Library sector workforce capability framework project — Current state analysis

This current state analysis document contains data that formed the baseline and current benchmark to identify the initial components for the library workforce capability framework in Aotearoa, as part of the New Zealand Library Partnership Programme.

Report formats

This is the web version of the Library Sector Workforce Capability Framework Project, Current State Analysis.

You can also download the PDF version Library Sector Workforce Capability Framework Project, Current State Analysis (pdf, 1.85MB)


Whakatauki

Inā kei te mohio koe ko wai koe, I anga mai koe I hea, kei te mohio koe, kei te anga atu ki hea.

If you know who you are and where you are from, then you will know where you are going.

Executive summary

Libraries are a place to develop our community’s intellectual capital.

This current state analysis document contains links and data that collectively formed the baseline and current benchmark to identify the initial components for the library workforce capability framework in Aotearoa, as part of the New Zealand Library Partnership Programme (NZLPP).

Trends in current and changing library services worldwide

Literature scans and sector engagement showed that the main trends in libraries are around:

  • nurturing human capital (being resilient and committed to life-long learning, teaching and sharing knowledge around literacy, digital literacy and dexterity, soft skills, critical and design thinking, collaborating and supporting access to safe and inclusive spaces, programmes and data)

  • utilising latest technology (maintaining a skilled workforce, implementing latest technological industry developments, increasing capacity (technical, storage, staff, licensing for electronic resources etc) to create, store and manage digital content)

  • providing equitable access to all and respecting and including diversity in people, collections, cataloguing, data and knowledge sharing

  • strengthening communities (investing in relationship building and innovative space and programme planning for local communities, collaborating across the sector and borders to co-create and share knowledge for the betterment of the community, wider library and information sector and environment)

  • strategising libraries like a business (seeing the bigger commercial picture to navigate complex relationships with stakeholders, funders or the wider public, marketing the visibility and value of the profession, and continuous innovation to cater for changing needs).

Existing competency or qualifications frameworks

The Australian Library and Information Association’s (ALIA’s) Professional Pathways’ Technical Report confirmed our findings that there is a lack of current and up-to-date competency and capability frameworks available worldwide. With the COVID- 19 pandemic having added additional change to the roles and operations of libraries worldwide, we’ve found that the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP) Professional Knowledge and Skills Base (PKSB, updated in 2021) and the ALIA Competencies and Professional Pathways Framework (under development, 2022) are the most comprehensive, up-to-date and co-designed resources.

Both frameworks are very ‘Eurocentric’ models which don’t align with Aotearoa obligations to Te Tiriti o Waitangi. Stakeholder engagement showed there was an urgent need for further learning and support to improve and embed mātauranga, tikanga, kawa and te reo Māori throughout all libraries.

Stakeholders involved

Besides international collaboration with ALIA and CILIP we engaged and co-designed with Aotearoa stakeholders:

  • New Zealand Library Partnership Programme / National Library

  • Library associations

  • Library representatives from each New Zealand library sector (National, public, tertiary, school and special libraries)

  • Māori and Pacific representatives in the library sector

  • Tertiary education providers offering library training and development

  • Collaborators who have done earlier work in this area

Current development pathways for growth in Aotearoa

People can currently obtain Library and Information qualifications through the Open Polytechnic Kuratini Tuwhera, Victoria University of Wellington, Te Wananga-o-Raukawa or Charles Sturt University. Although having a qualification is invaluable as to the increased knowledge and experience, this (on average) does not currently seemed to be ‘valued’ in the sense of remuneration compared to unqualified staff within library and information sector placements. Getting qualified while employed is therefor often not seen as a priority due to the time and investment involved.

The Library and Information Association New Zealand Aotearoa (LIANZA) and the various library sector associations provide ongoing professional development opportunities through either formal (eg, Bodies of Knowledge) or more information learning (eg, conferences, special interest group events).

LIANZA and School Library Association New Zealand Aotearoa (SLANZA)(with help from NZLPP) currently have Tertiary Grants available for people who are either employed or new to the sector, for Library and Information Services qualifications.

Purpose of this document

After initial research and briefings, this document is Step 2 in the process of creating an Aotearoa New Zealand library sector workforce capability framework. This current state analysis forms a baseline and current benchmark to identify the initial components for the workforce capability framework. This research includes:

  • trends in current and changing library services worldwide

  • known competency or qualifications frameworks that support or grow library sector capabilities

  • stakeholders involved and library sector profiles in Aotearoa

  • overview of current development pathways for growth in Aotearoa.

Infographic — long description below.
  • Long description — Implementation plan infographic

    Infographic showing three phases of implementation plan.

