Category Archives: Training

From American Libraries: Conducting effective difficult conversations

Check out this article excerpt 

“What is a difficult conversation? For a conflict-avoidant person, it is any conversation that produces anxiety, that worries you, or that you have put off, and in which you are certain the other person will not like what you are saying. For a straight shooter who is not afraid of confrontation, a difficult conversation may become one in which, after “telling it like it is,” the other person becomes hostile, combative, or worse.

Different kinds of difficult conversations

A difficult conversation entered without reflection can become a difficult situation, and it may only go downhill from there. But what is difficult is in the eye of the beholder—or rather, the mouth of the speaker. However, some generalizations and common examples are:

Telling people they will not be retained or did not get a promotion. Hiring and promoting can be rewarding and even pleasurable conversations to have, and firing or denying promotions can be among the most difficult. Unfortunately, our jobs are filled with the give-and-take of this cycle, and thinking about how to manage the less pleasurable conversations that arise throughout the workday is important.

A leader might have to let someone go for many reasons, such as when grant funding for a position ends and there are no other funds to continue the position. Sometimes we have to let people go because they are not performing their job adequately. Often the decision happens after a long series of difficult conversations. If you have not been consistent about having frequent conversations and creating documentation, letting someone go can be a difficult process.

Similarly, telling people that they did not get a promotion or a position they applied for can also be difficult. Often people who have applied for a promotion have worked with you for some time. The employee may have become a friend and trusted colleague. In these instances, difficult conversations have an added layer of personal complication that must be considered.

Telling people they are not performing adequately. In many libraries and other academic units, we are expected to conduct performance reviews on an annual basis. We would like to report that their regularity makes them easier, but that would not be true. For most of us, these conversations are especially difficult precisely because of their regularity and because we conduct them with people we may know well.

Negative performance reviews are tricky because the task is to clearly identify behavior that needs to be changed while also motivating the employee to stay engaged and be willing to improve. Hiring new employees is almost always more expensive and time consuming than training and supporting current employees. Finding a way to conduct this conversation effectively is critical to success as a leader.

These conversations can be especially difficult if the other person believes he or she is doing an excellent job. However, avoiding telling people that they are not meeting expectations is unproductive. How can anyone improve his or her performance unless he or she knows that expectations are not being met? You can put off having the difficult conversation, wait until the yearly review, and then surprise the employee with a poor performance review, but that would be discouraged by any human resources department. It is unfair and unkind not to help the employee improve simply because you want to avoid a difficult conversation. Furthermore, ignoring poor performance can affect the morale of those performing well. It can be demoralizing to work hard every day only to see others making a minimal effort with no consequences.

Telling people you need them to do something they don’t want to do, or telling people you need them to stop doing something that they like to do or feel entitled to do. These types of conversations may be less formal in terms of institutional norms, but they are no less difficult. In academic settings like libraries, most of us have benefited from the opportunity to “own” our jobs. This privilege can make work rewarding, but sometimes we forget that the opportunity to create our own work is a privilege and not a right. All working situations change; new tasks get assigned and new technologies demand that old tasks be done in new ways. Redirecting people’s work is a common aspect of a leader’s job. This conversation is not likely to go well if not handled with some level of reflection and planning.

The good news and the bad news

No matter what you do to prepare, difficult conversations are never easy. There is a lot at stake in these types of conversations.

Telling people that grant funds have expired and they will not be rehired is tantamount to telling them that they will not be able to pay their rent or feed their children. Telling people that they are not performing tasks adequately is often interpreted as telling them they are inadequate human beings. You should go into each difficult conversation assuming that the stakes are even higher than evident on the surface.

Practical steps and learnable skills can be used to make difficult conversations go smoothly. Adequate preparation is important, and careful follow-up can ensure that such conversations result in desirable behavioral change and accountability for both the employee and yourself. Communication skills like listening, nonverbal immediacy, and clear messaging can go a long way toward making difficult conversations effective.

