scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Curricula in information science: Analysis and development

TLDR
The Curriculum Committee of the Special Interest Group/Education Information Science of ASIS is charged with the responsibility for determining the scope and characteristics of information science programs in the U.S. and Canada in terms of curriculum developments and course offerings as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
The Curriculum Committee of the Special Interest Group/Education Information Science of ASIS is charged with the responsibility for determining the scope and characteristics of information science programs in the U.S. & Canada in terms of curriculum developments and course offerings. To fulfil this responsibility, questionnaires were developed to elicit reliable information concerning courses being offered relating to information storage and retrieval, information science and/or documentation. The data requested included course levels, pre- and post-requisite courses, textbooks used, topics covered, frequency with which offered, etc. Responses were received from 45 schools, providing information about 185 courses and 242 topics. Using several methods of clustering the data, it was difficult to arrive at firm results, because of the diversity and scatter of the topics included in this field. It was therefore decided to hold a workshop of experts which would examine the validity of the questionnaire results. This workshop, using the Delphi technique to arrive at consensus, was held at the University of Pittsburgh on September 21–23, 1970. Sixteen specialists in the field representing universities, industry and government were brought together to participate. Consensus was reached in identifying nine factors which contribute to the curriculum in information science and seven courses which constitute the core for the Master's program. The topics to be included in each of these courses were also isolated. The 9 factors are: Psychology/Behavioral Science, Language/Linguistics, Management, Statistics, Library Science, Systems, Mathematics, Information and Communication Theory, and Computer Science/Automata. The 7 courses are: Introduction to Information Science, Systems Theory and Applications, Mathematical Methods in Information Science, Computer Organization and Programming Systems, Abstracting/Indexing/Cataloging, Information and Communication Theory, and Research Methods. The topics relating to these courses are given in Appendix III. Not all the objectives have been attained. The “meat” surrounding the core has not yet been supplied; the core for a Doctoral program must also be determined. The committee feels that some conventions for evaluating the levels of professionalism reached at the completion of such programs could result as a byproduct of ths study.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

An essay on the past and future (?) of information science education—I: Historical overview

TL;DR: It is suggested that information science cannot prosper; possibly even survive in the next decade if serious, concentrated action is not undertaken in the “externalities’ and “internalities” of its education.

Needs For Improvement Of Professional Education In Library And Information Science.

TL;DR: A review of recent professional literature on graduate education for library and information science reveals that many improvements are being actively sought, but most of these desired changes would take the form of minor curriculum adjustments to existing programs.
Book ChapterDOI

Foundations of information science

TL;DR: This chapter describes the nature and science of information, and theory of foundations, a field whose basic principles, theories, and laws lie in many disciplines, both applied and theoretic.
Book ChapterDOI

Information Needs and Application of the Results of User Studies

TL;DR: Lin and Garvey noted, in reviewing the 1971 literature, that user studies continued to thrive in the United States and that beginning in the 1970s there was a good deal of activity in other nations; it has become a truly international phenomenon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of the Delphi method in library and information science research

TL;DR: Though LIS Delphi studies are relatively few in number, they have a consistent record of being published in some of the most prestigious LIS journals and an overview of existing literature in LIS that utilizes the research method is presented.
References
More filters

Analysis of the future: the delphi method

Olaf Helmer
TL;DR: The Delphi technique, in its simplest form, eliminates committee activity among the experts altogether and replaces it with a carefully designed program of sequential individual interrogations interspersed with information and opinion feedback.
Related Papers (5)