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San Jose SLIS Awarded Federal Grant to Explore Library Residency Programs

 

Today's libraries have a wealth of new technology available, offering nearly
endless possibilities for leveraging that technology to better serve their
patrons.  Yet libraries have limited resources available for determining
which emerging technology options are most relevant to their organizations,
as well as limited financial and personnel resources for implementing new
technology tools.

 

Thanks to a generous grant from the Institute of Museum and Library
Services, Dr. Sandra Hirsh, professor and director of the School of Library
and Information Science at San Jose State University, will guide a new
exploration regarding how residency programs can support libraries' efforts
to integrate emerging technology.  

 

Together with project partners, Hirsh will conduct an in-depth exploration
of a new residency model for recent Master of Library and Information
Science (MLIS) graduates.  The residency model will focus on embedding new
graduates with emerging technology skills into a range of library settings,
providing libraries with additional personnel resources to support their
efforts to investigate and implement new technology for the benefit of the
patrons they serve. 

 

Residencies can provide immediate and creative solutions, enabling libraries
to respond to shifting priorities.  They also involve mutual learning for
residents and host institutions, with residents bringing fresh insights and
energy to libraries.

 

The San Jose School of Library and Information Science will partner with
three national professional associations - the Association of College and
Research Libraries, the Public Library Association, and the Urban Libraries
Council, as well as OCLC, an organization that offers a depth of global
expertise regarding technology integration in libraries.  With input from
technical advisors, the five partners will conduct a targeted needs
assessment, develop the residency program model, and prepare to pilot and
evaluate the model at the end of the planning year.

 

The overarching goal of the project is to build a replicable residency
program model aimed at helping new librarians and library leaders integrate
emerging technology in diverse types of libraries.  At the same time, a
secondary goal is to learn how to embed technology experts within libraries
so they can be successful change agents within their institutions and the
broader library community.  The project partners also hope to learn more
about how to build effective and sustainable residency programs.

 

The Institute of Museum and Library Services, the primary source of federal
support for the nation's libraries and museums, announced the award on June
21, 2011.  View their announcement here:
<http://imls.gov/news/2011/062111a.shtm>
http://imls.gov/news/2011/062111a.shtm

 

To learn more about SLIS, visit:  <http://slisweb.sjsu.edu/>
http://slisweb.sjsu.edu/

 

For information regarding this announcement, please contact Lisa Valdez at:
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]