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LIS Education and Research Areas for Developing Countries

Singh, Professor Jagtar and Shokeen, Dr. Ashu and Mahajan, Dr. Preeti and Kaur, Dr Trishanjit and Hosamani, Mr. H G and Chauhan, Mr. Suresh K (2007) LIS Education and Research Areas for Developing Countries . Convention on Automation of Libraries in Education and Research Institutions, Delhi, India.

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Abstract

The importance of Information and Communication Technologies in distance learning has been acknowledged as an essential component of strengthening LIS education in the remote areas of the north eastern states of India. (Rath1). The same could be said of the use of ICT for LIS education in remote areas of Australia, South Asia and in America. A global infrastructure of physical, human and financial resources will continue to attract students to the LIS profession and add dimension to the concept of information literacy for all as a universal concern. Beyond ICT and distance platforms, LIS education can also be strengthened by faculty knowledge of cultural differences experienced by their students and the impact of the digital divide. With knowledge comes sensitivity. This reflective essay was based on a literature review of barriers in LIS international education. In 1999, Robert Stueart2 wrote of the challenge to information access in Asia: “One of the most important activities is information society is to maintain a cadre of qualified information professionals”. How can India maintain a cadre of qualified information professionals? Library education in India dates back to 1911.3 Dr Ranganathan was the major force in the introduction of librarianship courses at the University of Madras, Bombay, Banaras, and Delhi. This essay concludes that information professionals themselves are the channel of globalization of LIS education because they see the need for standards in computerisation initiatives and are sensitive to the benefit of promoting communities of practice within and without their own country of origin. Students everywhere may have overcome great difficulties and personal sacrifice to pursue their education. Universities need to develop students who possess not only discipline knowledge but a high level of personal and interpersonal skills.4 The subject of information ethics can be part of the library and information science curriculum in developed and developing countries worldwide. This subject forms a common boundary which is open to student interpretation.

EPrint Type:Conference Proceedings
Keywords:International LIS Education; Ethics in International librarianship
Subjects:Library and Information Science Education
ID Code:2447
Deposited On:19 November 2008
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1 Rath, Pravakar. Information and Communication Technologies – Application in Higher Education with Special Reference to North-Eastern Region. www.caluniv.ac.in/news/prabhakar.doc. Accessed 15 January 2007.

2 Stueart, Robert D. Education information professionals for the next century – The Asia-Pacific Rim perspective. Presented at the IFLA Education and Training Workshop “Standards for LIS Education: Proposed Conceptual Changes”, August 26, 1999 at Chulalongkorn University, Thailand. www.ifla.org/IV/ifla67/papers/140-193e.pdf Accessed 15 January 2007

3 Amin, Saiful. The Comparative Study of Education in India, UK and USA.

http://drtc.isibang.ac.in/~saiful/colloq/lis_edu.html. Accessed 24 January 2007

4 Hallam, Gillian. (2006) Trends in LIS education in Australia. In Christopher. Khoo, Diljit. Singh and A.S. Chaudhry (Eds). Preparing information professionals for leadership in the new age: Proceedings of the Asia-Pacific Conference on Library and Information Education and Practice, p. 41-51. Singapore: School of Communication & Information, Nanyang Technological University.

5 Higgins, Susan and Chaudhry, Abdus S. (2001). Articulating the Unarticulated Element of the Information Science Paradigm. Journal of Education for Library and Information Science 44(1):pp. 2-16.

6 Dorner, Daniel G. and Gorman, Gary E. (2006) Information Literacy Education in Asian Developing Countries: Cultural factors Affecting Curriculum Development and Program Delivery. IFLA Journal 32(4): 281-293.

7 Bagnall, Richard G. (2001). The contingent university: an ethical critique. In Roberts, Peter and Chambers, Mark. (editors) “Digital Developments in Higher Education: Theory and Practice”. Cambridge, UK: Taylor Graham, 2001.

8 Pawley, Christine. Unequal Legacies: Race and Multiculturalism in the LIS Curriculum. The Library Quarterly, Volume 76 Number 2 (April 2006): 149–68

9 Ford, Barbara J. Global Perspectives on Public Libraries. In de la Pena McCook, “Introduction to Public Librarianship”. NY: Neil Schuman Publishers, Inc, 2004.

10 Byrne, Alex. “Can International Organizations Deliver the Information Society?” 16th Annual Mortenson Distsinguished Lecture. http://www.library.uiuc.edu/mortenson/lecture06text.htm Accessed 26 January 2007.

11 Merriam, Sharan B. “Qualitative Research in Practice: Examples for Discussion and Analysis”. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2002.

12 ALISE Position Papers and Policy Statements, Draft for Approval: Information Ethics in LIS Education. October 10, 2006. http://www.alise.org/about/iesigstatement.pdf

Accessed 26 January 2007

13 Sandler, Bernice R. The Chilly Climate: Subtle Ways in Which Women are Often Treated Differently at Home and at Work. http://www.bernicesandler.com/id23.htm. Accessed 24 January 2007.

14 Takenouchi, Tadashi. A Consideration of the Concept of Information Literacy, Is it really ‘necessary for all”? JIE International Journal of Information Ethics (2) 11/2004.

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15 Pawley, Christine. "Information Literacy: A Contradictory Coupling." Library Quarterly 73, no. 4 (October 2003): 422–52.

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