journalArticle

Never Neutral, Never Alone

R. David Lankes

2020-07-00 Jul 2020

In: Journal of Education for Library and Information Science

Vol. 61 , No. 3 , pp. 383-388

DOI: 10.3138/jelis.61.3.2020-0007

URL: https://www.proquest.com/docview/2519892415/abstract/30E80FE...

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Abstract

Library science is getting harder to teach. The variety in libraries of all types is increasing as more and more mold themselves to their communities rather than field-wide norms. How can library science education change to meet the new variety, and the variety in a post-neutrality world? The author proposes new metrics for evaluating the effectiveness of LIS programs: Agility-What ongoing methods are in place to identify, evaluate, and prepare students for developments in a rapidly changing profession? Connectedness-Who are the partners networked with the program and its faculty to ensure direct connection of the classroom to the field? Embeddedness-What is the program's ability to deliver authentic field experiences to students that allow them to contextualize theory and research methods? Resilience-How prepared are librarians to face, understand (i.e., analyze), and solve the problems in a community in line with the professional mission and values of librarianship?

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