The good news is that these conversations can be productive and yield important change. People we supervise, armed with clear expectations and supported by compassionate messages, can transform into model employees. Through difficult conversations, we might learn what is keeping an employee from performing adequately and might be able to create supportive structures so that performance can meet expectations. There is much to be learned through a carefully navigated difficult conversation.

And the news gets even better. By having these conversations, you will gain confidence, strength, and integrity. A great irony of life as a manager is that avoiding difficult conversations makes work more difficult. Tasks don’t get completed on time and at the right level of quality. People can be confused and unhappy, which can make for low morale.

The difference between a minimally successful manager and a truly successful one is the capacity for having effective difficult conversations. You will be remembered and promoted not because you manage your budget well and meet deadlines, although these are very important, but because you help the people around you reach—and maybe exceed—their professional potential. Having these conversations may never be easy, but if you follow key steps and develop needed communication skills, you will become confident in your abilities and feel satisfied that there is integrity in the way that you interact with those under your supervision.”

Register Today for the 2018 Minitex Interlibrary Loan Conference

Here is the registration page, with all the info you need!

REGISTER NOW. The deadline is April 20.

WHEN
8:30 a.m. – 3:30 p.m., April 25, 2018

WHERE
Continuing Education & Conference Center
University of Minnesota, Saint Paul Campus
1890 Buford Avenue
Saint Paul, MN 55108

WHY
Our keynote speaker this year is Amanda Moran, Senior Market Analyst at Outsell. Amanda’s presentation, “Navigating the Future: Exceeding Stakeholder Demands,” will identify the key marketplace trends driving today’s changing library service paradigms. Katie Birch of OCLC will provide her always-popular “OCLC Resource Sharing Update,” and the afternoon will feature four breakouts, including a session led by Ray Lockman of Hennepin County Library titled “An Introduction to Microaggressions and Microactivism.” Minitex Director Valerie Horton will close the day with her plenary presentation, “Going Together: Working in Teams.”

Please contact Becky Ringwelski at e-ring@umn.edu or Zach Miller at zmiller@umn.edu with your questions or comments.

Here is the schedule:

8:30–9:00 Registration & refreshments
9:00–9:15 Welcome & opening remarks
9:15–10:15 Keynote Presentation—Navigating the Future: Exceeding Stakeholder Demands—Amanda Moran
10:15–10:30 Break
10:30–11:30 OCLC Resource Sharing Update—Katie Birch
11:30–12:45 Lunch
12:45–1:45 Break-out sessions

  • Microagression and microactivism
  • PALS Alma update
  • MNLINK
  • Minnesota Libraries Publishing Project
1:45–2:00 Break
2:00–2:45 Going Together: Working in Teams—Valerie Horton
2:45–3:00 Wrap-up

Best Prep Technology Integration Workshop for School Library people

This sounds like it may be an interesting program this summer! Remember: we have a scholarship available for up to $300 to help you attend training.

“Dear ITEM Members: Each summer, Best Prep offers their Technology Integration Workshop. This is a week-long workshop open to K-12 educators. What makes it unique is that each participant gets to be paired with a business so you can learn about the world of work where many of your students will be headed in the coming years. I encourage you to check out this great professional development opportunity, especially if you are looking for something unique to add to your professional development portfolio.

Mary Mehsikomer, CETL Technology Integration Development & Outreach Facilitator Minnesota E-Rate Coordinator for Schools TIES 651-999-6510 Mary.mehsikomer@ties.k12.mn.us

Here is info from the BestPrep website:

BestPrep’s Technology Integration Workshop positions technology as an essential part of the curriculum, providing the resources, strategies and knowledge to help educators integrate new technologies into the classroom. At this four-day professional development opportunity, educators learn how existing and emerging technologies can enhance lesson effectiveness and student engagement. Educators increase their technological literacy through first-hand and hands-on experiences including an impactful job shadow with a business professional.