    Aim is to build on work that's been done and pass on tools for future adaptation.

    Phase 1: Current state and approach

    1. Briefing and research

    2. Current state analysis report

    3. Basic approach for capability framework and stakeholder engagement

    Phase 2: Stakeholder engagement

    1. Pre-engagement with key people to inform stakeholders and gather knowledge

    2. Wider sector engagement to co-create content for framework

    3. Reference group engagement to decide on content for framework

    Phase 3: Development, review and future-proof

    1. Library sector workplace capability framework development and review

    2. Action plan for implementation recommendations

    3. Future-proof and storage of files

Long description — Implementation plan infographic

Infographic showing three phases of implementation plan.

Aim is to build on work that's been done and pass on tools for future adaptation.

Phase 1: Current state and approach

  1. Briefing and research

  2. Current state analysis report

  3. Basic approach for capability framework and stakeholder engagement

Phase 2: Stakeholder engagement

  1. Pre-engagement with key people to inform stakeholders and gather knowledge

  2. Wider sector engagement to co-create content for framework

  3. Reference group engagement to decide on content for framework

Phase 3: Development, review and future-proof

  1. Library sector workplace capability framework development and review

  2. Action plan for implementation recommendations

  3. Future-proof and storage of files


A. IFLA Trend Report – 2021 Update

The International Federation of Library Associations and Institutions (IFLA) Trend Report released its 2021 Update in January 2022. (1) The report identifies five high-level trends shaping the information society, spanning access to education, privacy, civic engagement and transformation. Its findings reflect a year’s consultation with a range of experts and stakeholders from different disciplines to map broader societal changes occurring, or likely to occur in the information environment.

The 2021 Update (2) shares 20 different suggested trends (some complementary, some contradictory) that the people leading the library field in ten years felt would mark their professional lives. The trends are below (with starred items * indicating what people at the President-elect’s session at the 2021 World Library and Information Congress thought were the top 5 pressing trends):

  1. Tough times ahead (A slow recovery from COVID- 19 will put pressure on all forms of public spending, requiring libraries to intensify advocacy efforts)

  2. * Virtual is here to stay (People continue to prefer to access library services remotely, putting into question the value of spaces and physical offerings)

  3. The comeback of physical spaces (People rediscover the value of spaces that offer opportunities for meaningful exchange and discussion)

  4. The rise of soft skills (With rapid evolution in technologies, librarians need to be able to innovate and adapt to unpredictable situations)

  5. * Diversity gets taken seriously (Growing awareness of the existence/impacts of discrimination leads to a radical reform of collections, services and practices)

  6. * An environmental reckoning (Climate change brings new threats to libraries and their communities, forcing radical adaptation in order to avoid disaster)

  7. A mobile population (With more nomadic people, the ‘local’ library concept becomes less relevant, and the need to provide joined-up services across borders rises)

  8. The impatient user (Library users expect the most modern technologies and service, and risk turning away from libraries if they cannot find them)

  9. An analogue backlash (A new generation, traumatised by the stresses of constant social media connectivity, rediscovers physical resources as an escape)

  10. Scale matters (The cost of providing full and modern services means that it is only possible for larger institutions to do so, leaving smaller ones behind)

  11. Data domination (New uses and applications of data change our economic and social lives, making it essential for people to become data literate)

  12. Search transformed (Artificial intelligence revolutionises the way in which we find information, making it possible to provide more accurate results for users)

  13. Race to the extremes (Political debate more polarised, making it difficult to find consensus in politics and society, undermining the case for shared institutions)

  14. * Lifelong learners (No more ‘job for life’, so people need to retrain throughout life. Libraries intensify learning activities in response)

  15. A single, global collection (With digitisation of resources and working across institutions, it is less about local collections, more about access to universal resources)

  16. The privatisation of knowledge (Technology & slow reforms to copyright mean people can privately restrict/control information and oblige permissions/payments)

  17. Qualifications matter (As complexity of the information environment increases, the need for library workers to benefit from a high level of education also rises)

  18. Information literacy recognised (Governments and others recognise importance of information literacy as a long-term response to the rise of misinformation)

  19. 'Open Access' challenges libraries' USP (With scientific information available freely, libraries are forced to adapt their role or lose their USP and relevance)

  20. * Inequalities deepen (Technology creates new possibilities for those with access to it, growing the gap between them and those without, risking more poverty)

The skill-set required by librarians to fulfil their potential and that of their institutions is evolving. When looking at each trend, these are the accompanying skills required for each:

Trend

Skills required

Tough times ahead (pressure on all forms of public spending)

