Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service

Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service is needed now as a response to how much has changed in academic librarianship as a profession (from the smallest academic libraries to large research libraries).

Much has been written recently about the status of the profession of librarianship, i.e. whether or not it should still be considered a “profession,” are the same credentials still required/enough, should things change dramatically in SLIS programs in response to the new normal, and what is the impact of hiring PhD’s in disciplines outside of librarianship.

Major topics covered include:

  • State of the profession of librarianship today
  • Status of librarians
  • Tenure or not
  • Move away from faculty status in some (more) academic libraries
  • Contributions to the profession -- scholarship
  • What is produced
  • How are librarians conducting research
  • Where is it taking place -- who is producing scholarship
  • Why
  • Trends
  • Contribution to the profession -- service and professional associations
  • LIS Education
  • Tomorrow -- what are the implications for the future of our profession

Author Marcy Simons explores the history, current status, and future of the profession of academic librarianship. She clearly demonstrates the need for a shared understanding of how we will work together in order to continue our transformation.

"1138509195"
Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service

Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service is needed now as a response to how much has changed in academic librarianship as a profession (from the smallest academic libraries to large research libraries).

Much has been written recently about the status of the profession of librarianship, i.e. whether or not it should still be considered a “profession,” are the same credentials still required/enough, should things change dramatically in SLIS programs in response to the new normal, and what is the impact of hiring PhD’s in disciplines outside of librarianship.

Major topics covered include:

  • State of the profession of librarianship today
  • Status of librarians
  • Tenure or not
  • Move away from faculty status in some (more) academic libraries
  • Contributions to the profession -- scholarship
  • What is produced
  • How are librarians conducting research
  • Where is it taking place -- who is producing scholarship
  • Why
  • Trends
  • Contribution to the profession -- service and professional associations
  • LIS Education
  • Tomorrow -- what are the implications for the future of our profession

Author Marcy Simons explores the history, current status, and future of the profession of academic librarianship. She clearly demonstrates the need for a shared understanding of how we will work together in order to continue our transformation.

85.5 In Stock
Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service

Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service

by Marcy Simons
Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service

Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service

by Marcy Simons

eBook

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Overview

Academic Librarianship: Anchoring the Profession in Contribution, Scholarship, and Service is needed now as a response to how much has changed in academic librarianship as a profession (from the smallest academic libraries to large research libraries).

Much has been written recently about the status of the profession of librarianship, i.e. whether or not it should still be considered a “profession,” are the same credentials still required/enough, should things change dramatically in SLIS programs in response to the new normal, and what is the impact of hiring PhD’s in disciplines outside of librarianship.

Major topics covered include:

  • State of the profession of librarianship today
  • Status of librarians
  • Tenure or not
  • Move away from faculty status in some (more) academic libraries
  • Contributions to the profession -- scholarship
  • What is produced
  • How are librarians conducting research
  • Where is it taking place -- who is producing scholarship
  • Why
  • Trends
  • Contribution to the profession -- service and professional associations
  • LIS Education
  • Tomorrow -- what are the implications for the future of our profession

Author Marcy Simons explores the history, current status, and future of the profession of academic librarianship. She clearly demonstrates the need for a shared understanding of how we will work together in order to continue our transformation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781538136218
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 07/29/2021
Series: Beta Phi Mu Scholars Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 116
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Marcy Simons is the organizational development librarian at the University of Notre Dame, where she works closely with the office of the provost to ensure a shared understanding of the library faculty role, its expectations, and equity, diversity, and inclusion in the recruitment, onboarding, and retention practices. Simon’s previous book, Academic Library Metamorphosis and Regeneration, was also published in the Beta Phi Mu Scholar Series.

Table of Contents

Preface

Acknowledgements

Chapter One: Librarianship, the Profession

Chapter Two: The Question of Status

Chapter Three: Contribution to the Profession

Chapter Four: Anchored in Service

Chapter Five: Education

Chapter Six: A Path Forward

Bibliography

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