Spend four days learning how to make your classroom come alive with the use of technology. Participants strengthen their technology integration skills, learn new technologies and witness current career and technology skills in the business world. Through presentations and breakout sessions, participants gain knowledge that is applied when modifying a unit plan to be used in the upcoming school year. The job shadow provides a glimpse into today’s workplace, an unparalleled experience. As part of their experience, each attendee creates a technology infused unit plan available to the public for viewing and use.

Find out more about the Technology Integration Workshop on this flyer and watch our short video from last year; it highlights the keynote speakers, breakout sessions and all that our educators learned.

A Day in the Life of a Leader: Free Webcast March 23

Leader123
This free webinar sounds great! We are focused on building 15 leadership skills in our Season Three of Linking Our Libraries podcast. Check out this webinar (free!), and also listen to our podcast so you are ready to be a leader for your own library! (This week we are discussing Planning.)

“What does it take to be a good leader? Join the San José State University School of Information as we explore the qualities and skills needed for leadership positions in the information profession during a four-part webcast series on A Day in the Life of a Leader. The webcasts are free to attend and open to everyone.

The first webcast is scheduled for Friday, March 23, 2018, from 10 to 11 a.m. Pacific Time. Guest speakers Dana Vanzanten and Heather Robinson from the St. Thomas Public Library in Ontario, Canada, will share their perspectives on the most important responsibilities and attitudes for leaders, as well as ways students can practice leadership skills while they’re still in grad school, or early in their careers.

Having worked in libraries for more than 20 years, both speakers have first-hand experience in paraprofessional and leadership roles. Currently, Vanzanten is the manager of advocacy and community development, and Robinson is chief executive officer.

Session URL: https://sjsu.zoom.us/j/640243104

More information about the March 23 webcast and upcoming webcasts is available on the iSchool’s website at https://ischool.sjsu.edu/about/webcasts/upcoming.

This webcast series is being organized by iSchool faculty members Susan Alman and Cheryl Stenstrom, who serve as co-chairs of the Leadership & Management Program Advisory Committee. Save the dates of April 6, 13 and 20 for the other leadership-focused webcasts.

Questions about this event or future events can be sent to ischool@sjsu.edu.”

Training Tips: Creativity at Work

White Marshmallows

I love to have creativity at work.

I have no artistic skill, I can’t dance, can’t draw, can’t sing – but I like to have new/fun/interesting things to do for work! Happiness at work (and in general!) is very important to me; and for me, having some creativity in the way I work, in my work environment, and in the work that I do makes me happy.

Probably, I’m not alone in this. I’m guessing that most people like to have an element of creativity or fun in the things you do. And you would be correct in thinking that’s a great way to go!!

Creativity at work means we think of new things to try. We solve old problems in new ways. And we have a whole new set of issues we can explore, once we start bringing creativity to the workplace!

Hopefully you are not in one of those stale organizations, where growth has fizzled out, and the robotic response to everything suggested is “But we’ve always done it that way.” (Okay, just typing that made me grind my teeth in annoyance!! Boo!!) Even if you are in there, you can start sneakily adding in creativity to the way you are working. Use colored folders, you rebel, you! Switch up your tea. Suggest a therapy dog program (backed up by funding plans, and research on the positive ROI.)

If you are the one thinking up your annual Staff Training Day program (or whatever your organization calls it), I love this activity! Do you know the marshmallow/spaghetti tower challenge?? You get the chance to try some creative problem solving, and reading through the supporting materials gives you so many ideas about other ways to build teams and solve problems in new ways!

Watch the video below. Or maybe consider reading the instructions and trying this for yourself (get colleagues to help you!), and THEN watch and learn the “secrets” behind the project! (Spoiler Alert: no real secrets; just interesting facts and approaches.)

Here is the material from Tom Wujec’s website on the challenge.

There are millions of other ways to be creative, and to practice your own workplace creativity! We will talk about more strategies; so feel free to leave yours below, or send us an email to admin@cmle.org!