Tag Archives: tips

Strategies to Simplify: Tip 4: The Master To-Do List

“Work simply. Live fully.”  This week CMLE focuses on the following work productivity tip from Work Simply, Carson Tate’s popular book.  At CMLE, we’ve boiled down Tate’s wealth of knowledge from Work Simply to a few key points; please see the book for more detail and resources. At the bottom, see links to earlier tips in the series! Let’s all be our best selves….

This week’s activity: Consolidate your to-do lists into one Master Task List

To get all your to-dos in one place, first you need to perform a “brain dump,” in which you think about everything you need to get done, both at work and in your personal life. In Work Simply, Carson Tate describes this process as “Turning your brain upside down and emptying its contents.”  Then, if you have noticed that your list contains more projects than simple tasks, work to create attainable next steps that aren’t so overwhelming. Finally, keep this list in one place for easy and constant reference.

Recently, you discovered your Productivity Style with a simple assessment.

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Work Simply

Find your Productivity Style for some personalized tools to manage your Master List:

Prioritizer: Try using ruled or lined paper. Some apps that may be useful to you include iDoneThis, which sends out e-mail reminders asking what tasks you have completed.

Planner: You may like using calendars, or Outlook’s task manager. Also try out Wunderlist, an app that allows you to keep all your to-dos in one place, and includes due dates and reminders.

Arranger: Try using Stickies, or the app Carrot, which takes a to-do list to the next level – earn points for completing tasks and get praised (or scolded!) for how many tasks you complete.

Visualizer: Whiteboards or unlined notebooks may work well for you, or try Personal Brain, a mind-mapping tool that works on both PCs and Macs, which links ideas, documents, and sites based on the way you think.

Previous tips in this series

Strategies to Simplify: Tip 1: Focus your attention

“Work simply. Live fully.”  This week CMLE focuses on the following work productivity tip from Work Simply, Carson Tate’s popular book.  At CMLE, we’ve boiled down Tate’s wealth of knowledge from Work Simply to a few key points; please see the book for more detail and resources. At the bottom, see links to earlier tips in the series! Let’s all be our best selves….

This week’s activity: Use your Productivity Style to focus your attention.

As Carson Tate explains in Work Simply, “Our attention is an enormously powerful force, one that can profoundly shape our lives and our very being.” With all the distractions around today, learning to make the most of our attention is an essential skill. Last week you discovered your Productivity Style with a simple assessment. Use your style to consider these tips.

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Work simply. Live fully

 

Find your Productivity Style for some personalized tips:

Prioritizer: Try setting a timer or alarm to go off at specific intervals throughout your day. The alarm serves to remind you to focus your attention and stay on task!

Planner: Use your scheduling skills to your benefit, and plan your day’s tasks around your varying energy levels or the type of work required by each task.

Arranger: Make a plan to mix your solitary work with a conversation or collaboration with a friend or co-worker. Music can also help Arrangers keep their focus. (As an Arranger, I can vouch for both of these tips! Angie)

Visualizer: Keep a balance in your day between the routine, boring tasks and more enjoyable, stimulating tasks. The variety will help keep your attention focused.

Previous tips in this series


	

Nine must know tips for Instagram

Red UmbrellaInstagram (in this writer’s opinion) is one of the most fun social media sites. Being able to beautify your pictures and literally see what your friends are up to without the wordy commentary of Facebook, what’s not to like? Just like any social media app, Instagram has some great shortcuts that can improve its experience.

This article delves deeper into nine tips for beginners, many of which include increasing privacy by blocking random followers and removing location tags from a map. You can also find instructions for viewing every photo you’ve ever liked, and arranging notifications to alert you when someone you follow has posted a new picture.

How do you like Instagram? Any other shortcuts or tips the article forgot? Leave us a comment and let us know!

Image credit: http://tinyurl.com/md7dfnp, licensed under CC BY 2.0

5 tips for making student group work successful

heartGroup activities can be really enjoyable if teacher librarians are aware of the best management strategies to use. Chaos and high decibel noise can take over in a hurry if proactive steps aren’t taken in getting the groups started. For example, instructions to simply discuss without producing a tangible product can prove to be a disaster. Our friends at  Edutopia, offer strategies, tips and tools that enhance group engagement while curbing the chaos. Hmmmm….some of these strategies could work in librarian working groups too!

Image credit: https://unsplash.com/ (Kristina Litvjak), licensed under CC0 1.0

http://www.edutopia.org/blog/tips-making-group-work-manageable-kristina-doubet-jessica-hockett

20 project management tips for libraries

meetingGet your library project on track with 20 tips from Proud2know. From the lessons she learned in her 20 years of managing international and national digital projects, Vanessa Proudman shares some quick tips to get you started.

Read the whole post now or check out a preview of the list:

  1. First develop your business case
  2. Specify how your project involvement helps achieve internal library (strategic and financial) business goals from the start
  3. Know the stakeholders who will help make this project fly or crash
  4. Help ensure the project hits the right notes with your users
  5. Set the scene for the success ahead
  6. Use metaphors for one project voice
  7. Make your project objectives SMART transparent
  8. Define your user requirements and technical specifications
  9. Ensure that staff are up-skilled in a project management method.
  10. Consider how to do more with less resources this time around
  11. Bring in new skills and excellence into your institution
  12. Involve and build leaders and great communicators
  13. Support secure online remote project work
  14. Specify the exploitation of results from the beginning
  15. Manage your risks
  16. Keep an issue log and manage change consistently
  17. Monitor and evaluate throughout the life of your project
  18. Open Access, open data and disseminating project results
  19. Consider a sustainability plan
  20. Look back to look forward