Advocacy for the industry and workforce, resilience, understanding of government ‘machinery’ and funding

* Virtual is here to stay (access to library services remotely)

Having meta-literacies (critical thinking and collaboration in a digital age) to become active participants in the information society and effectively participate in social media and online communities

The comeback of physical spaces (spaces for meaningful exchange and discussion)

Project management for programmes/event, hospitality, customer services, facilitating and mediating positive outcomes, creative thinking to make spaces more accessible

The rise of soft skills (able to innovate and adapt to unpredictable situations)

Ability to learn/retrain, adaptability, resilience, agility, flexibility, building community confidence, partnership-building, problem-solving, ability to respond positively to the unexpected, innovation, creativity, critical thinking, ability to understand and respond to individuals’ needs, emotional intelligence, teamwork (including across borders and types of institution)

* Diversity gets taken seriously (radical reform of collections, services & practices)

Respect for different cultures/values/rights/privacy, assessing diversity of collections, cataloguing, design thinking (how can we change what has been done before that has created discrimination, accessibility issues etc?)

* An environmental reckoning (radical adaptation in order to avoid disaster)

Risk management, promoting spread of knowledge and behaviour change, providing accessibility to upskill and increase literacy around climate change

A mobile population (provide joined-up services across borders rises)

Ability to provide customer service virtually

The impatient user (users expect the most modern technologies and service)

Patience, ability to help people in different ways

An analogue backlash (rediscovery of physical resources as an escape)

Customer service, hospitality, literacy/reading for pleasure

Scale matters (cost of providing full/modern services only possible for larger libraries)

Partnerships/network, teamwork,

Data domination (essential for people to become data literate)

Digital literacy, data gathering & analysis, data governance, coding, building awareness,

Search transformed (artificial intelligence provides more accurate results for users)

Machine learning, AI, coding/programming/troubleshooting, IT skills

Race to the extremes (political debate more polarised, undermines shared institutions)

Open mindset, media and information literacy, promoting reading

* Lifelong learners (people need to retrain throughout life)

Ability to teach and facilitate learning, open to learning and retraining, literacy skills, digital skills, soft skills,

A single, global collection (access to universal resources)

Digital literacy, communication skills, teamwork/collaboration, data gathering and analysis, innovation, creative thinking, IT skills

Privatisation of knowledge (people can restrict/control information and oblige permissions/payments)

Copyright/other rights, Open Access, knowledge & information systems

Qualifications matter (increased complexity of the information environment)

Continued professional development, higher digital skills, enabling full use of digital tools to deliver user-centred services, STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics) skills, coding and programming, sustainability and environmental literacy, ability to assess community and user needs and respond accordingly, ongoing training to deal with new types of material, including open access content and digital libraries, and to learn to be effective advocates.

Information literacy recognised (information literacy to combat the rise of misinformation)

Information literacy

'Open Access' challenges libraries' USP (libraries forced to adapt or lose their USP/relevance)

Open Access, funding knowledge, supporting discoverability, ensuring preservation, providing the skills and support needed to navigate around the vast number of available resources, manage research data repositories, financial sustainability

* Inequalities deepen (gap between people with access to technology and those without)

At least basic level of service across all libraries, ensuring users can benefit from core possibilities to access and use information.

Leadership and management could work on ensuring greater recognition of the work of librarians and salaries to match. This could help attract and
retain talented people, further boosting the ability of the field to deliver on its missions. Ongoing opportunities for learning and certification of skills,
as well as creating and holding open leadership tracks would also help keep people inside the field.

The Library of the Future (3) is a place where people, not books, not even information, are at the centre.

B. Trends in other research

“It’s not just about smartphones and tablets versus printed newspapers, journals, and glossy magazines. It’s about immediacy, relevancy, experience, and trust. It’s about giving students, researchers, and faculty access to the most relevant information in a way that makes sense to them as individuals.”
— The Future of Libraries, The Insider, 2019

The global changing landscape for libraries (4,5,6) sees libraries run more like businesses, with common trends emerging to ensure a sustainable future.

Innovative space and programme planning

  • Space planning to find a middle ground between Covid- 19 pandemic restrictions (social distancing, book quarantining etc),
    community needs (central hub, remote workspaces), and changing collections.

  • Continuous innovation to cater for all (and changing) community needs.

  • Targeted engagement with stakeholders by delivering a mix of in-person and virtual events and programmes.

Accessibility

  • Accessibility and inclusion for all, regardless of background, age, language or abilities.

  • Remote 24/7 off-site access to catalogue, information and in-house electronic resources via mobile devices.

  • Self-service focus to enable library remote access or via dedicated terminals in library and knowledge centres.

