Core and More: Identifying Key Skills and Qualifications for LIS

by Eileen Abels and Laura Saunders

The LIS field is changing rapidly, and encompasses a wide range of career paths and directions, all of which must be considered when preparing new LIS professionals. In addition to more traditional skills related to information organization and soft skills like customer service orientation and interpersonal skills, employers are also looking skills and qualifications in areas like emerging technologies, preservation of print and non-print materials, design thinking, and cultural competency. It is incumbent on LIS schools to ensure that their curricula are meeting the needs of the field. But which skills are core—meaning that all students should have a foundation in those skills, regardless of their area of focus or ultimate career path—and which are specialized, meaning that only professionals in specific positions are likely to need those skills?

In spring 2017, Simmons SLIS undertook a survey to address these questions. The survey went out to area employers, internship and practicum supervisors, faculty, and alums. Respondents were asked to rank 53 skills on a scale of “core” to “specialized,” and were also given an opportunity to identify additional skills that they did not see represented in the original list. We received over 1100 responses, which we will be analyzing and using to inform our curriculum.

Attached is the executive summary of the survey. We would like to thank everyone who participated, and we look forward to continued conversations about how best to prepare our LIS graduates for success. Click this link to access the Executive Summary of the Survey: Executive Summary

Link Round-Up May 1-5, 2017

Every Friday, UNBOUND posts links from the past week that relate to the future of libraries and current trends in LIS. These posts will also highlight different blogs from across the LIS world.

Blog of the Week: Hack Library School

Hack Library School is a project that started in the Fall of 2010 and quickly turned into a GoogleDoc, then to a wiki to the rotating group of contributors that it is today. From their website:

Hack Library School is an invitation to participate in the redefinitions of library school using the web as a collaborative space outside of any specific university or organization. Imagine standards and foundations of the profession that we will create, decided upon by us, outside of the institutional framework. Ideas like the democratization of the semantic web, crowdsourcing, and folksonomies allow projects like this to exist and we should be taking advantage of it.

Archives related:

  1. Interactive player Europeana Radio opens up access to Europe’s sound treasures via Internet Archive Blogs
  2. National Archives (U.S.) Will Utilize a New Model for Preservation and Accessibility of Presidential Records via infoDocket LibraryJournal
  3. How NPR’s Research, Archives & Data Strategy team is saving sounds of the past for the future via Current.org

Academic Library related

  1. University of Oregon Libraries Join HathiTrust via UO Libraries
  2. Universities redesign libraries for the 21st century: fewer books, more space via Los Angeles Times
  3. North Carolina State University Libraries Brings in Major Mellon Grant for Visualization via NCSU Libraries

Tech related:

  1. AI Everywhere via TechCrunch
  2. As Scientists Take to Twitter, Visual Abstracts Help Results Reach More People via University of Michigan Health Lab