Wednesday, 19 October 2011

I confess, I volunteered!

Ah, this is almost the last item to be explored and written about for CPD23. A hot topic locally and nationally - volunteers.

In December 2007 when I had recently moved to the UK from the US I wrote:
"On volunteers in Libraries Based solely on my inquiries, the London libraries do not use volunteers to help complete routine responsibilities (shelving books, making up labels etc). Given the library funding crunch in many councils, I wonder why? Some reasons may be: fear of further deprofessionalizing library work, UK socialist desire to pay everyone, concern over the management of volunteers."

Flash forward to October 2011: the issue of volunteers in libraries is being forced at the same time as huge budget cuts. I've gained respect for the (endangered) UK social welfare practices which show respect for human lives and potential. Other than that my views are the same - good idea, bad timing: .

I have worked as a volunteer in libraries three times:
1) in a public library in the USA., doing shelf-reading on a weekly basis. This was prior to starting my Master's degree and just after I'd moved house. The library seemed a good place to reconnoiter my new town and I made friends with other volunteers. The schedule was based around the volunteers' availability and we checked the shelves to make sure the books were in correct order, also pulling out books that needed repair or replacement. There were a number of volunteers doing this task, so it was not an inconvenience to the library if one or more of us couldn't work as planned. As it was a small library the manager trained and supervised the volunteers.

2) as an intern in a larger public library in the USA, during my Master's degree.  While this was work experience and a requirement of my Master's degree, I consider it volunteer work. I was not being paid, and I carried out three projects which the library had outlined but did not have staff available to complete. I surveyed teens on social media and used the result to create a teen blog. I wrote and taught a teen class on creating web pages and researched foreign language collections at area libraries. These projects were all at a professional level of work and helped me to win my first professional library job.

3) in a primary school library in the UK, after my Master's degree - while trying to find a public library position. The school library had 80 boxes of books starting to mold in a storage shed while they waited for staff to find time to merge the Key Stage 1 and 2 collections. A crash course for me in early education curriculum and school libraries, with lots of reading and consultation with the local public librarian. My work was primarily behind the scenes; weeding, repairing, working on displays and ordering furniture, as well as training other volunteers. The funding from the parent association covered materials but not staff and although I recommended it the school did not want to hire the local Schools Library Service. I put a great deal of time into the project and earned a reference which was a fantastic help to me. The improved library saw much more use; when the funding improved a part time staff position was added to maintain and develop the collection.

I think volunteers in libraries are a fine idea if there are well-defined unmet needs in the library, organised infrastructure to support volunteers and the net effect on resources and services is positive. Having benefited socially and professionally from my volunteer experiences I would be hard-pressed to deny others unless it was endangering jobs in the foreseeable future. In a public library, the community-building mission of the library can be supported by including volunteers. My pessimistic (perhaps short-sighted) view is that given technology and social change, the future of libraries is too cloudy to worry about five or ten years hence.

1 comment:

Nicolas Jackman said...

I think we need to rethink the issue of volunteering. In the current economic climate, public libraries would be demonstrating their value by taking on volunteers: the volunteer opportunities in libraries would enable job seekers to improve their job prospects by gaining work experience and skills.
Crucially, this needs to be carefully planned and managed,
but isn't this the case with a lot of things.