Talk the Talk, Walk the Walk

15 Nov
Talking Dog

Hey, cat! Can you get me another cup of joe while you’re up there?

After back-to-back canine family members who rarely barked or made much of any noise, we now find ourselves with a talker. Eliza the hound dog is a bit of a barker, but more, she’s a talker. There’s no spellchecker for how to spell the sounds in her vocabulary, but  maybe “awhooowhooawwowwwohhawww” translates well. I imagine, though, that if you’ve ever cared for and/or known a hound, you know the sounds. She has a lot to say, that little dog – to me, to Lynn, and to our cat, Tater. Tater is, by far, her favorite family member to converse with. They have a lot to say to one another. 

I have been talking a lot lately. In the past month, I was on a panel with other NLM-funded informationists to talk about our projects; I guest lectured at a couple of library school classes (the third, last night, experienced some technical glitches, so we’ll try again soon); I taught a half-day CE class, facilitated a forum on the current state of health sciences libraries, and led a business meeting at the annual meeting of NAHSL; I attended the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association and spent a good deal of time talking with colleagues there; I presented a poster at the Community Engagement and Research Symposium of the UMass Center for Translational Science; I wrote up (kind of like talking) and submitted two proposals for next year’s annual meeting of the Medical Library Association; I worked with a researcher to submit a proposal for another informationist grant (again, you’ve got to talk a lot before you can write); I’ve worked with a team on an R21 grant proposal to NIH; and then I’ve had several road trips and meetings and other events with colleagues where you, you know, talk. A lot. Even for verbose, social me, it’s been one heck of a month.

All of these activities, though, were add-ons to the work that I do that gives me something to talk about and that, at times, is a conundrum. This month, I’ve been conundrum-ed. It’s easy to get sucked into giving so much time to talking with others that you lose the time to do the very things that got you invited to talk in the first place. My “walking the walk” has definitely suffered these past weeks. Don’t get me wrong. I’m really happy to get to talk about my role as an embedded librarian, to share some of our successes, to offer my opinions and insights into how this role fits in our evolving profession, to sell others on the roles that librarians can play in this area. I get inspired by colleagues, particularly those newer to the profession, who tell me how what I do is what they want to do one day. I get excited when I see the switch click on in researchers’ brains, the realization of the skills that librarians have outside of our hard-to-break stereotypes; when they recognize the real added value that we can bring to their teams and their work. I count each and all of these as measures of success for the work that I’ve been doing over the past year and a half or so.

“But keep on talking,” I tell myself, “and you’ll talk you’re way right out of work.” The month has been tremendously fun, but it’s really time to hole up and get back to the doing. I have deadlines for work promised, not deadlines for work that I hope to do.

As an aside, I couldn’t help but notice the past weeks just how much work is involved in preparing grant proposals – an awful lot of work to propose work that you hope will get funded so that you can do it. This is the life of my researcher colleagues. I realized that they balance the “talking and walking” all of the time. They constantly have to talk about the work that they’re doing so that they can be funded to do more work in the future – all the while, doing the work. No wonder they work so much!

For me, I’m looking forward to some weeks ahead that involve being right here on my campus, doing my humdrum day-to-day work. The work that gives me something to talk about. Then I’ll share it with you here. It is, after all, a big circle.

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For those of you who enjoy my sketchnotes, I practically filled up a whole sketch book these past weeks. I’ve shared them on a separate spot, if you wish to give them a look see.

Get the Word Out!

7 Nov

Stay tuned for a report of a really full, really engaging, and really interesting few days of learning that I experienced at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association this week. It was a terrific opportunity and I look forward to sharing some of the insights and thoughts (and pictures – of course there will be sketchnotes) that I gleaned while there.

But first… there’s ANOTHER symposium that I have to attend to attending. Tomorrow is the 2013 Community Engagement and Research Symposium here at UMass Medical School. One of my embedded informationist assignments is on the leadership team of the CER Section of our Center for Clinical and Translational Science. I’ve been doing some work for them around the topic of research impact and research dissemination, so I thought I’d submit a poster for the symposium. It got accepted and I’ll be presenting it tomorrow, but you don’t have to wait. Here’s a preview for my readers:

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HUGE thanks to my friends and colleagues, Kristi Holmes, PhD and Cathy Sarli, MLIS, for being leaders in our field in the area of documenting research impact. If you’re unfamiliar with the Becker Model, check it out. It’s a valuable tool and helping researchers better understand the many ways in which they can share their work is a perfect role for librarians to assume.

Knowledge: It Knows No Bounds

31 Oct

Freshly back from the annual meeting of NAHSL, frantically meeting deadlines before trekking off to APHA this weekend, I wanted to at least share a little bit from the former on my blog this week. It was a terrific meeting, complete with thoughtful, thought-provoking, and engaging speakers, wonderful food and entertainment with friends and colleagues, and the not-to-be-outdone location of Falmouth, MA, right on the water. One great benefit of our region is we’ll never run out of lovely spots to hold our meetings!

Too Big to Know As has become my practice, I did some sketchnoting during the conference. Since I wrote an earlier post mentioning his book, I thought I’d share my notes from David Weinberger’s Plenary Talk here. Entitled, “Library as Platform?” it took much of the content of “Too Big to Know” and put it into the context of the role of libraries (and librarians) at this time. “Too Big” was one of my favorite books from last year. I really enjoyed getting to hear the author share the thoughts and ideas in person, and as you can see by my notes, it left me with several of my own:

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