Utilising latest technology

  • Enable professional development programmes for workforce to maintain skilled in latest technological industry developments.

  • Increase of capacity (technical, storage, staff, licensing for electronic resources etc) to create, store and manage digital content.

  • Online public access catalogues (OPAC) ‘experiences’ (eg, enabling virtual bookshelves, providing discovery tools and links).

  • Embracing Artificial Intelligence in the libraries (eg, using predictive analytics to identify needs across the student body or enabling chatbots as a support channel for virtual library patrons, increasing use of AI in supplementing the catalogue, seamless sharing of meta-data (eg, through use of blockchain), better use of intelligent linking and semantic web services, data mining, text analysis technology to support and assist students with research).

Librarians as facilitators of knowledge

  • Provide accurate granular information: more research, better statistical information, and analytical reporting.

C. Potential changes in human resource requirements and capabilities

In Future Skills for the LIS Profession (7) (2018) Simon Burton writes about the growth and change in UK law and academic libraries. They found skills gaps in the legal libraries in these broad categories:

  1. Analysis (ability to conduct qualitative and quantitative analysis; drawing insights from data and/or complex information sets)

  2. Technology (utilising technology-enabled solutions and new platforms for research and knowledge activities, i.e., social media, AI, and intranet)

  3. Communication (ability to influence and inform)

  4. Project management (ability to manage large and long-term projects)

  5. Business and commercial knowledge, particularly in their understanding of how their organisation functions as a business and within the larger commercial landscape.

As for the academic libraries, librarians must have a broad range of skills in their toolkit, covering everything from general management, subject expertise, and technical skills to persuasion, advocacy, and influencing skills. To be effective in this environment librarians need to have an excellent customer service focus, strategic viewpoint, and an ability to be adaptable and resilient to an ever-changing environment.

For both legal and academic libraries, they found:

  • Information management and core librarian competencies are more important than ever.

  • Customer service focus is a critical consideration when hiring, but it must be accompanied by competence in other core skills.

  • Digital literacy, particularly with data-related technology such as AI and data and text analysis, is increasingly important to both sectors.

  • The ability to see the bigger picture to navigate complex stakeholder relationships is a key consideration for new hires.

The American Library Association’s Core Competencies (8) have been updated to intentionally incorporate the concepts of social justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion both throughout the competences and in a separate competence. Social justice in the library context includes the knowledge and skills necessary for library professionals to create and support library collections, services, personnel, facilities, and programs that foster equitable access to and participation of all people to use the library and its resources. Embedding social justice throughout the competences demonstrates that it is not a siloed activity, while having a separate social justice competence also recognizes that it contains unique attributes over and above the other competences.

D. Trends and changes in New Zealand regarding workforce development

Due to Covid-19, the New Zealand Libraries Partnership Programme (9) is focusing on sustainability mahi so libraries can continue to serve their communities and have a positive impact. Key initiatives included data collection and evidence, workforce development strategy, and a strategic review of National Library’s core services to New Zealand libraries.

Part of the NZLPP has been offering coaching support to each library staff member supported by the Programme. There are communities of practice in each of the six focus areas below:

  1. digital inclusion

  2. library workforce development

  3. community engagement

  4. reading for pleasure

  5. te reo and mātauranga Māori

  6. content creation and curation.

Stakeholder engagement session feedback on the current environment

In the stakeholder engagement sessions for to co-create a library workforce capability framework, the main trends or focus area identified across the sectors were to:

  • strategise like a business

  • improve and embed mātauranga, tikanga and kawa Māori

  • have diverse and inclusive spaces to work and welcome our communities

  • be community focussed

  • grow partnerships and collaboration with the wider sector

  • be resilient and able to change

  • be curious, life-long learners who keep up with the times

  • work on promoting the visibility and value of the profession.

Below is a consolidation on the activities the various sector thought they should continue, stop and start doing in the next 3-5 years.


