I too am a Library Systems Specialist and I think that title fits perfectly 
well to the job I do. When I took on the position in the first place I assumed 
it was just about fixing things, wrong! I have had to learn a lot of 
'Librarian' type stuff in order to be in a position to advise my director in IT 
related issues.

I also need to understand what Librarians and Circ staff do in order to provide 
them with the services they need to do their jobs.

So although I am an IT Systems guy as per job title I also look at myself as a 
library person without the title.

Stuart Forrest PhD, ACM Member
Library Systems Specialist
Beaufort County Library
Beaufort
SC 29902
843 255 6450
sforr...@bcgov.net

http://www.beaufortcountylibrary.org/
For Learning, For Leisure, For Life.



-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of David 
South
Sent: Thursday, February 14, 2013 12:11 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] You *are* a coder. So what am I?

Even though I did not attend the conference, I have had this same conversation 
many times with people trying to describe what I do.    Systems Specialist (my 
actual job title) I also think is appropriate for the job many of us do, but is 
highly confusing (even to some of the staff I work with).  System Developer I 
think fits for some when working with a multitude of systems within a library 
and is easier to understand.  My favorite though is just Library IT - to me it 
is simple, all-encompassing, and because I do not have an MLIS(or similar) 
degree I do not run the risk of snubbing actual Librarians by calling myself 
one.  

One of the problems I think that technology staff in a library face, as far as 
a title or descriptor goes, is that having a technology degree really does not 
confer meaningful titles unless you are working with something specific - you 
*can* be a "programmer" or a "developer" or even more specific a "web 
developer" but when you work with a mix of things like web programming, 
administrating and supporting an ILS system, general technical support, and 
project manager you get more into general technologist territory, and there 
really in my opinion anyway, no single way to describe that.

Sorry if this was tl;dr - I went on a bit of a ramble and couldn't stop myself 
:)


David M. South
Library Systems Specialist
Pumerantz Library
Western University of Health Sciences
909.469.8229
dso...@westernu.edu

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU] On Behalf Of 
Maccabee Levine
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2013 4:23 PM
To: CODE4LIB@LISTSERV.ND.EDU
Subject: [CODE4LIB] You *are* a coder. So what am I?

Andromeda's talk this afternoon really struck a chord, as I shared with her 
afterwards, because I have the same issue from the other side of the fence.
 I'm among the 1/3 of the crowd today with a CS degree and and IT background 
(and no MLS).  I've worked in libraries for years, but when I have a point to 
make about how technology can benefit instruction or reference or collection 
development, I generally preface it with "I'm not a librarian, but...".  I 
shouldn't have to be defensive about that.

Problem is, 'coder' doesn't imply a particular degree -- just the experience 
from doing the task, and as Andromeda said, she and most C4Lers definitely are 
coders.  But 'librarian' *does* imply MLS/MSLS/etc., and I respect that.

What's a library word I can use in the same way as coder?

Maccabee

--
Maccabee Levine
Head of Library Technology Services
University of Wisconsin Oshkosh
levi...@uwosh.edu
920-424-7332

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