Mar 28, 2024  
2013-2014 General Catalog 
    
2013-2014 General Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Library & Information Science (Graduate Program)


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Program Overview

The School of Library & Information Science offers the only Master of Library & Information Science (MLIS) degree in Louisiana. In 1926, LSU began offering summer courses in library science, and in 1931 the Board of Supervisors established The Graduate School of Library Science. The name was changed to the School of Library & Information Science (SLIS) in 1981. LSU’s departmental-level academic course plan in library and information science has been continuously accredited by the appropriate accrediting authority throughout its history. The Master of Library & Information Science degree program is currently accredited by the American Library Association.

Many careers are open to those who earn the master’s degree in library and information science (MLIS). Librarians, archivists and information scientists are able to organize great amounts of disparate information for retrieval and to activate use of information for problem solving and policy making. In public service positions, librarians and information scientists assist patrons in using material to enrich their lives and work. Our graduates are building print and digital library collections, providing face-to-face and online reference services, offering storytelling programs, studying human-computer interaction, and preserving archival collections. Some MLIS graduates hold positions in major research libraries, community college libraries, school libraries, and public libraries, while others are employed in the Library of Congress and the National Library of Medicine. Others are information specialists for business and industry, or work in federal government libraries such as the Government Printing Office or overseas in Army libraries, or in state government libraries. Still others manage archival materials in a wide variety of historical repositories, or work in hospitals, law firms, and museums.

The diversity of careers for which the MLIS degree is the requisite credential offers mobility and many opportunities for advancement. Graduates will be well prepared to pursue information careers that support their personal interests and skills. More than 170 graduate students are enrolled in SLIS and more than 50 MLIS degrees have been awarded in each of the last five years.

Administration

Beth M. Paskoff, Director
TELEPHONE 225-578-3158
FAX 225-578-4581
WEBSITE slis.lsu.edu

Admission

Applications and supporting materials for all graduate study must be submitted through the online application site for the LSU Graduate School: www.lsu.edu/gradapply. Official transcripts, official test scores, and other materials that come from third-party sources must be mailed to: Graduate Student Services, 114 West David Boyd Hall, Baton Rouge, LA 70803. These paper documents are stored electronically and departments have access to all materials submitted by and/or on behalf of a student applying to graduate study.

Applications for admission are received and evaluated by the department throughout the year, and students may be admitted to begin their studies in fall, spring or summer. Applicants must adhere to the application deadlines established by The Graduate School.

Students seeking admission must submit satisfactory credentials from previous study, including a grade-point average of at least 3.00 (“A”= 4) for the last two years of undergraduate work taken and 3.00 for all graduate-level work previously taken, based on all work for which a grade is given. Students must also have GRE scores (a combined score of over 1000 on the verbal and quantitative portions will assist those with GPAs below 3.0), three letters of recommendation and a professional resume. International students whose native language is not English must also submit an acceptable TOEFL or IELTS score.

Provisional admission may be considered for an applicant who appears to be admissible on the basis of credentials submitted, but who is unable to supply all of the required official records prior to registration. A student admitted provisionally must submit complete and satisfactory records within 60 days (45 days in summer term) after the first day of registration. If these credentials are not received by the date specified or if they prove to be unsatisfactory, the student will not be permitted to register for other courses. Provisional admission does not guarantee subsequent regular admission.

An applicant who fails to meet the necessary admission requirements but who is, nevertheless, judged by the dean and the faculty to show promise for successful graduate work, may be recommended to The Graduate School for probationary admission. Probationary admission requires that students maintain a 3.0 or better GPA for nine consecutive hours in order to convert to regular admission. Students who fail to maintain this average will not be permitted to register for additional courses. Applicants who have an unsatisfactory undergraduate record who have completed a minimum of nine hours of graduate course work with at least a 3.33 graduate GPA and who have acceptable GRE scores will be considered for admission on probation.

Financial Assistance

Details about scholarships and assistantships for MLIS students, including application forms and deadlines, is available at slis.lsu.edu/admissions/tuition.html.

Graduate Faculty

(check current listings by department by clicking this link)

Carol L. Barry (6A) • Information retrieval, relevance, library automation, abstracting and indexing
Bert Boyce (EM)
Michael Carpenter (EM)
Alma Dawson (7M) • Collection development, academic libraries, foundations of library and information science, information literacy instruction
Elizabeth Dow (M) • Archives management, TEI and EAD in an XML environment, preservation of historical materials, intellectual access to historical materials
Tao Jin (6A) • Special libraries, competitive intelligence
Robin Kurz (6A) • Public libraries and youth services
Boryung Ju (7M) • Human-computer interaction
Shirley B. McDonald (3P) • School Libraries
Michelynn McKnight (7M) • Health sciences libraries, information behavior of health care providers and consumers, research methods
Patsy Perritt (EM)
Suzanne Stauffer (M) • Cataloging, history of books and libraries, children’s services
Yejun Wu (6A) • Information retrieval systems, text classification, digital libraries

Degree Programs

Programs

    Master of Library and Information Science

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