Always Learning

A sweet scene I captured soon after we reopened the library to the public.

There are many types of learning. We can learn a lot just from observing—just paying attention in a library space can lead to many learning opportunities—and that observation can lead to even more levels of learning. Modeling is a technique used when training new staff members. Someone who has worked on the circulation desk for years can show how to be more efficient to a new employee or what the library’s cultural expectations for interacting with staff and the public are. Modeling is also used by librarians as a way for both children and their caregivers to learn early literacy skills. Children take that modeling and turn it into play, similar to what The Lego Foundation (2016) used when teaching a new skill. As they found, every result was different, but they were all valuable (The Lego Foundation, 2016). Play is also a part of sensory learning and experience, as was shown in the Marsden Library’s Sensory Space (Public Libraries Connect, 2020).

Play as a learning experience is something that we talk about a lot in early literacy. In fact, the five early literacy practices are talk, sing, read, write, and play (Ghoting & Martin-Díaz, 2013). I discuss those practices at the beginning of every storytime, reminding caregivers that there are many aspects that are important to learning. The photo above of one of my storytime graduates is a good example of both play and modeling. I try to bring that knowledge of play as a literacy practice into my training as well, remembering to approach it with a sense of fun along with the goal of teaching. It is easier to retain information when one is not stressed out, after all. 

Library staff is lucky enough to get to learn every day. Each patron who walks through the door brings their own experiences and ways of looking at the world, and that can be amazing. Those unique perspectives can also be stressors. As Simon (2020) stated, expressing expected emotions when interacting with the public is its own form of labor and one that often leaves librarians feeling drained. When I was a cashier at a grocery store, I often interacted with 100 people during a shift. That was 100 different Mellisas I also needed to be, as each customer expected something slightly different from the last. As an introvert, I often needed to sit in a quiet room with the lights dimmed for a long period of time in order to recover after a shift. That emotional labor is also a core component of library work (Simon, 2020). As Simon (2020) found, having something that challenged library staff outside of public interaction helped in dealing with that stress.

That brings us back to learning. As supervisors, we can offer all staff opportunities to enrich their experiences at work. We can offer them training in how to deal with emotional labor, but we can also offer more. As Sally (2016) found, making the library a classroom for frontline employees can help to offer professional development for those who often get left behind. By utilizing tools like the 3-2-1 plan discussed by Stephens (2019), we can reinforce the importance of that learning within the job. I recently signed up my assistant for a webinar series that explores outreach opportunities as well as teaching literacy to school-age children. She had been feeling run down and uninspired, but since beginning the course, her eyes are sparkling, she is coming to me with new ideas for how to incorporate what she learned, and she is passionate about her job again. We discuss the training, I reinforce what she has learned with my own experience, and as her supervisor, I support her excitement by finding ways for her to use her new knowledge in the field. Learning can be good stress, an enriching experience, and it can be an amazing tool to keep employees engaged and the library a relevant place in the 21st Century. 

References

Ghoting, S. N., & Martin-Díaz, P. (2013). Storytimes for everyone!: Developing young children’s language and literacy. ALA Editions, an imprint of the American Library Association.

The Lego Foundation. (2016). What do we mean by learning through play? [Film]. Vimeo. https://www.legofoundation.com/en/learn-how/knowledge-base/what-we-mean-by-learning-through-play/

Public Libraries Connect. (2020, February 17). Check out Marsden Library’s Sensory Space! https://plconnect.slq.qld.gov.au/blog/check-out-marsden-librarys-sensory-space

Sally. (2016, June 24). The library as a classroom for library staff. FINDING HEROES. https://findingheroes.co.nz/2016/06/28/the-library-as-a-classroom-for-library-staff/

Simon, K. (2020). Emotional labor, stressors, and librarians who work with the public. School of Information Student Research Journal, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.31979/2575-2499.100106 

Stephens, M. (2019). Whole-hearted librarianship: Finding hope, inspiration, and balance. American Library Association.

11 responses to “Always Learning”

  1. Arwen O'Reilly Griffith Avatar
    Arwen O’Reilly Griffith

    This was such a great reminder of the tightrope walk of working with people! It can be so inspiring and you get that jolt of excitement from constantly learning, but it can definitely be draining. Your image of the Storytime with two kids just melted my heart. Kids learn so much from what they see around them (as do we all!) and what fantastic lessons those two are learning. (Not to mention the stuffies 😉

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    1. Hi Arwen!
      Isn’t that adorable? I walked around a bookcase and saw them doing a storytime, the stuffies placed on each of the letters of the alphabet. It was such a wonderful welcome back to allowing patrons in the kids’ room again.

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  2. Hi @mhannum,
    I was inspired by your post. I have helped lead storytime and it is a fun program to have some time to “play” with the kids. I appreciate what you shared about how library staff learns each day as they interact with many, new patrons. I, too, am introverted and find downtime is helpful to recharge. I had not thought of library as a classroom for employees, but indeed, it would be of help to train them.

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    1. Hi Eileen!
      Storytime is so much fun, and the lessons one learns in it can be applied to so many other programs or even ways to teach.

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  3. Julie McPherson Avatar
    Julie McPherson

    @mhannum, I feel like our posts for this week are cousins. I also wrote about always learning and used the same concepts from our readings but I approached the concepts on a more macro scale. The discussion of this concept deserves treatment on all the scales, so I am glad our posts complement each other. I love reading your examples, modeled storytime (so sweet), the 100 different Melissas (me, too! Although I didn’t have those words for it at the time, and reinvigorating an employee through PLEs (sounds like you are the kind of supervisor we all need). Librarians are like teachers, constantly reinventing themselves, interaction by interaction. It is liberating, but like you said, also exhausting too. And yes learning through play is essential, for all ages!! Thank you so much for sharing! -Julie

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    1. Hi Julie!
      I love that our posts are cousins. You are right, librarians are like teachers. One of my bachelor’s is in education, and I notice the similarities regularly. It is so wonderful we get to keep learning and stay challenged—even if it is tiring sometimes. 🙂

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  4. This post resonated with me and I appreciate all the discussion here.

    This:

    “Learning can be good stress”

    I like the sound of that – and I think I have enjoyed moments deep in learning something new that are a “good stress.” I wonder if it works for others or if there is some way to turn it on in training situations…

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    1. Hi @michael!
      That is a great question! I wonder if giving people time to process training and following up might help learning to be a good stress?

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      1. @mhannum Good thought! Sometimes training happens and then staff go back to their departments and things fade away… follow might be good,

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  5. Great, and touching photo! That alone makes our jobs worth it!

    Kristi

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    1. It really does make it worth it, Kristi!

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