One of the best part of librarianship for me is how varied it is. Every day is something new! Seriously, at the public library, you just never know what will happen. I asked my mentor once what a typical day for her was like and she said there was no typical day, and then described what the previous day had been like, which involved all sorts of things you just don't learn in library school.
My favorite thing about my job, though, is when a child comes up and wants help finding a book to read. The other day, a girl came up and she totally soaked up every book idea I put in front of her. (Of course, there's been some who don't like any book I suggest!)
But by far my favorite part of librarianship in general is the idea of information literacy. I imagine that for those who have been librarians for awhile, it's been amazing to see the transformation from a bricks and mortar institution to one where there are no limits to information. Seriously, people don't need librarians to find information. There is no dearth of information out there. But then that goes into the idea of information literacy - finding, assessing, and using information. Finding is finding good information which of course is done through assessing. But assessing is also figuring out if information is good for your purposes - it might be a solid, trustworthy resource but not have anything to do with what you are doing. Then using information is not only writing a report or making a Power Point - it's using alternative methods like Glogster and Jing and Prezi (or, like I've done here, creating a presentation using HTML - isn't so much more interesting than a Power Point?), and even more, creating content. My oldest daughter is great at doing things like this. She made a video for her sister's birthday using iMovie and posted it on You Tube (not listing it, so you have to have the link to see it). That video totally makes me cry!
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