Home | Browse | Search | Credits | About
Register | User Area | DL-Harvest | Help
DLIST

Two Cultures, One Faculty: Contradictions of Library and Information Science Education

Raber, Douglas and Connaway, Lynn Silipigni (1996) Two Cultures, One Faculty: Contradictions of Library and Information Science Education. Journal of Library and Information Science Education 37(2):pp. 120-130.

Full text available as:
PDF - Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader or other PDF viewer.

Abstract

Library and information science faculty must live within two competing cultures that have very different values and interests: the academic and the practicing profession. This difference causes these cultures to exert competing expectations and demands upon library and information science education. While the university's value is increasingly judged by its demonstrated utility, its central legitimating value is still intellectual achievement and the creation of knowledge. While the need for a knowledge base is recognized, the central legitimating value of the profession is demonstrated utility in terms of service to users. This is necessarily dominated by technical rather than reflective aspects and the need for immediate solutions to practical problems that include the education and continuing education of professionals. This article addresses the problems that result from the collisions of these two cultures: applied versus pure research, theoretical versus practical education, and competing definitions of service. It explores the applicability of Ernest Boyer's model of higher education as a means of solving problems.

EPrint Type:Journal Article (Paginated)
Keywords:Competing expectations Two cultures Practical versus academic education
Subjects:Library and Information Science Education
ID Code:687
Deposited On:19 January 2005
Eprint Statistics:View statistics for this eprint
Tell A Colleague:Tell a colleague about it.
EPrints dLIST, an open access archive for the Information Sciences, is supported by the School of Information Resources and Library Science and Learning Technologies Center, University of Arizona. Established in 2002, dLIST has a global Advisory Board and is a part of the Information Technology & Society Research Lab. Open Archives
Contact: Admin | Donate