Continue

Grow partnerships and collaborate (across sector)

  • Build relationships with communities

  • Establish meaningful relationships with Māori

Human Resources (HR)

  • Recruiting the right, experienced, qualified staff and Māori and Pasifika specialists

  • Recruit people with iwi specific knowledge

  • Upskilling and empowering staff

Collections

  • Growing digital literacy, content and services

  • Diversifying collections, embedding mātauranga

  • Co-creating partnerships and collective collections

  • Improving accessibility: Move to OA & OER

  • Research data management

  • Navigating complexities of publisher landscapes

Culture

  • Value cultural competence & heritage

  • Indigenous data sovereignty

  • Increase bicultural focus & diversity

Work environment

  • Support wellbeing

  • Flexible working to cope with hybrid services

Strategy

  • Align service delivery to strategic plans / meeting stakeholder needs

  • Plan strategically

  • Showing our value

Community

  • Organise programmes and events

  • Improve accessibility and use of public spaces


Stop

Closed/fixed mindset issues

  • bias

  • seeing/reinforcing silo work

  • thinking there is only one way to do something

  • AI is bad, defensiveness

Valuation issues

  • Being undervalued and having to justify existence and budgets

  • Being regarded as second rate professionals (low pay and recognition)

  • Being stereotyped and how this is holding us back from meaningful engagement with our stakeholders

  • Resourcing issues

  • Staff succession issues

  • No new admin roles for new starters

  • Leadership issues

  • Upskilling issues

  • Access issues

  • Marketing issues

  • Doing manual work where possible

  • Relying on others to provide IT solutions


Start

Strategise like a business

Improve mātauranga Māori

  • Develop partnerships and collaborate: Mana orite, collaborate across the GLAMMI sector, join national networks, research projects, internships/training.

  • Build relationships with communities

Human Resources (HR)

  • Better recruitment, upskilling to leaders, succession planning

  • Agile workforce, sharing staff roles

  • Better support of staff from diverse backgrounds

Keep with the times

  • Seek funding

  • Share and learn

  • Invest in technology

  • Embrace new structures

  • Improving pay

  • Digitisation by default/on demand, collecting diverse types (software, databases)

Promote value

  • Being more attractive to students/young people (mentoring, internships)

  • Improving visibility of library and value added

  • Increase accessibility of resources (physical and digital)

Improve skills in

  • stakeholder engagement/networking

  • strategic thinking

  • financial management

  • Te ao Māori and mātauranga Māori (Cataloguing using Māori subject headings)

  • Shifting from supporting roles to influencing role, from transactional to transformational (higher level added value services)

  • Digital/tech (AI, data analysis)

  • A professional PhD programme for librarians

  • Teaching librarians about pedagogy in LIS qualification

  • Focus on technical training in librarianship (use AI, understanding machines, Ubiquitous tech, data labs and analysis)

  • Develop skills in legal side of digital information (copyright, privacy, defamation, right to be forgotten)

Stocktake of existing material

A. Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA) Professional Pathways (most recent update in 2022)

Core competencies 2014

Technical Report 2021

The Professional Pathways: Frameworks Project (see section 6c) shared their Professional Pathways Technical Report with us, prepared by Dr Gillian Hallam. This report includes more in-depth research than this section, and we recommend reading it alongside this current state analysis document.

Professional Pathways Technical Report

The report includes extensive research covering Australia, New Zealand, USA, UK and Canada, and gathers high-level information around:

  • Skills frameworks: core professional competencies and specialised professional competencies

  • Skills for future professional practice

  • Professional values and ethics

  • Qualification pathways and continuing professional development

  • Future views of professional learning

The NZLPP workforce capability framework project team and ALIA connected in December 2021 and agreed to collaborate on our findings, allowing to build on each other’s work.

Draft Competencies and Pathways Framework – June 2022

After the technical report and several focus sessions (where we participated as the voice from Aotearoa) ALIA created a draft framework for competencies and professional pathways which has gone out for consultation and further development.

Professional Pathways Frameworks Project Presentation

The framework is designed to be able to be used by people from different backgrounds and different career stages, and to provide support to the sector and to employers.

Infographic depicting a draft framework for supporting professional pathways within library and information services.
  • Long description - ALIA draft framework

    Infographic depicting a draft framework for professional pathways.

    Elements of the framework:

    Foundation domains

    • Sector and organisational contexts

    • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledges, cultures and Country

    • Wider information contexts

    • Ethics and values

    Professional knowledge domains

    • Information services

    • Information management

    • Literacies and learning

    • Digital technolgies

    • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Contexts

    • Community engagement

    • Research

    • Leadership and management

    Active professionalism

Long description - ALIA draft framework

Infographic depicting a draft framework for professional pathways.

Elements of the framework:

Foundation domains

  • Sector and organisational contexts

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander knowledges, cultures and Country

  • Wider information contexts

  • Ethics and values

Professional knowledge domains

  • Information services

  • Information management

  • Literacies and learning

  • Digital technolgies

  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Contexts

  • Community engagement

  • Research

  • Leadership and management

Active professionalism


B. Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP) Professional Knowledge and Skills Base (updated in 2021)

The CILIP Professional Knowledge and Skills Base is the sector skills standard for the information, knowledge, library and data profession in the United Kingdom. It has been developed in consultation with employers, practitioners, sector experts and learning providers and has been updated in 2021. It is recognised as the foundation of learning and skills development for the profession and often referred to as the “PKSB” by the community.

