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Part-Time Librarians: an Examination of their Roles in Missouri Academic Libraries. Brent Husher Reference Librarian, UMKC Adjunct Reference Librarian, MCC – Longview husherb@umkc.edu Tensy Marcos- Bodker Adjunct Reference Librarian, MCC – Longview Tensy.Marcos-Bodker@mcckc.edu.
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Part-Time Librarians:an Examination of their Roles in Missouri Academic Libraries
Brent HusherReference Librarian, UMKCAdjunct Reference Librarian, MCC – Longviewhusherb@umkc.eduTensy Marcos-BodkerAdjunct Reference Librarian, MCC – LongviewTensy.Marcos-Bodker@mcckc.edu
Agenda1. National Picture2. Survey of Missouri Libraries3. What Part-Timers Offer4. Challenges Part-Timers Face5. Remedies6. Questions
Adjuncts – the national picture? http://www.flickr.com/photos/manchesterlibrary/3401129903/
Adjuncts – the national picture • In 1987 slightly more than half of CC faculty were part-time • In 2003, that number was up to 70% • 43% or 530,000 part-time (US dept. Ed) • 67% of faculty at CC are part-time (Schmidt 2008)
Adjuncts –the national picture • From 1976 to 1999 enrollment up by 34%, part-time faculty grew by 119%, and full-time grew by 31% • Women disproportionately over-represented in part-time work • 68% of faculty teaching English at community colleges are part-time. (MLA Dec 2008)
Survey of Missouri Academic Libraries http://www.flickr.com/photos/hometowninvasion/392578146/
Survey Design & Methods • Problems • Random selection etc. • Includes qualitative • Survey rules
Who Participated? • Started survey: 91 • Work at a Missouri academic library: 72 • Self-identified as part-time : 7 • Self-identified as full-time: 51 • Manager or administrator: 29
I consider part-time librarianship to be… As / than full-time
(Part-Time Respondents only) I consider part-time librarianship to be… As / than full-time
Comments related to Professional Status • We only have part time med students that keep library open at night. • however--that's not how full-time colleagues view us! • It does not matter whether the person works full time or part time as a librarian. It is the quality of work that matters. • Are not required to do research or service at our institution. • It depends on the position and person's work.
More Comments • Part-time librarians are at a disadvantage in a variety of ways--communication, access to management, opportunities for advancement, etc • We only have a part-time librarian on an as needed basis, when we are not fully staffed. • I do not see a connection between the amount of time spent and the quality of a person's work. I do see a problem if the employer does not offer full-time employment as the norm, however.
More Comments • Part-time librarians are not expected to do research or service. • not useful, too long to train, unable to fill need, hard to find "MLS" required work as too long to train • There are no part-time librarians at my institution (14 responses)
Benefits Respondents say most full-time and few part- time librarians receive the following benefits: • Employer provided health insurance • Vacation time • Paid sick time • Employer funded retirement plan
Benefits Comments • Librarians are faculty on a 12 month contract so we have better benefits than the majority of the faculty who are on 9 mo contracts • 12 month librarians receive all the benefits listed; 9 month do not have formal leave/vacation or sick time • Part-timers receive pro-rated benefits
Benefits Comments • Instead of part time librarians, we have part time reference assistants • Part-time librarians really suffer because of this status • Have not employed a part-time librarian in 5 years
Benefits Comments • Our part-timers are retired faculty • No part-time has an benefits whether professional or support staff • We don’t have part-time people in librarian positions
Professional Development Respondents say most full-time and few part- time librarians receive the following : • Funding for conference registration • Funding for conference hotel and travel • Paid time-off for conference and webinars
Professional Development Comments • Budget status affects this each year • Given $1000/year for professional development • Funding cut this year • Limited funding but at discretion of librarian • When the budget allows • Everyone gets a portion of conferences paid
Professional Development Comments • This varies; sometimes part-timers do receive paid time off for local conferences and seminars • Sometimes the costs are covered, if part-time insists on this • There are occasional exceptions for part-timers to attend local seminars & conferences • Part-timers can apply for staff development monies.
What Part-Timers Offer • Work experience • Increased productivity • Reduced absenteeism/turnover • Reduced burnout • Extended coverage (nights/weekends)
What Part-Timers Offer • Retain professionals who choose part-time • Parenting • Caregivers • Seeking additional degrees • Geographic relocation • Reduce labor costs (no benefits) • Income for retirees
Challenges Part-Timers Face • Communication • Pay • Experience • Burnout / boredom • Professional development/advancement
Remedies • Communication • Integrating with campus • Cross training –keep things interesting • Additional responsibilities , assignments & projects • Duties: rotating & new • Offer & encourage support & training • New kinds of rewards
Remedies • Retention • Faculty Status • Invest in Future • Encourage Professional Development (Research, Presentation etc.) • Examine Inequalities