Archive for February, 2006

‘To do’ list

Tomorrow O Week - Orientation Week - begins. That’s when the campus is hit with swarms of new students all wanting to find out whatever it is they need to know about studying at university. For those of us who work in the library, it means having to be tour guides - we take group after group of new students through the library - as well as teachers - we show students how to use the library’s online tools to find material on their reading lists and for writing assignments.

During O Week and for about two or three weeks after that, I say over and over again to new students: “Google is not going to be enough”. I follow this surprising (to some of them) statement by showing them the range of resources that the library provides. Depending on the group of students, I even mention how much some of the journal databases cost (the million-dollar one always makes some sit up).

It’s going to be a tiring week.
Monday:

  • Meeting with The Boss’s Boss to discuss project I’m working on with him. This project will involve me going to KL in March.
  • Library tour.

Tuesday:

  • Business librarians’ meeting. I expect we will commiserate with each other over how busy we are.
  • Lunch meeting with colleagues from across the university. We did a management course together and we’re getting together to see how we’ve been, etc. I hope I’m not too distracted by everything else I have on…
  • Teaching and learning committee meeting. This two hour meeting almost always goes for longer. Have I mentioned that afternoon meetings are killers?

Wednesday:

  • Collection management meeting.
  • Presentation to a library committee on managing our blog.
  • Seminar for postgrad students.
  • Evening orientation session for new postgrad students. Includes finger food and drinks, so is not too arduous. I do this session every semester and it has effectively cured me of any fear of speaking in front of large groups.

Thursday:

  • Presentation at a meeting with the School of Accounting’s Research and Development committee.
  • Reference desk shift.

Friday:

  • EndNote presentation to staff at Graduate School of Business.
  • Numerous appointments with doctoral students.

Tasks I need to do during the week:

  • Answer reference queries over phone and email.
  • Work on classplans for KL trip in March.
  • Ensure library podcasts go up! (Yes, we have recorded some podcasts. Yes, you will be able to hear my smarmy voice online at some point over the next few weeks. But I haven’t decided if I am going to tell you when or which podcast it is, yet ;) )
  • Work on articles.
  • Write reports. I am expected to report on some of the meetings I attend, and if I don’t write things down I forget to mention things. Although this job sounds tedious, it actually gives me some pleasure in that I take copious notes during the meetings themselves, using a fountain pen. (Aargh I’ve just remembered I forgot to submit a report for some minutes. Should’ve done it on Friday.)
  • Blog. My colleague SGS and I have landed ourselves the task of managing our library’s blog. I’m not complaining too much as this task lets me add blogging to my CV.

Unwinding and relaxing after the end of each day is going to be a challenge. Even if I don’t let myself bring any work home or consciously think about work in the evenings, I sometimes find myself waking up to the thoughts of how I am going to approach situations or what I should do to make sure something goes smoothly or things I have forgotten to do.

There’s something very satisfying about writing lists. Putting everything down so neatly seems to make each individual task seem slightly less … big, and is a good way of making sure I don’t forget to do something. I hope am sure I will cope, even if I am a bit frazzled come Friday!

Categories:

Blogging/writing, or, how to write a post that’s more links than text

Read this on Will Wheaton’s blog:

Somebody was once asked to define blogs. They refused and said:
I don’t care. There is no need to define “blog.” I doubt there ever was such a call to define “newspaper” or “television” or “radio” or “book” — or, for that matter, “telephone” or “instant messenger.” A blog is merely a tool that lets you do anything from change the world to share your shopping list. People will use it however they wish. And it is way too soon in the invention of uses for this tool to limit it with a set definition. That’s why I resist even calling it a medium; it is a means of sharing information and also of interacting: It’s more about conversation than content… so far. I think it is equally tiresome and useless to argue about whether blogs are journalism, for journalism is not limited by the tool or medium or person used in the act. Blogs are whatever they want to be. Blogs are whatever we make them. Defining “blog” is a fool’s errand.

Will read it on Party Poker Blog.

I wonder where blogs and blogging will be in say, five years from now.

In lieu of anything more interesting to say this morning, here are some links on tips for blogging (and writing generally). I am saving them here so in the interests of not clogging up Bloglines:

10 killer post ideas. First seen on Lifehacker.
Being able to write. A great list from the Free Range Librarian.
How to blog by Tony Pierce.
Privacy of blogging by Wang Jian Shuo. He says: “Blog has to be useful”.
Not on writing as such, but on the social impact of blogging from Library Web Chic.
Two from Micro Persuasion: Ten things Disney can teach us about blogging. Also Blogging isn’t just writing, it’s a dialogue.

Thanks CherryRipe for this link, on Technorati. And finally, if you’ve heard about that article in New York magazine on bloggers and want to take a look, here’s a link to it: Blogs to Riches: The Haves and Have-Nots of the Blogging Boom.

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New toys

Picked up a package from His Nibs yesterday.

Speeno pen, with my Moleskine diary. The picture doesn’t show it, but the Speeno is a ‘telescopic’ pen - it’s very small closed, but you pull the barrel out to make a larger pen.

Uranus 2018 Multifunction brush pen, with specimen of my poor Chinese handwriting*.
One end of this pen is a roller ball, the other end a brush, for writing characters.

* From right to left:
霞光 xia guang“dawn light”
精神 jing shen“consciousness”
思想 si xiang “thought”
机会 ji hui “opportunity”
赵美铃 Zhao Mei Ling My Chinese name.
Zhao [family name] Beautiful Bell. “Bell” as in ding-a-ling.



Inky hand. I filled the Uranus pen and managed to get ink almost everywhere.

Verdict: The Speeno is wonderful. Besides the cute/novelty factor, it is a very smooth writer! The Uranus is just going to be a lot of fun. I don’t know if my calligraphy skills will improve but I will enjoy playing with the brush.

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