Employment prospects?
Warning: this is a long post. It made me realize that I don't feel too bad about not doing short posts every day as I tend to subject you readers to this length of post on a somewhat regular basis.
Recently, there has been a discussion about employment, or the lack thereof, in this field on the Newlib-L listserv. One person mentioned that she is leaving the field, hoping for greener pastures. Her comments started me wondering: how much attrition does this field experience? That is, not including retirements, people who leave the field intending to never come back to it.
Why do we experience that attrition? Bad job experiences, loss of interest in the field, greater interest in another field, poor pay, no jobs available, or some other nebulous reason? Anyone looking through the archives of this weblog can see my depression and disenchantment with the job hunt. Yes, job hunting is going to be bad no matter what field you're in these days. I recognized that because of the sudden economic downturn after 9/11 (though the economy had started going bad even before that date), I would have a harder time finding a position. What I resented during my job search was the same "call to arms" that was being heralded as I enterred grad school. The myth of the massive retirements.
The problem is that these retirements are going to be happening:
1. at upper levels.
2. probably 5 years later than expected, if not longer, to compensate for the market's tanking.
Yes, those of my cohort in the field are being groomed to step up for when those retirements DO happen. We can't be groomed though if we are not in a position to be groomed. We are scrambling for what few entry-level positions there are compared to the number of new graduates. We often have to cobble together several part-time positions to make a decent salary, and almost always without benefits. If we're lucky, those part-time positions will be giving us the professional experience needed to get our foot in the door for a full-time position. Those of us who are sole providers often take on part-time positions, in addition to our full-time positions, in order to pay off our student loans and other debts.
None of these situations are new. They are talked about constantly among new librarians. The
ALA-APA was created to address the issue of salaries. What needs to be addressed in addition to the salaries, is the lack of full-time entry-level positions. The profession also needs to recognize that the statistics about the retirements became out of date as soon as the market tanked. If you're going to discuss the "soon-to-be-happening" retirements, I want to see numbers from 2004 to support this, not 1998.