A Practical Writing Guide for Academic Librarians
eBook - ePub

A Practical Writing Guide for Academic Librarians

Keeping It Short and Sweet

  1. 172 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

A Practical Writing Guide for Academic Librarians

Keeping It Short and Sweet

About this book

Mastering the skills necessary for clear, effective writing can make writing tasks flow more easily. This book helps academic librarians who are new to the profession or new to a supervisory or management position, as well as those who want to be more productive and make the their writing for work go more smoothly. From progress reports to project plans, cover letters to case studies and book reviews to blogging, readers will find examples and how-tos for most of the types of writing they need to do in their academic library careers. - Discusses the importance of style and audience - Analyzes and guides the reader through the types of writing that academic librarians use in their everyday work - Includes information on presenting data: specifically, tables, graphs and charts

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Yes, you can access A Practical Writing Guide for Academic Librarians by Anne Langley,Jonathan Wallace in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Languages & Linguistics & Library & Information Science. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
1

Introduction

If writing seems hard, it’s because it is hard. It’s one of the hardest things people do. – William Zinsser
Writing is hard. Writing is painful. Writing hurts.
There. We said it.
Pulling weeds out of dry soil, cleaning under the bathroom sink, looking for our work keys after a two-week holiday – we’d rather do any of these things than sit down in front of a computer and write.
And yet here we are, writing a book about writing for academic librarians.
Why? Because we saw a need for it.
Library managers and administrators assume that when you show up for work, you know how to write. And you do, of course. Even if you’re starting your first job in an academic library, you’ve spent at least four years of your life as an undergraduate and at least two years as a postgraduate. You’ve done plenty of writing.
The problem is, you haven’t done all the kinds of writing, or even most of the kinds of writing, that you’ll need to do in your job.
Even if you’re an experienced writer, when you’re confronted with a new kind of writing, you can feel like you’re back in that first-year composition course, or writing your first research paper. You may have no idea where to begin, or what you need to include, or what the unspoken rules are. You’re a beginner. You’re lost. It’s not a good feeling. And the fact that you know that you’re a competent professional only makes it worse.
We’re here to help, by taking the kinds of writing that academic librarians do, analyzing them one by one, and thereby taking the mystery and – we hope – at least some of the stress out of them.

What to expect from this book

In our Practical Writing Guide for Academic Librarians, you’ll find two kinds of help with writing.
The first two chapters, on style and audience, focus on broad concepts that apply to any writing you do at work. In fact, these chapters apply to any writing you do anywhere. In that sense, they should also be useful to writers who are not academic librarians. All the writing examples we use to illustrate our ideas, however, are taken from the world of academic libraries.
Just because the first two chapters are broad does not mean that they are theoretical rather than practical. In Chapter 2, we give you scores of words and phrases to avoid if you want your writing to be clearer and more concise, and we suggest alternatives. In Chapter 3, we help you get started with audience by sketching out the basic approach to each of the four main audiences for whom academic librarians write. At the end of both chapters, we show you how we put our recommendations to work in our own writing.
Chapters 4–9 are about the different kinds of writing you encounter at work. Each chapter focuses on writing projects that are similar to one another in some way. For example, Chapter 4 looks at the writing we do when we’re seeking a job, recommending someone else for a job, or seeking a promotion or a pay rise. Chapter 6 is about the writing we do when we become managers and have to supervise others.
After a brief introduction, each of these chapters looks at a series of typical writing projects. For each project, we give you a rundown of the dos and don’ts, and we include ideas about audience, objectives, idiosyncrasies, writing resources, and more.
For most writing projects, we also provide a sample document. These are not meant to be perfect examples of lilting and lyrical prose. Rather, we hope that these samples will get you started, giving you ideas about the format, voice, language and other conventions that define the documents you will be asked to write.

Our goals as writers

We wrote this book with our own writing principles in mind. We think that writers should strive to:
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 Be concise, direct and avoid jargon
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 Write appropriately for the intended audience
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 Use formatting to help the reader find information more easily.
If you apply these principles, your writing will be easier to understand, easier to follow and more fun to read. It’s the Golden Rule, modified for writing: Write unto readers as you would have them write unto you.
We hope that we succeeded in following our own principles throughout the book. But if we didn’t, it just goes to show you – writing is hard, and no one’s writing is perfect.
2

Style: short and sweet

If you came to this book looking for rules about writing, this chapter is the closest you’re going to get.
This is not, however, a chapter about grammar. We’re not going to make a fuss about whether you split infinitives, or start sentences with ‘and’. We’re not going to tell you whether it’s better to ask ‘Who do you love?’ or ‘Whom do you love?’ And we’re not going to try to persuade you that you should choose carefully whether to say ‘think’, ‘believe’ or ‘feel’. In disputes like these, we don’t have a dog in the race.
Our rules – suggestions, really – will help you make what you write more concise, more direct and clearer. That is, they’re about making your writing short and sweet – sweet in this case meaning not sugary or mellifluous but direct and to the point.
You don’t have to read this chapter to get something out of this book. If you are looking help with a specific library- related writing project, you can go directly to the chapter that covers that genre of writing for some quick, basic help. If, on the other hand, you want to improve your communication skills for all the writing assignments you encounter in your work, you are in the right place.

Why short and sweet?

As an academic librarian, we’re sure you’ll agree, you are nothing if not busy.
On a given day, you mig...

Table of contents

  1. Cover image
  2. Title page
  3. Table of Contents
  4. Copyright
  5. About the authors
  6. Chapter 1: Introduction
  7. Chapter 2: Style: short and sweet
  8. Chapter 3: Audience
  9. Chapter 4: Getting and keeping a job
  10. Chapter 5: Meetings and reports
  11. Chapter 6: Managing
  12. Chapter 7: Public services and collections
  13. Chapter 8: Online and presenting data
  14. Chapter 9: Scholarly work and teaching
  15. Chapter 10: More resources for writing
  16. Index