Looks like time to pack my bags. Twitter has been an amazing source of collegiality and friendship—thank you, friends! Catch me on my other socials. See you soon
My colleagues and I participated in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Care and Handling Awareness training at work today organised by some brilliant colleagues, Ryan Stoker, Lyndon Ormond Parker and @saywhatsentance (1/3)
I don’t think I was prepared for the emotional impact of it. Working in a cultural organisation like a Library requires acknowledgment that I work in a monument to western civilisation, a tool of colonisation and that my work upholds and maintains white supremacy. (2/3)
This may seem like an ordinary portrait, but look closer.
That grey mark at the bottom is actually a skull when viewed from the right angle.
It's The Ambassadors, painted by Hans Holbein the Younger nearly 500 years ago, and one of art's greatest mysteries...
When I park at work alongside another station wagon with reusable shopping bags, old toys to take to Vinnies, and sports equipment in the back, I give that person a mental fist bump. Look at us overloaded working parents trying to get shit done!
As a librarian I have met many students struggling with their relationship with their supervisor. If this is you, listen to this podcast. Also good for anyone with a line manager or who is a line manager #handsup 👇
Do you have a toxic relationship with your line manager or supervisor? Three ways you can tackle your relationship so you can stop dreading your meetings and start thriving again at work 🧵
This is a great listen. I really feel for the folks interviewed, “it’s like hacky hour with a gun to your head”. Also, after living in the US on a precarious J visa for years, I understand the immigration nightmare some are now facing
It’s Hard Fork Friday! Hours before layoffs began, we talked to two Twitter employees about life under Elon. One person described the last few days as like “hack week with a gun to your head.” Listen to their stories ➡️ https://t.co/UVqdbvRzgp
"By analysing large-scale bibliographic data from 2010 to 2019, we found a robust association between open access and increased diversity of citation sources" https://t.co/8D2exALmzi