Synopses & Reviews
Taking a management position in a new library or being promoted to a higher position in your library means a new approach to interpersonal relations. How to make this transition can be a challenge. This book provides the information you need to learn so you can become an effective leader and to recognize and circumvent the legal pitfalls that you may find in your path. Written in reader-friendly language, two seasoned veterans share their experiences and the experiences of others in this introduction to managing people.
Managing a small library requires skills in working with personnel, the library board, patrons, and the key people in the community. Understanding these requirements will help the person with no formal education to be a more effective administrator in this setting.
Review
"Written for almost any librarian with a new job, this book is filled with practical advice for those starting that new postition, even if you are moving from one job to another. How do you meet people? Establish relationships? Understand the organization? Get your program underway? While they may have addresses some of these skills in library school, this book is a good refresher to get started on the right foot." - Teacher Librarian
Review
"[H]andy and readable primer for libarians new to supervision." - Info Career Trends
Review
"Chapters describe how a library might analyze its community as well as assess and evaluate its collection. Other chapters address collection development policies, statistics, budget, selection, acquisition, reviewing sources, the publishing industry, collection maintenance, mending and preserving, and promotion and marketing. The final chapter discusses complaints, challenges, and intellectual-freedom issues. There is no bibliography, but several helpful Web sites are mentioned in the text. Recommended for all public library collections." - Booklist/Professional Reading
Review
"Crash Course in Library Supervision is a useful, informative read for those new to supervision and those who have been supervising others for a while but may have forgotten some of the important details of administration in a library setting. I can imagine myself referring to this in years to come." - Colorado Association of Libraries
Review
". . . aimed at the new public library director, but it is also filled with pertinent information for the new supervisor in any library setting. . . an easy-to-approach, concise guide to managing a library for the new supervisor. it is ideal for those seeking to brush up skills in this area or for others seeking an introduction to the topic. . ." - The Australian Library Journal
Synopsis
This book is a quick guide to working positively with your library board and other administration officials and recruiting and supervising staff and volunteers so that your library runs like a well-oiled machine.
Synopsis
Managing a small library requires skills in working with personnel, the library board, patrons, and the key people in the community. Understanding these requirements will help the person with no formal education to be a more effective administrator in this setting.
Synopsis
Taking a management position in a new library or being promoted to a higher position in your library means a new approach to interpersonal relations. How to make this transition can be a challenge. This book provides the information you need to learn so you can become an effective leader and to recognize and circumvent the legal pitfalls that you may find in your path. Written in reader-friendly language, two seasoned veterans share their experiences and the experiences of others in this introduction to managing people.
Managing a small library requires skills in working with personnel, the library board, patrons, and the key people in the community. Understanding these requirements will help the person with no formal education to be a more effective administrator in this setting.
About the Author
DENNIS C. TUCKER holds a PhD in Theological Studies from Foundation House, Oxford, an MLS from Missouri, a MAT and a BS in Secondary Education from Southeast State University. He has both school and public library experience before joining the staff at the Indiana Cooperative Library Services Authority (INCOLSA) as a microcomputer expert and manager of a 4-year grant to high school librarians in Marion County (Indianapolis area). He was Director of Librarians at the Northwestern State University of Louisiana and Director of Learning Resources at Modesto Junior College. He is author of 10 publications, mostly manuals. He has conducted workshops in many states and in Mexico.SHELLEY ELIZABETH MOSLEY holds a BS in Education from Grand Canyon University and an MLS from the University of Arizona. She is presently an adjunct faculty member at the Glendale Community College. She has experience in both public and school libraries. She is author of Romance Today: An A-to-Z Guide to Contemporary American Romance Writers (Greenwood, 2006), The Suffragists in Literature for Youth: The Fight for the Vote (2006) and she is currently writing a book, The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Ultimate Reading List.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1: Settling In: Getting to Know You
Chapter 2: Getting to Know the Staff: Listen and Learn
Chapter 3: Managing Personnel: Tips to Make Your Life Easier
Chapter 4: Personnel Laws: You Can't Become Familiar with These Too Quickly or Too Soon!
Chapter 5: Hiring, Firing, and Other Good Stuff: It Happens Even if You're New!
Chapter 6: Friends and Volunteers
Chapter 7: "Managing" the Board: Who They Are, and How to Build and Maintain Consensus-A Tricky Tightrope
Chapter 8: Your Customers: Your Reason to Exist
Chapter 9: Key People in the Community-No Library is an Island
Chapter 10: Managing Change: Look before You Leap!
Glossary
Resources
Index