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This post talks about the importance of professional librarians, and links to another about the deskilling of National Parks.
Basically, you get what you pay for, and you DON'T get what you DON'T pay for. That means if you want professionals who actually know what they are doing, and can help you competently, you must pay for those salaries. If you are cheap, you will get unskilled people who know jack about the topic. In a library, this could mean you don't find what you need and you miss a crucial deadline. In a park, it could mean you wind up DEAD if someone makes an innocent mistake about what terrain is traversable right now or not.
If I walk into Wal-Mart, I really don't expect staff to know anything about what's for sale. It's Wal-Mart; I know what their priorities are, and if the employees are actually knowledgeable about the goods, that's a pleasant surprise. If I walk into a library, I expect the person behind the desk to know more than I do about what the building contains and how to find information. That pretty much means they have to be professionals, because if I can't find it, we're looking for a needle in a barn complex not merely a haystack. If I go to a National Park, I expect serious and accurate information about its uses to be available, and I should like to be able to carry on a conversation on the level of "What are your observations now that wolves have been reintroduced to this ecosystem?" not merely "What's that red flower?"
And I think those kinds of things are better ways to spend money than, say, tax breaks for the rich or pouring wealth down the rathole of voluntary warfare.
Basically, you get what you pay for, and you DON'T get what you DON'T pay for. That means if you want professionals who actually know what they are doing, and can help you competently, you must pay for those salaries. If you are cheap, you will get unskilled people who know jack about the topic. In a library, this could mean you don't find what you need and you miss a crucial deadline. In a park, it could mean you wind up DEAD if someone makes an innocent mistake about what terrain is traversable right now or not.
If I walk into Wal-Mart, I really don't expect staff to know anything about what's for sale. It's Wal-Mart; I know what their priorities are, and if the employees are actually knowledgeable about the goods, that's a pleasant surprise. If I walk into a library, I expect the person behind the desk to know more than I do about what the building contains and how to find information. That pretty much means they have to be professionals, because if I can't find it, we're looking for a needle in a barn complex not merely a haystack. If I go to a National Park, I expect serious and accurate information about its uses to be available, and I should like to be able to carry on a conversation on the level of "What are your observations now that wolves have been reintroduced to this ecosystem?" not merely "What's that red flower?"
And I think those kinds of things are better ways to spend money than, say, tax breaks for the rich or pouring wealth down the rathole of voluntary warfare.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-06-26 01:43 pm (UTC)This has carry over into every field. Almost always, you get what you pay for and the reverse. Hell, I can't find a knowledgeable employee in a fabric store, rather, I as the shopper am *always* the knowledgeable person there. I can't tell you how many times I've walked into a fabric store and had an employee say to the customer she was not able to help, "OH good, here's Susi; she'll know!" And at fabric stores, they pay minimum wage.
Yes...
Date: 2011-06-26 06:01 pm (UTC)*chuckle* But yeah, I've been pulled in for advice in all kinds of places. The Universe has hung a sign on me: "Information Here." I've had total strangers ask me to explain or recommend things to me, or read labels, or whatnot, because I "just look like someone who'd know."
Re: Yes...
Date: 2011-06-26 07:13 pm (UTC)Dammit, where's my flying car?
Re: Yes...
Date: 2011-06-26 07:27 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2011-06-26 06:04 pm (UTC)Case in point:
Our college recently published (internally, of course) the results of the environmental survey that all faculty and staff took a few months ago. At least two or three of the comments about the library amounted to, "The librarians do nothing. They just sit around all day. Wow, I wish I had that job."
*facepalm*
0_o
Date: 2011-06-26 08:13 pm (UTC)Yeah...
Date: 2011-06-26 08:55 pm (UTC)Re: Yeah...
Date: 2011-06-26 09:05 pm (UTC)