sylvia hall-ellis, phd library & information science program

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Employers’ Expectation for Entry-Level Catalog Librarians: What Position Announcement Data Indicate

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Employers’ Expectation for Entry-Level Catalog Librarians: What Position Announcement Data Indicate. Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program. Reasons for the study. Preparing entry-level catalogers (part of my research agenda) Teaching cataloging course sequence - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Employers’ Expectation for Entry-Level Catalog Librarians: What Position Announcement

Data Indicate

Page 2: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhDLibrary & Information

Science Program

Page 3: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Reasons for the study

Preparing entry-level catalogers (part of my research agenda)Teaching cataloging course sequence

Beginning Cataloging & Classification Descriptive Cataloging Subject Cataloging Managing Electronic Records Special Topic: Technical Services Administration

Page 4: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Basis for the study

New LIS Program Accredited June 2004

Significant investment in cataloging courses

Align course content & learning experiences with employers’ expectations

Ensure that employers were hiring entry-level catalog librarians

Page 5: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Background research study #1

The Cooperative Cataloging Council (CCC) suggested that library school faculty who are responsible for teaching basic organization and cataloging courses would prepare new catalog librarians with a list of overall skills to meet students’ and perspective employers’ expectations.

Page 6: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Background research study #2

Association for Library Collections & Technical Services (ALCTS) issued an educational policy statement, June 1995.

Theoretical framework of knowledge and skills for new library school graduatesintellectual access and information organization; preserving access; identification, selection, and acquisition of information resources; management skills; and, research analysis and interpretation skills.

Page 7: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Background research study #3

Kellogg-ALISE Information Professions and Education Reform Project (KALIPER).

Page 8: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Stages of cataloger education

Formal graduate program

On-the-job training

Continuing education experiences throughout a career

Page 9: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Research Question #1

Which academic preparation, technical skills and competencies do employers expect entry-level catalog librarians to possess?

Page 10: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Research Question #2

Do employers’ expectations regarding the academic degrees and cataloging course work, technical skills and competencies differ among types of libraries (academic, special, public and school)?

Page 11: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Research Question #3

What are the academic preparation, technical skills and competencies included in a “typical” position announcement for an entry-level catalog librarian?

Page 12: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Methodology

Descriptive content analysis

Review of 495 position announcements for catalog librarians

September 1, 2000 through August 31, 2003

American Libraries (print & online versions)

AutoCAT

Colorado State Library Jobline

Page 13: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Raw data set

151 positionsAcademic

• University – 90

• 4-year College – 12

• Community college – 6

Public – 22

Special – 20

School – 1

Page 14: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

61 variables in 6 categories

General employer descriptionAcademic preparation Cataloging, classification, authority control Related technical services or bibliographic control tasks Assignments outside domain Communication competencies and work-based relationships

Page 15: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Definition of entry-level

ALA-accredited MLIS (or foreign equivalent)

Fewer than 2 years of post-MLIS experience

Page 16: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Position description components

academic preparation

required qualifications

preferred competencies and skills

primary work assignment functions

institutional information

specific resources available through Web sites and hyperlinks

Page 17: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

What do the data indicate?

Page 18: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Summary observations

Page 19: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Observation #1

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to have knowledge & competency with cataloging tools

Anglo-American Cataloging Rules (96%)

Library of Congress Rule Interpretations (58.6%)

“Other standard cataloging tools” (59.8%)

Page 20: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Observation #2

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to have knowledge about authority work

MARC 21 authority format Authority records (94.7%) Authority files (59.3%)

• Contributing• Maintaining

Relationship of authority records, files and integrated library systems (59.1%)

Page 21: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Observation #3

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to have knowledge & competency with MARC 21

Each MARC 21 bibliographic format

Specified formats• Electronic resources (30.7%)

• Continuing resources (23.3%)

• Archival resources (12%)

Page 22: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Observation #4

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to have knowledge & competency with classification schemes

Library of Congress Classification (30.7%)

Dewey Decimal Classification (94.7%)

Superintendent of Documents (59.3%)

Page 23: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Observation #5

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to have knowledge & competency with subject headings

Library of Congress Subject Headings (91.4%)

Page 24: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Observation #6

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to have knowledge & competency with at least one bibliographic utility

“General use of bibliographic utility” (83.7%)

OCLC (71.3%)

RLIN (8%)

OCLC & RLIN (4.5%)

Page 25: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Observation #7

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to be able to

handle routine maintenance (69.3%) and policy development (18%) for bibliographic (69.3%) and metadata (25.3%) databases acquisitions (5.3%) and subscriptions (10%) to databases and electronic journals and serials management (23.3%) support an ILS (12%)

Page 26: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

work regular shifts (frequently during evening and week-end hours) on a reference desk (26%)

handle collection development responsibilities (39.3%)

as a liaison to faculty members (28%) in academic institutions

Page 27: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Observation #8

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to Be flexible regarding assignments (26.7%)

Maintain committee participation (34.7%)

Assume responsibilities for special projects (40.6%)

Possess effective verbal (59.4%) and written (59.4%) communication skills

Page 28: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Academic Preparation

0.0%20.0%40.0%60.0%80.0%

100.0%120.0%

Incl

usi

on

Fre

qu

ency

Accredited librarydegree

Catalog course(s)

Additional graduatedegree

Page 29: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Theoretical Basis of Organization

0.0%

20.0%

40.0%

60.0%

80.0%

100.0%

120.0%

AA

CR

2r

LC

RI

Auth

ority

contr

ol

Cla

ssific

ation

Subje

ct

headin

gs

Bib

liogra

phic

utility

MA

RC

form

ats

Rela

ted c

ata

login

g t

ools

Inclu

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n F

req

uen

cy

Public

Special

Community College

4-Year College

University

Page 30: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Competencies

0.0%10.0%20.0%30.0%40.0%50.0%60.0%70.0%80.0%

Incl

usi

on

Fre

qu

ency

Public

Special

Community College

4-Year College

University

Page 31: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Final thoughts

Employers expect entry-level catalogers to possess broad-based theoretical knowledge, extensive hands-on experience, mastery of computer-based tools and system-specific familiarity that appear to exceed the requirements and preferences stated in position announcements and the content of beginning cataloging courses

Page 32: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

“Descriptive Impressions of Entry-Level Cataloger Positions as Reflected in American Libraries, AutoCAT, and the Colorado State Library Jobline, 2000-2003.” Cataloging & Classification Quarterly 40, no. 2 (2005).

Page 33: Sylvia Hall-Ellis, PhD Library & Information Science Program

Questions?