The CLIP Professional Knowledge and Skills Base

The PKSB can be used as a self-assessment tool to give direction to personal, professional and career development. It can be used to demonstrate your unique skill set to employers and it can be used to map and demonstrate transferable skills to open up opportunities across the profession.

It is the framework for CILIP Professional Registration, recognising excellence in professional practice through Certification, Chartership and Fellowship. It is a perfect guide to continuing professional development for Revalidation too.

The Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals Professional Knowledge and Skills Base — a self-assessment tool to give direction to personal, professional and career development.
  • Long description - CILIP Professional Knowledge and Skills Base

    A wheel-shaped self-assessment tool to give direction to personal, professional and career development within the information, knowledge, library and data profession.

    At the center: Ethics and values

    In the first ring outwards:

    • Professional expertise

    • Generic skills

    In the second ring outwards:

    • Information management

    • Knowledge management

    • Literacies and learning

    • Record management and archiving

    • Research

    • Customer focus, service design and marketing

    • Leadership, advocacy, influencing and personal effectiveness

    • Strategy, planning and management

    • Technology and communication

    • Collection management and development

    • Data management

    • Information exploitation and use

    • Information governance and compliance

    In the outermost ring:

    • Organisation and environmental context

    • Wider library, data, information and knowledge sector context

    • Professional development

Long description - CILIP Professional Knowledge and Skills Base

A wheel-shaped self-assessment tool to give direction to personal, professional and career development within the information, knowledge, library and data profession.

At the center: Ethics and values

In the first ring outwards:

  • Professional expertise

  • Generic skills

In the second ring outwards:

  • Information management

  • Knowledge management

  • Literacies and learning

  • Record management and archiving

  • Research

  • Customer focus, service design and marketing

  • Leadership, advocacy, influencing and personal effectiveness

  • Strategy, planning and management

  • Technology and communication

  • Collection management and development

  • Data management

  • Information exploitation and use

  • Information governance and compliance

In the outermost ring:

  • Organisation and environmental context

  • Wider library, data, information and knowledge sector context

  • Professional development


C. Library and Information Association of New Zealand Aotearoa (LIANZA) Competencies and Bodies of Knowledge (2012)

Bodies of Knowledge

The Bodies of Knowledge (2012) identify the different areas of competency for the Library and Information Profession, to ensure New Zealand library and information professionals have a broad knowledge base and skill set.

The Bodies of Knowledge, LIANZA

LIANZA Skill Map

List of competencies

For each of the topics listed below, it is assumed:

  • that to possess a skill in that area is to have an ability to understand and apply these topics in the Library and Information environment and/or have the ability to create, use, develop, implement, manage that information tool, program etc. as appropriate

  • that different levels and sectors of Library and Information worker may understand/use that skill differently. It is also assumed that a general understanding and awareness of the Principles of the Treaty of Waitangi underpin everything we do, and that cultural competency is essential to providing a high-quality library and information service.

Library/Information skills
  • Services to different user groups (children, YA, older people, Māori, Pasifika, disabled)

  • Promoting literacy/promoting love of reading

  • Developing new services

  • Searching skills (catalogue/database/web)

  • Reference skills (reference interview/readers advisory)

  • Business information research skills

  • Legal information

  • Information literacy, digital literacy

  • Cataloguing

  • Metadata (understand, use)

  • Māori subject headings (understand, use)

  • Iwi and hapu names list (understand, use)

  • Indexing

  • Repairing

  • Preservation (physical and digital)

  • Digital curation

  • Knowledge management

  • Archives management

  • Records management

  • Mātauranga Māori

  • Māori information management

  • Heritage (oral history/local history/genealogy/arrangement of Māori heritage)

  • Collection development

  • Collection management

  • Collection knowledge (physical, online, wider information universe)

  • Evaluation (services, information resources etc)

  • Infometrics

  • Critical analysis

IT skills
  • IT/ICT in general

  • In-house information tools: catalogues, databases, website, intranet, wikis

  • Manage, create, use intranets

  • Create, manage, use wikis

  • Basic IT helpdesk knowledge / ability to learn new technologies

  • Troubleshooting

  • Familiarity with the tools your customers use: e.g. search engines, apps, websites, databases

  • Web skills/web content management / web standards/ web development

  • Web applications : Knowledge of web applications (e.g. email programmes/ web programmes in general)

  • Use of different browsers and versions

  • Web 2.0 and Library 2.0 technologies (knowledge and use)

