Abigail Weil (she/her) -- Research & Instruction Outreach Librarian
Simon Elichko (they/them) -- Social Sciences & Data Librarian
Introductions
Library types
What's R&I librarianship?
Break
Libraries Outreach
Image credit: BayNet (Katherine Becvar, Tawny Dovico)
bibliographer
subject librarian
reference librarian
instruction librarian
research librarian
more subject-specific and collection-focused
more general and interaction-focused
information literacy
librarian
research + instruction librarian
two strands of librarianship
job titles ⤴
What about at larger universities?
and public libraries?
Examples from
ALA Joblist
Information literacy is the set of integrated abilities encompassing the reflective discovery of information, the understanding of how
information is produced and valued, and the use of information in creating new knowledge and participating ethically in communities of learning."
- Association of College and Research Libraries Framework for Information Literacy in Higher Education (2016)
Citizenship in a modern democracy involves more than knowledge of how to access vital information. It also involves a capacity to recognize propaganda, distortion, and other misuses and abuses of information. ...Information literacy provides insight into the manifold ways in which people can all be deceived and misled.”
Final report, American Library Association Presidential Committee on Information Literacy (1989)
Both educators and librarians must help students see how networked systems affect how they read, and how they come to know things. Ultimately, students must learn how to read these systems — the architectures, infrastructures, and fundamental belief systems — so they can put what they read in context and determine whether or not it’s trustworthy."
Allison Head, Reading in the Age of Distrust. Project Information Literacy. (2021)
Think about a library you love—it can be the Swarthmore library, your high school library, a public library you love.
What are your favorite things about the library? It can be services, specific resources, a space, a program, a philosophy or even a feeling.
How would you tell a friend about it?
How would you share the information with a peer—a classmate, a fellow library enthusiast?
How would you help someone who has never been in the library learn about it?
What might be barriers for someone
to use a library, and why?
How do you welcome people into the library
and support them using it?
Targeted outreach (coming to the community to connect them with the resource, like when a librarian visits a class)
Coalition-building (campus partnerships, working with student groups)
Pop-up programming, in the libraries or other high-traffic spaces
Advertising through established channels like newsletters
Social media
What else?
Hands-on activity:
Design an outreach strategy for a potential project
Use one of our suggestions or propose your own idea
Some guiding questions:
What kind of library would this be at?
Who is the target audience?
Is there a built-in audience, is there an untapped audience?
Abigail Weil
Outreach Librarian
aweil1@swarthmore.edu
Simon Elichko
Social Sciences & Data Librarian
selichk1@swarthmore.edu