Hi - I'm also an English undergrad.  This was after miserably failing out of a 
Math/CS program (although I learned a lot).  The English degree forced me to 
write a lot while in college - a time when one's mind needs some expanding lest 
it get caught in ruts.  This helped my communication skills immensely.  Despite 
what Giarlo says.

I also agree that a background in informatics is going to be really helpful in 
the years to come.  We are awash in data, yet little of it has the semantics 
needed to automate the extraction of meaning.  I think there are going to be 
many years of smart people plowing meaning back into the data sets that we're 
struggling to put away at the bit level now, and I think it sounds like fun 
work.

Another common thread I agree with, and one my kids have heard since they were 
in diapers, is GET A JOB!  Especially in the area you think you're interested 
in.  You'll learn more practical things there than in any class.  You may suck 
at it at first, but hey, they're paying you anyway!  If you like doing it, 
you'll get better, build your resume, and be better able to see if it's 
something you want to do long term.

Year later, after working in corporate IT for a while and getting sick of my 
profession being treated like an expendable commodity, I went back and got an 
MBA to better understand business - and learned that corporate IT is an 
expendable commodity...  I wasn't really OK with that, so I came back to 
academia to do more meaningful work for far less money ;)  With the MBA, I was 
able to come back at a director level and influence change, so that's kinda 
cool.
 
Good job getting ahead of this!  You're a neat person and I appreciate what you 
do for the community!

Declan

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Henry, 
Laura
Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2014 5:51 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] College Question!

My undergrad degree is in English, and it actually has come in handy at times. 
Good communication is important, regardless of what you end up doing. If I 
could do it again, I'd seriously consider informatics - but I didn't know it 
was a thing until I started library school. 
http://www.soic.indiana.edu/informatics/

As far as IT, I learned a lot from the tech-support job I had right out of 
college, and after that I'm self-taught. I imagine it's a steeper learning 
curve than if I had some sort of tech degree. 

 If you're going for an ML(I)S, major in whatever interests you. Librarians 
come from all kinds of backgrounds. In my class there were a ton of English and 
History degrees, but we also had people with degrees in astrophysics, soil 
science, and accounting.

Laura C. Henry, MLS
Assistant Systems Librarian
Beaufort County Library
311 Scott Street, Beaufort, SC 29902
Phone 843.255.6444   [email protected]
www.beaufortcountylibrary.org
For Learning ♦ For Leisure ♦ For Life

-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Amy 
Drayer
Sent: Thursday, May 29, 2014 12:50 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] College Question!

Dear Riley et al:

I was thinking the same thing as Coral.  I have a humanities undergrad degree; 
a computer science oriented degree would certainly have been beneficial, 
especially with an emphasis on network and server administration, or even web 
development depending on your interest (as a systems librarian I also managed 
the website and catalog).  The library-oriented education can wait until grad 
school.

Honestly, I think we come from a variety of backgrounds.  My liberal arts 
foundation works for me (I feel my education was well rounded in a way a 
science or IT degree may not have been), but I would definitely have wanted 
some more technical classes such as I mentioned above if I had known I would be 
in this field.

In peace,

Amy

In peace,

Amy M. Drayer, MLIS
Senior IT Specialist, Web Developer
[email protected]
http://www.puzumaki.com


On Wed, May 28, 2014 at 11:24 PM, Coral Sheldon-Hess <[email protected]
> wrote:

> Riley,
>
> Whatever you do, don't major in library science as an undergrad. Maybe 
> minor in it, along with some other major, if you want, but it's not 
> useful by itself as an undergraduate degree--most libraries want 
> librarians to have the MLIS. And what if you change your mind after a 
> few years and don't want to get the masters? Do something you could 
> get a career in--or work in, part time, to afford the MLIS.
>
> If you want to be a systems librarian, why not get a degree in systems 
> engineering or IT? (Seriously, there are degrees in 
> IT<http://www.ccsu.edu/page.cfm?p=332>now, what a world!) Computer 
> science wouldn't hurt, if you don't mind theory, and you can get some 
> good foundational stuff that will help with the information science 
> part of "libraries and information science."
>
> The school where I got my MLIS had an "Information Science" department 
> that was mostly IT, too. So, that's a possibility.
>
> --
> Coral Sheldon-Hess
> http://sheldon-hess.org/coral
> @web_kunoichi
>
>
> On Wed, May 28, 2014 at 7:17 PM, Riley Childs 
> <[email protected]
> >wrote:
>
> > I was curious about the type of degrees people had. I am heading off 
> > to college next year (class of 2015) and am trying to figure out 
> > what to
> major
> > in. I want to be a systems librarian, but I can't tell what to major in!
> I
> > wanted to hear about what paths people took and how they ended up 
> > where they are now.
> >
> > BTW Y'All at NC State need a better tour bus driver (not the c4l 
> > tour,
> the
> > admissions tour) ;) the bus ride was like a rickety roller coaster...
> 🎢
> >
> > Also, if you know of any scholarships please let me know ;) you 
> > would be my BFF :P
> >
> >
> > Riley Childs
> > Student
> > Asst. Head of IT Services
> > Charlotte United Christian Academy
> > (704) 497-2086
> > RileyChilds.net
> > Sent from my Windows Phone, please excuse mistakes
> >
>

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