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How Data Librarians Use Community to Get Started and Stay Current

Getting oriented in data librarianship

The landscape of research data, scholarly communication, and data services changes fast…faster than most formal training programs can keep up with. If you’re thinking about moving into data librarianship (or you’re already in the role and trying to keep up), it can be daunting. Luckily, data librarianship has a generous, active, wildly knowledgeable community. That community is one of your most powerful career assets.

Below is a curated, community-informed guide to the conferences, training programs, reading habits, and professional groups that can help you get oriented and stay connected to the people shaping the field.

Start With Community/Professional Groups 

Conferences Worth Your Time

You don’t have to attend all of these, but consider exploring a few to find your people

Training and Certificate Programs

These programs can help you get grounded or formalize a professional pivot:

Technical Skills Pay Off

You don’t need to become a software engineer, but having some technical confidence changes everything. Consider:

Carpentries trainings are ideal for this because they focus on practical, beginner-friendly, research-oriented skills.

Publications to Keep on your Radar

Journals

Even periodic table-of-contents scanning can keep you current on trends.

Foundational Reading

Internships, Bootcamps & Real-World Experience

Tap Into Everyday Community Knowledge

The data-librarian community is uncommonly open, supportive, and collaborative. Some of the best ways to stay plugged in:

This is a community where asking questions is normal, not embarrassing. Data librarianship thrives because people share freely: tools, failures, workflows, job ads, and questions that start with “Is anyone else seeing…?” There is no single path into the field. Instead, there is a community that helps you build the path as you go.

If you’re advising someone exploring data librarianship, or you’re stepping into the role yourself, this post can be a great starting point. But the most important step is simply showing up:

Join a Slack. Ask a question. Attend a webinar. Volunteer to teach a Carpentries workshop.

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Contributors: Thank you to everyone in the community who helped pull this together, especially Amanda Whitmire, Abigail Goben, Kristin Briney, Megan O’Donnell, Kelsey Badger, Deb McCaffrey, Jen Ferguson, Mikala Narlock, Stephanie Labou, Rachel Woodbrook, Katharine Tepper, and Stephanie Labou.

If there’s a resource, program, or community space we missed that you think others would benefit from, we’d love to hear from you. Send us a note at uc3@ucop.edu and help keep this guide growing.