Subscription to professional discussion
lists allows librarians a place to share interesting information and talk about
issues within respective areas of librarianship. This analysis will cover the
discussion lists of Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) and Digital
Preservation (DigiPres), and hopes to discuss the material posted, things
learned, interesting posts that stood-out to the author, likelihood of
following continuation, the likelihood of the author recommending this
discussion list to others, and what population would likely gain the most from
subscription.
Discussion lists can be the
lifeblood for new research and professional development within communities.
While all librarians share similarities, having a group of professionals that
do exactly what you do available for discussion and idea bouncing is invaluable
to the growth of that specialized community. Not only can they offer guidance
in your current position, they can offer listings of new positions or
professional development seminars/conferences practitioners and researchers may
wish to attend. Just like snowflakes, each discussion list is different from
the next. This paper compares and contrasts the discussion lists of Young Adult
Library Services Association (YALSA) and Digital Preservation (DigiPres), and
hopes to offer insight on what discussion lists really can offer the library
community.
What type of material is posted?
YALSA
The
YALSA discussion list is very active, having close to 100 unique posts within a
month. The information posted varies, and can range from casting of upcoming
movies/TV shows based on young adult literature to help with a reference
request. The members also offer recommendations for personal reading as well as
professional initiatives within a library. No question or topic is off the
table within the realm of young adult literature/patronage on this discussion
list.
DigiPres
The DigiPres discussion list had a
moderate amount of posts, 37 within a month. The main material posted is job
postings, call to papers, course listings, and conference information. There
did not seem to be collaboration between digital preservationists, as there
were no responses to the only interesting post I found.
Did you learn anything of interest?
YALSA
Early in my YALSA subscription, I
came upon a cataloging question. I found it rather interesting. It was in
regards to genre stickers, stickers that are used to denote the different
genres within young adult literature (e.g. dystopian future, romance, science
fiction, etc.). Some librarians stated they used colored dots with a posted
legend, but patrons did not seem to use it. However, it proved to be easy for
librarians to shelve the material with said stickers. I thought this was a
unique way of dividing the literature and making it easier for patrons to find
books within the genre they enjoyed.
DigiPres
I
was made acutely aware of the job and publication opportunities in the field. I
also found it interesting that there was little to no interaction between the
users of the discussion list. There was a specific post that I discuss below
that I thought would insight discussion, however, there was no feedback.
Did anything specifically stand out?
YALSA
There was a recent post that
discussed transgender individuals (Schultz, 2016), novels that offer reading
support, and supplemental information about librarian interactions (what to
say/not to say). I thought it was great that this discussion list not only
supported and offered information about young adult literature/services, but it
also supported the patrons themselves, as well as the librarians. I thought
this was great, because dealing with young adults, their time in life is so
volatile with hormones and emotions, that having literature and librarian
training on how to interact with their specific clientele.
DigiPres
One post really stood out to me (Williams,
2016), a link to an article on cultural genocide that received no response. I
thought for sure this would insight conversation, as it very applicable to
modern times, but it seemed to be taken as a link only.
Do you plan to continue following this discussion
list? Why or why not?
YALSA
I
will definitely continue following the YALSA discussion list, because my guilty
pleasure is young adult literature. Books, movies, TV shows, you name it – I am
in. I think this is an excellent resource for not only young adult librarians,
but also for fans of young adult literature. I feel as though there is enough
of variety in information that I will be able to find multiple posts daily
interesting and informative.
DigiPres
While
I am interested in digital preservation, I did not find enough useful or
interesting information offered by the discussion list members to interest me
in maintaining my subscription. If anything, I felt it was “junking up” my
inbox.
Would you encourage others to follow it?
If so, what type of person would this discussion list
be of most interest to?
YALSA
I would definitely encourage others
to follow this discussion list. Particularly, young adults, those interested in
young adult literature, and young adult librarians. Not only is this a valuable
list for librarians, if you care about the genre of young adult literature, or
the things that are most important to young adult culture right now – this is
the place for you. I would even suggest high school English teachers to keep an
eye on this message board, as there are a number of invaluable discussions and
posts going on here.
DigiPres
I
would only encourage those interested in finding a job in preservation or in
presenting preservation research to follow this list. Other than these two
topics, the discussion list is useless.
References
Schultz, L
(2016, January 28). [yalsa-bk] What Not to Say to a Transgender Person
[Electronic
mailing list message]. Retrieved from http://lists.ala.org/sympa/info/yalsa-bk
mailing list message]. Retrieved from http://lists.ala.org/sympa/info/yalsa-bk
Williams, J
(2016, February 9) [Digipres] Why can't we protect cultural heritage?
[Electronic
mailing list message]. Retrieved from http://lists.ala.org/sympa/info/digipres
mailing list message]. Retrieved from http://lists.ala.org/sympa/info/digipres
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