  • Social media (technical aspects)

  • Cloud computing – knowledge of cloud applications and cloud storage

  • Big data

  • Power Search Skills ( including Google, internet, database Knowledge Basket etc)

  • NZ websites and Government websites especially job sites; other government info

  • Databases: Use of online and local e.g. NZ Digital Archive, genealogy websites and databases

  • Database development

  • Discovery Layers / Federated search engines

  • Skype and REANNZ networks

  • Online conferencing

  • Downloadable media such as e-books/e-audio books

  • Music technology - downloading, streaming and creating playlists , mp3 Add Mobile Apps

  • Uploading photos, editing photos (customers as well we help lots daily doing this to photo sites, email
    attachments and Facebook etc )

  • Mobile devices: Smart phones. e-books including e-readers and platforms

  • Mobile apps

  • Metadata schemas and transformation: eg MARC to RDA

  • Metadata transformation – eg MARC to DC

  • Programming/Coding/encoding: XML and HTML, CSS and editing programs, UTF-8, ASCII etc

  • Knowledge of structured markup languages HTML, XML

  • Data analytics

  • Server basics

  • Software: Evaluation, Installation and support of software

  • Software Proprietary: Photoshop, Adobe Acrobat MS Office (including CV making / editing)

  • Proprietary Software RFID LMIS - Collection hq

  • Software Opensource: Open Office, Kete (online collaboration engine used to share and create online)

  • PuTTY open source SSH and telnet client, Google Refine a power tool for working with messy data

  • Windows OS Advanced: Filename bulk changes batch rename files

  • Knowledge of verbal and written te reo Māori and its application to IT

  • Macroniser

  • Information systems (includes implementation, management and integration)

  • Knowledge of content management system

  • Critical analysis of technologies and ability to compare technologies

  • IT-based innovation

  • IT project management of IT

  • Teaching computer skills

  • MOOC’s

  • Digitising: Digital imaging, formatting,

  • Digitisation of text resources, photos, slides and negatives scanning (OCR photos PDF etc)

  • Digital Curation/Understanding of digital archiving and preservation

Communication skills
  • Customer service

  • Communication in general

  • Best practice knowledge – netiquette and non-verbal cues

  • Non-verbal communication

  • Listening

  • Interpersonal communication skills

  • Intercultural communication skills

  • Conflict resolution

  • Public speaking

  • Presentation skills (writing, creating, delivery)

  • Story telling / story reading

  • Meeting skills

  • Interview skills

  • Networking

  • Social media (communicating using it e.g. blogging)

  • Pronunciation and use of te reo Māori (official language, language used every day – content, place names, personal names)

  • Written te reo Māori

  • Communication and Engagement Planning

  • Stakeholder engagement

  • Negotiation

  • Marketing

  • Handling the Media

  • Persuasion and influencing skills

  • Corporate, Finance and IT language skills

  • Report/business/ business plan / annual report writing

  • Delivery of statistical information – e.g. infographics

  • Web and technical writing

  • Current awareness/SDI services

Research skills
  • Searching for information

  • Research data management

  • Understanding research requests: breaking down the actual information request - finding out what somebody actually wants.

  • Undertaking research

  • Analysing and reporting research

  • Using research in the workplace

  • An understanding of Māori, Pacific and indigenous knowledge

  • Mātauranga Māori

  • Mātauranga ā iwi

  • Tikanga Māori

Management skills
  • Organisational awareness (often Libraries are a business unit of a parent organisation)

  • Organisational behaviour

  • Ethics and values

  • Effective application of tikanga Māori

  • Politics

  • Diplomacy

  • Decision making

  • Strategic/business planning/goal setting

  • Policy development

  • Stakeholder analysis and management

  • Negotiating/contracts

  • Innovation

  • Advocacy

  • Marketing/PR

  • Measuring service quality (quantitative and qualitative)

  • Valuing library services (Social value, economic value, etc)

  • Statistics

  • How to show ROI

  • Project and programme management (should project be in non-management skills too?)

  • Evaluating alternatives

  • Presenting a business case

  • Financial Management and Budgeting

  • Basic financial management understanding (eg. capex/opex/revenue/depreciation/ledgers etc)

  • Efficiency planning – managing resources/budgets etc in a tightening environment – strategy planning and financial management – service rationalisation.

