Guest speaker sessions via Zoom:
Thursday, Mar. 7 from 12:00 to 4:30 pm ET (recordings available)
Manage conflict and safety concerns proactively by learning strategies and tactics for conflict resolution, de-escalation, and long-term safety in your library or classroom. Keep your colleagues, patrons, and yourself safe by learning best practices for sustaining library safety.
Safety concerns are on the rise at libraries, and it can be difficult to know your options for managing these challenges. This course, intended for librarians and frontline staff, will teach you trauma-informed practices for de-escalation and conflict in order to promote safety in your library and classroom.
Librarians often have to be mediators in moments of high tension. This course will equip you with tools to respond to security issues, file incident reports, resolve conflicts, intervene as a bystander, and more to ensure you are prepared in these moments. You will also learn how to establish restorative justice practices so that you can approach safety from an equity lens.
You will leave this half-day intensive with new and innovative strategies to prioritize safety in your library.
The live sessions run on Thursday, March 7, 2024 from 12:00-4:30 pm ET (recorded for on-demand viewing). Don’t miss this opportunity!
When you sign up early, you’ll have immediate access to our Early Access On Demand Resources—a series of webinars from Library Journal and School Library Journal contributors along with rich, supporting materials in the form of readings, activities, and videos—to explore at your own pace.
Approach safety from a trauma-informed lens
Use NARCAN to respond to opioid overdose crises
Use tools to stay grounded in your values during conflict
Understand youth developmental norms
Engage with youth in crisis in an authentic, trauma-informed, and developmentally appropriate way
Establish professional and healthy boundaries
Resolve conflicts in a trauma-informed way
Know when to disengage and ask for support
This course is for librarians and frontline staff to equip you with tactical safety strategies on the ground as you navigate safety risks, high tension, or conflict in the workplace.
If you attend or watch the recordings of all live sessions, you'll spend approximately 4 hours on this course. You'll earn 4 hours of PD credit and a Library Journal certificate of completion.
Can’t make a live session? All guest speaker sessions are recorded and available on demand for six months following the initial broadcast.
4 professional development credit hours
For support with online courses, please contact libraryjournal@edmaker.co
All guest speaker sessions feature live captioning and are made available on demand after the initial broadcast. Please email libraryjournal@edmaker.co upon registration if you require any special accommodations and we will make our best efforts to facilitate them.
Discounted registration fees are available for groups of 3 or more.
Send us a request for a quote.
By registering for this event you confirm that you have read and agree to our Code of Conduct.
For support with online courses, please contact libraryjournal@edmaker.co.
Session 1 | 12:00-12:45 pm ET
Librarians and frontline staff often have to navigate tense or unsafe situations. How do you simultaneously attempt to resolve conflict and maintain your personal boundaries and self-care all while in a customer service role? How do you respond to an unruly patron, and at what point do you disengage and ask for support? This session will discuss de-escalation strategies and give you practical tips for identifying and articulating your boundaries and identifying ways to care for yourself while at work.
Speaker:
Melissa Munn, (she, her) Customer Experience Director, Public Operations at Pierce County Library System |
Session 2 | 12:45-1:30 pm ET
Trauma-informed practice is essential for creating an environment of safety and care. This session will teach you the foundations of trauma-informed principles to apply to your library especially, but not exclusively, in moments of crisis. We will also discuss ways to process and start to heal after a traumatic event. These practices will be actionable and relevant whether you’re interacting with patrons, colleagues, or turning trauma-informed care toward yourself.
Speakers:
Leticia Cotto, Customer Experience Officer, Hartford Public Library |
Catherine G. Corto-Mergins, LCSW, Director of Training, The Village for Families & Children |
Break | 1:30-1:45 pm ET
Session 3 | 1:45-2:30 pm ET
How do you know when there is a potential opioid overdose incident in your library? And what can you do to help defuse the issue and support the patron if needed? This NARCAN training will teach you how to recognize the signs of an opioid overdose and administer the drug Naloxone (brand name NARCAN), a medication that saves lives by reversing an opioid overdose. Leave this session understanding your role in harm reduction in this public health crisis.
Note: The training does not provide the credentials to be a Naloxone Distribution Entity. State requirements differ. Please check with your local state HHS or Health Departments for specific requirements for your state.
Speaker:
Kourtnaye Sturgeon, director of education at Overdose Lifeline, Inc. (ODL) |
Session 4 | 2:30-3:15 pm ET
Between safety concerns and hostile patrons, tensions in and around libraries are at an all-time high. Research shows that implicit biases are more likely to surface and escalate during moments of tension and conflict. As a result, truly internalizing equity practices is key to centering equity during conflict. This session will discuss ways to ground yourself, recognize and deal with implicit bias, and respond rather than react in moments of conflict so that you remain aligned with your values.
Speaker:
Lu Bangura, Chief of Equity and Fair Practice at Enoch Pratt Free Library |
Break | 3:15-3:30 pm ET
Session 5 | 3:30-4:30 pm ET
A panel of experts on working with young adults in and outside the library profession will share insight from their own fields on how to manage and de-escalate situations involving tweens and teens in crisis. The panel will be moderated by a librarian and facilitated discussion after the panel will focus on how these insights from other fields can be put into practice in a library environment.
Speaker:
Georgette E. Spratling, MALS, MLIS, Library Manager - Youth Services Librarian - Program Coordinator at North Miami Public Library |
Astro Pittman, (they/them) 2SLGBTQ2IA+ Specialist |
Leslie Briner, MSW, Founder of Social Strategies, LLC |
Live session with Andrea Blackman and Tasneem Ansariyah Grace |
Live Guest Speakers
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Recordings of guest speakers |
Recordings Available After The Live Session
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Early Access On Demand Resources |
Early Access and Ongoing Resources To Support Learning
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