosophies of the academic librarian profession • Older librarians will want to share their knowledge with their younger colleagues • Younger librarians could (should?) learn how to perform complex tasks on the job; an older librarian’s guidance could be the solution • Librarians, regardless of age, are interested in improving their skills

  12. Majority Do Not Have Mentorship Program

  13. An Experienced Workforce

  14. With a Strong Sense of Professionalism…

  15. Who Want to Help

  16. And Who Need Skilled Colleagues…

  17. But who are too busy or feel they don’t know enough to be of assistance. (Huh?)

  18. What the Survey Data Tells Us… • 66% of respondents have 5 or more years of experience • Yet, 37% do not believe they are experienced enough to be mentors • And, 37% are simply “too busy” to be a mentor • 50% of respondents want to be a mentor • Only 15% (6) want to have a mentor • Yet, 61% would like to participate in a continuing education opportunity directed to mentees

  19. Is There a Connection Here?

  20. Kirkland, Janice. The Missing Women Library Directors: Deprivation versus Mentoring C&RL July 1997

  21. Grooming Model

  22. When grooming goes bad…

  23. Peer Networking Model

  24. So What Can We Do? • Investigate further (i.e. continue to annoy respondents with more surveys) • Greater specificity • Correlative • Cross-sectional • Conduct focus groups either in-person, online or via conference call • Quick, actionable data • Coordinate activities with LALINC Directors and SLIS • Broaden support network • Eliminate redundant efforts

  25. Start Here

  26. Plan for the Future

  27. Future Assessments • Mentorship Commitment Inventory • Auditing of interest and effort by mentors • To provide a trusting relationship • To teach mentees skills • To guide mentees in decision-making and reflection (i.e. active listening) • Auditing of interest and effort by mentees • To learn new skills • To participate in mentor/mentee programming • To collaborate with Mentors in providing service to the profession

  28. Future Assessments • Demographics • Age, sex, length of service, number of years as a state resident, years until retirement • Career information • First or second career librarians? (Maybe third?) • Transitions • Moving to management? • Deciding to specialize? • Expertise (you would like to share) • Reference • Cataloging/Systems • Management/Administration • Instruction • Outreach/Publicity/Marketing

  29. Timeline to Completion

  30. Possible Outcomes • Results may show… • We don’t need a “formal” mentorship program • We need a mentorship program, but one which is peer-based and flexible. • We don’t need a mentorship program in any form. If there is not a significant need for a statewide mentorship program, we still have accumulated data to guide our chapter’s other initiatives!

  31. Assessing our Success • Qualitative Data • Anonymous questionnaires • Deployed on secure website with passwords • Open-ended questions requiring essay responses • Quality of relationship • Quality of feedback • Reflection on “lessons learned” • Quantitative Data • Rating of mentor/mentee • Rating of interest in program • Comparison of initial intentions with final outcomes

  32. What could be the long-term benefits of a mentoring program?

  33. What could be the long-term benefits of a mentoring program?

  34. M.A.L.D.E.N.?

  35. Beyond Thunderdome: Meta-Analysis and Aftermath Part Two

  36. What Were We Thinking? • LOUIS (and, by extension, LUC) and LLA were great venues for learning…but academic librarians needed more venues for academic library scholarship and assistance with academic library concerns (beyond SIRSI, etc.) • There seemed to be a lot of new academic librarians in the state who might need help • ACRL-LA seemed the logical answer to fill in the gap between LOUIS and LLA, and the logical solution to the needs of new academic librarians

  37. What Were We Thinking? • The ACRL-LA Executive Council decided that the best way to gather information about the needs of new librarians (and the need for a mentoring program) was a survey • A committee, with several task forces, was formed; one task force developed the survey

  38. Side Effects Include… • Along the way, we revamped our website • Online forms for membership led to… • Online forms for our pre-conference workshop! • Developed an online forum wherein we discuss issues and concerns (vs. doing it all via email and filling up inboxes) • Learned about the skills and strengths of our membership, which produce great resources

  39. Aftermath: Ch-ch-changes! • The target group, new librarians, has changed to librarians in transition • The structure is changing from mentor-mentee to peer-colleague • The purpose is even changing: in the beginning was pure mentorship, now we’re also looking at continuing education opportunities

  40. Identifying Our Next Steps • More surveys (follow-up) • Bulldozing ahead • Establishing “duties” or guidelines for mentors/peers • Contacting deans & the library managers interest group • Identify areas of interest for continuing education opportunities for academic librarians

  41. What Do We Do Now? • Re-evaluate our purpose and our mission • Gain a better understanding of the needs of librarians in the state • Focus on providing continuing education • We are able to still help librarians… • …and in non-library ways! • Creating and maintaining resources as the mentoring program evolves and develops

  42. Still Up for Debate • Format • Casual vs. formal? • Directory of Experts? • FAQ? • Name of mentors/mentees • “Mentees”? • “Peer-Mentees”? • “Mentors”? • “Peer-Mentor”? • “Professional friend”? • “Grasshoppa”? (just kidding)

  43. Challenges | Problems | Obstacles • Hurricanes (that’s a big one) • Resolving the aforementioned debatable topics • Size of the committee: needs to be larger • Getting started (re-beginning the beginning) • Interest? Need? Desire? • Variables (people, people-resources, resources, resources for people, etc.) • Information&Interest

  44. Definite Outcomes • Planning more workshops like our Pre-LUC workshop, “Publish & Flourish: Writing for Academic Librarians” • Focusing on technology-oriented workshops, covering such topics as Flash, Camtasia, and Moodle • Pursuing our vision of a mentorship program, but adapting as new information becomes available via follow-up surveys

  45. What Can You Do? Join ACRL-LA! • If you’re a member of ACRL, you’re automatically a member of ACRL-LA • If you aren’t a member of ACRL and you would like to join ACRL-LA, it’s just $20 – see our website for membership information • Volunteer to serve on the mentorship committee • Volunteer to be a mentor/peer friend/whatever • Don’t be afraid to be a mentee/grasshoppa/whatever

  46. What Can You Do? • Take our surveys – the information you provide is crucial to our understanding of academic librarians in the state of Louisiana, even beyond mentorship • Don’t be afraid to contact us with concerns, ideas, recommendations, suggestions – we *WANT* to hear from you!

  47. Sharing the Mentoring Vision:the Louisiana Library Association Part Three

  48. Sharing the Mentoring Vision: A Timeline • Until in/about 2000, LLA had a New Members Round-Table, with a nebulous mentoring program for new librarians … at least an at-Conference pairing of new librarians with established ones, which may or may not have sustained a continuing relationship between the two librarians. • Since the disbanding of NMRT, LLA has from time to time “kicked around” the idea of establishing a formal mentoring program … without any movement forward.

  49. A Timeline On March 6, 2008, as the 2008 LLA Conference came to a close, the President-Elect challenged the LLA Membership to establish a program for bringing librarians-in-training and new librarians into LLA and to encourage them to stay with the Association and participate in its sections, interest groups, conferences, programs, and projects.

  50. A Timeline On June 23, 2008, the Co-Coordinators of the LLA Library Managers Interest Group pointed the Group toward the 2008-09 year and asked all to consider, in cooperation with the Academic and Public Library Sections: • heading up the creation and maintenance of a mentoring program for new library managers and • assisting in the creation and maintenance of a mentoring program for new librarians.

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