Library Life

Student Focus: Wendy Horne

- WENDY HORNE

Wendy was born and bred in Upper Hutt. When she isn’t ‘working’ she spends her time running around after her husband and two boys, studying, going to hot yoga on a Saturday morning, ‘playing’ cricket, working out ways to get into Wellington to go to gigs and drinking beer at Upper Hutt’s trendy Brewtown and the Upper Hutt institutio­n ‘The Tote.’

Q CAN YOU DESCRIBE YOUR LIBRARY JOURNEY UP UNTIL THIS POINT?

A I have worked at Upper Hutt City Library since 1999, following a brief stint at National Library as a library assistant and an illustriou­s career at Pak ‘N’ Save as a checkout operator. I loved the library as a kid and have very fond memories of visiting the mobile library, as well as our central branch. I spent lots of time in the school library at college and I just thought it would be an awesome job and was lucky enough to be the successful candidate at Upper Hutt. I have had many roles at the library, but the core of all the jobs has been customer service, which I am really passionate about (read into that what you will!). In the last five years I have been delivering core circulatio­n training with the new Kōtui libraries and this has been the best fun – visiting other libraries and sharing knowledge!

HOW LONG HAVE YOU BEEN STUDYING AND WHAT QUALIFICAT­ION ARE YOU CURRENTLY STUDYING TOWARDS?

*Whispers* I originally started a Level 5 diploma in 1999 but was so overwhelme­d by it (in a lazy youthful way) I never even completed the first paper. I started my second study journey with Open Polytenic in 2015 and completed the Level 5 Diploma in Informatio­n and Library Studies, and began the Graduate Certificat­e in Library and Informatio­n Leadership in 2019, with a view to finish it in early 2020. I have also started my te reo journey with the Papa Reo course through Te Wānanga o Aotearoa.

WHAT MADE YOU DECIDE TO STUDY FOR A LIS QUALIFICAT­ION?

The second time round was due to a few factors – my husband was diagnosed with cancer – all fixed now – and my boss of 15 years left (Hi Debbie!), as well as a few other people in my wider organisati­on leaving. I wanted to protect myself and my job and in turn, my family, as well as proving to myself and others that I knew my stuff. I think this has turned into wanting to learn the deeper meaning of why we do stuff and the considerat­ions taken with making decisions and directions of our services. One of the key things I felt I wanted to achieve with the graduate certificat­e was not to learn how to be the boss (that is

other people), but to be able to communicat­e up and down to staff and stakeholde­rs alike, challengin­g assumption­s and being able to explain our value.

HOW DO YOU JUGGLE STUDY AND WORK?

I feel a bit smug saying this, but I haven’t really felt like I have needed to juggle. I work full-time and am a mum to two boys, and my husband and I have a relatively busy social life on occasion. I spend my summer weekends playing and watching cricket and enjoy heading out into Wellington for gigs. My habits changed quite a bit while my husband was sick, which I think has helped my organisati­on – little things like doing things when they need to be done, tidying up first before tackling study, and blocking out time to do the actual study and writing – I have handed in almost every single assignment a week or two before the due date. I have an awesome team leader (studying a paper ahead of me) who reads my work and tells me I am amazing, so that helps drive me too!

I HEAR YOU WORK AT UPPER HUTT LIBRARY CAN YOU TELL US ABOUT WHAT YOUR JOB INVOLVES?

I do heaps and I love it! Currently I am the Technology and Systems Coordinato­r and I look after the digital side of stuff at the library. I spend lots of time liaising with help desks and the Council IT team and troublesho­oting. I spend about 5–10 hours a week on the floor out in the library and I love catching up with customers. I spend a lot of those hours smiling and laughing and chatting, oh and I issue the odd book too I suppose! I have been working with APNK on the roll out of Chromebook­s in our library and have offered advice to anyone who wanted it (and probably some who didn’t). I am involved with our senior leadership team at an operationa­l level, coordinate inductions and in-house training, and I am usually happy to turn my hand to anything as I have done lots of stuff in 20 years, but recently I have been trying not to jump in, and let others have a turn – let’s just say this a work in progress.

WHAT ADVICE WOULD YOU GIVE TO SOMEONE CONSIDERIN­G STUDY?

If you have never studied before, or it has been a long time between studying, there are foundation courses you can do through the Open Polytechni­c that will set you up. I did the Certificat­e in Tertiary Study Skills before embarking on my diploma and it was really great to be able to learn how to do things like referencin­g and different writing styles, instead of freaking out about them when it came to assignment time.

Read everything you get – and you will get a lot! But take the time to read your welcome pack, the forums, emails, the coursework - they are laden with so many useful tips and directions! This sounds like a no-brainer but if you are starting out it can be overwhelmi­ng but you can do it! (And you can do it with a coffee, or a wine, or a whiskey – your choice!)

And buy yourself a nice little pencil case with a nice pen, a highlighte­r and a pencil.

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