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Every work day…

Give Our Library Student Workers a Chance to Voice Their Opinions Zheng Ye (Lan) Yang Director of Direct Services Texas A&M University Library. Every work day…. 800 interlibrary loan and in-house document delivery requests are processed Lending request turnaround time is 24 hours

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Every work day…

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  1. Give Our Library Student Workers a Chance to Voice Their OpinionsZheng Ye (Lan) YangDirector of Direct ServicesTexas A&M University Library

  2. Every work day… • 800 interlibrary loan and in-house document delivery requests are processed • Lending request turnaround time is 24 hours • Borrowing request turnaround time is 5 business days, in general • In-house document delivery request turnaround time is less than 72 hours for most items

  3. Academic Library Department • Student Workers are an indispensable component of the library operations

  4. The purpose of this paper is to find out… • how the students perceive their library jobs • the working environment • the work ethic of staff and students around them • how well students communicate with their supervisors • what training method is most preferred by the student workers • what motivates the students to do a good job • what most often triggers their resignation from the library

  5. Methodology • The author distributed a survey in the fall semester of 2005 to all nineteen currently employed student assistants in ILS • The response rate was one hundred percent.

  6. Results • Among nineteen student workers currently employed by the ILS • ten (52.6%) have been working in the ILS for less than one year • three (15.8%) have been with ILS for over one year • two (10.5%) for two years • three (15.8%) for three years • one student (5.3%) has been with ILS for her entire four-year college career

  7. ILS Has 264 Hours Per Week of Student Help • Two student workers (30.5 hrs/wk) work in the borrowing unit • Six (92.5 hrs/wk) in the lending unit, and eleven (141 hrs/wk) in document delivery • Five students found the job in the ILS strictly through searching the website of Jobs for Aggies • The rest were recommended by friends who already worked in ILS.

  8. Student Handbook? • The majority (84.2%) of students were not in favor of having a Handbook of Student’s Rules, sixteen of the students stated they would not read the handbook

  9. Job Knowledge • Sixteen (84.2%) stated they learned the job through their supervisors’ thorough training • Three (15.8%) didn’t think that their supervisor trained them thoroughly • Fewer than half (47.4%) the students would like to have a student training manual as a reference guide that details the step by step process of the work • Ten students (52.6%) liked the idea of having a library tour as part of their training to gain overall knowledge of the TAMU Libraries’ operation • Nine (47.4%) didn’t believe the tour would be helpful in doing their jobs

  10. Job Assignment • Only one student (5.3%) deemed that the daily job assignment was too much, the rest (94.7%) all regarded their job assignments as adequate • When reporting to work, nine (47.4%) student workers prefer to be assigned a specific task • Five (26.3%) students prefer to decide how many requests that they could process on that day

  11. As a student, how hard do you work? • Fifteen students (78.9%) felt that they worked as hard as their fellow student workers • Three (15.8%) considered themselves hard workers than their fellow students • One (5.3%) modestly recognized his peers worked harder than he did. • Eleven students (57.9%) perceived that they worked as hard as their supervisors • While eight (42.1%) regarded their supervisors as working harder than they did. • None of the students felt that they worked harder than the staff members in ILS

  12. Are you informed? • Only two (10.5%) didn’t feel that the supervisor kept them informed about any changes in the procedures, workflow, and tips.

  13. Can we talk? • Thirteen (68.4%) felt free to voice their frustrations/concerns to their supervisors • Six felt intimidated by their supervisors • Two students (10.5%) indicated that the supervisor did not treat them with respect, but all nineteen students concurred that other staff members in the ILS treated them respectfully

  14. Getting Information To Students • When supervisors offer feedback, the majority (sixteen, 84.2%) prefer that the supervisor talks to them in person • Two (10.5%) prefer email • One (5.3%) prefers notes/announcements/tips to be posted in a central location for everyone to read • The majority (fourteen, 73.7%) would rather have timely feedback if their work does not meet expectations than be evaluated by their supervisors at the end of each semester • A bit over half (ten, 52.6%) students liked the idea of having a meeting with all ILS students at the beginning of each semester, to be better informed about expectations, rules and regulations • Nine (47.4%) didn’t think that necessary to have a meeting

  15. What Motives To Do A Good Job? • Seven (36.8%) believed: “I made a commitment, and I would like to carry it through” • Six (31.6%) thought: “a sense of accomplishment in a job well done” • Three (15.8%) felt: “everyone works hard in the ILS, and I want to contribute” • Two (10.5%) chose: “I feel appreciated” • One (5.3%) selected: “my supervisor sets a role model for me.”

  16. Raises • Fifteen (79.0%) agreed that they were fairly rewarded with pay raises based on their performance • Two (10.5%) did not agree they were fairly rewarded • Two (10.5%) had not yet received raises.

  17. Reasons Students Chose to Work At ILS • Eight (42.0%) responded “learning to balance my time between work and studies” • Four (21.1%) chose “purely to earn money” • Four (21.1%) selected “training myself to be a responsible person” • Three (15.8%) indicated “gaining some work experience.”

  18. Are You Happy Working At ILS? • More than three fourths (16) of our student employees are happy working in the ILS • Three (15.8%) indicated that they are somewhat happy • None chose “I am not happy working in the ILS, but I need to earn money.”

  19. Why Would You Quit? • “the pay is too low” (chosen by eight students, 42.1%) was the trigger which would prompt most of our students to quit the library job • “the job is too boring” (three, 15.8%) • “I am not treated well” ( three, 15.8%) • “the job is too tiring” (two, 10.5%) • “I don’t get along with my supervisor” (two, 10.5%) • “the working atmosphere is not good” (one, 5.3%) • None chose “the work distribution is not fair” or “I don’t like the people.”

  20. Recommendations • All our nineteen students would recommend a friend to work in the ILS if there were a vacancy

  21. Would You Work in a Library After Graduation? • Two (10.5%) gave a positive “yes” • Seven (36.9%) firmly discarded the option • Ten (52.6%) thought “maybe”.

  22. Conclusions • Student workers at the Texas A&M University Libraries’ Interlibrary Services feel very positive about the work environment • They perceive that everyone in the department works hard to achieve the mission of the TAMU Libraries which is to provide superior service and expedite requests to the patrons • Student workers and their supervisors maintain good working relationships • Low pay is considered to be the number one trigger to force student workers to quit the library job • Respect and appreciation go both ways, only when we treat our students well can we hope to retain them for as long as possible with good performance and high productivity

  23. Students’ Comments of the Survey • “Thank you for taking the time to take the student workers’ opinions on the work environment. I believe this is truly a positive step in the right direction!” • “Thank you for always making us feel respected and appreciated!”

  24. Thank you!

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