  • Accountancy / cash handling

  • Fundraising/revenue generation ability

  • Risk Management

  • Facilities management

  • Events management

  • Follow-up/control

  • HR

  • Workforce planning

  • Equal employment opportunities

  • Change Management

  • Managing/supervising people in general

  • Managing bullying in the workplace

  • Dealing with difficult staff

  • Dealing with difficult situations

  • Performance metrics/reviews

  • Leadership

  • Motivating others

  • Mentoring

  • Fostering and Managing

  • Building productive working relationships

  • Networking

  • Delegation

  • Informing others

  • Team building/coaching/mentoring

Teaching skills
  • Teaching in general

  • Education/learning theory

  • Adult teaching

  • Training

  • Programme development

  • Presentation skills

  • Delivery skills – webinars, user guides etc

  • Adapting content to audience

  • Personal Learning Networks (PLNs)

Personal skills
  • Flexibility / change resilience

  • Perseverance / optimism

  • Initiative

  • Self assertion

  • Self esteem

  • Self knowledge and development (taking personal responsibility)

  • Confidence dealing with people at all levels

  • Cross cultural awareness – engaging appropriately with different customer groups in culturally appropriate ways

  • Stress management

  • Dealing with information overload

  • Time management and prioritisation

  • Creative thinking

  • Critical thinking

  • Abstract thinking

  • Questioning

  • Career planning and management

  • Continuous learning and improvement

  • Personal grooming

An understanding of...
  • Parent organisation/industry

  • Wider international library context

  • Government policy and legislative requirements/processes

  • Local government context, in particular funding and strategic planning cycles

  • Any relevant legislation eg. Local Government Act, Records Act, etc

  • Ethics and information ethics

  • Role of libraries and information democracy

  • Biculturalism

  • Māori issues

  • Tikanga and kawa (this is separate from Māori issues)

  • Library standards

  • Te Tiriti o Waitangi Understanding of the Treaty of Waitangi,

  • Wai 262

  • Pasifika issues

  • Multiculturalism & multicultural awareness

  • Copyright

  • Licensing agreements (as well as copyright)

  • Censorship/freedom of information

  • Disability issues

D. Other international competencies and skills frameworks

American Library Association (ALA)

The American Library Association regularly updates its Core Competences of Librarianship (2009, PDF) (10) , which currently include:

  • Gateway Knowledge

  • Information Resources

  • Lifelong Learning and Continuing Education

  • Management and Administration

  • Organization of Recorded Knowledge and Information

  • Reference and User Services

  • Research and Evidence-Based Practice

  • Social Justice

  • Technological Knowledge and Skills

ALA Core Competences of Librarianship (2009, PDF)

ALA also lists knowledge and competencies statements developed by relevant professional organizations. (11) Specialised learning experiences are built upon a general foundation of library and information studies. The design of specialised learning experiences takes into account the statements of knowledge and competencies developed by relevant professional organizations.

Canada: Librarianship.ca

The Canadian library and information community Librarianship.ca has a comprehensive list (12) of competency resources for the various sectors:

General

MLIS Programs in Canada

Academic Librarianship
Archives
Art Librarianship
Assessment
Children and Youth Librarianship
Collections Management
Data Management
Government Librarianship
  • Competency Profile for the Research, Analysis and Library Specialists Group, Library of Parliament 2012

  • FLICC Competencies for Federal Librarians (PDF) Federal Library and Information Center Committee 2011

  • Government Knowledge and Information Management Professional Skills Framework, Government Knowledge and Information Management Network (UK) 2016

  • IM Technical Competency Framework Government of Newfoundland and Labrador 2009

Health and Medical Librarianship
Information / Document / Records Management
Law Librarianship
Library Technicians
Map Librarianship
Metadata and Cataloguing
Public Librarianship
Reference and Information Services
Readers’ Advisory Core Competencies
Scholarly Communications
School Librarianship

E. Strategies and policy statements

F. Capability frameworks developed by libraries in Aotearoa

Auckland City Libraries’ Career Pathways Map and Role Clarity document and spreadsheet

This work was done in 2020 but not available in a practical format.

The PowerPoint and Excel documents are based on a series of workshops with staff to identify key skillsets based on different types of library roles. The pandemic has raised the importance of supporting staff to work in their branches and with the public safely. Some of the learnings worked on internally or in conjunction with external providers are:

  • Mental Health 101

  • Customer Services Safety and Security

  • De-escalation Communication Training

  • Defusing and Debriefing: People Leader training

University of Otago (for researcher-facing librarians)

University of Otago Library Capability Framework

The University of Otago Library developed a Researcher-Facing Librarian Capability Framework to support expert practice and inform professional development decisions. It is available to members under a creative commons licence.

The framework was developed after a mapping exercise to collect data on the description of roles and tasks of researcher-facing library staff. The scope: Lorcan Dempsey has coined the term “inside-out” to describe how Academic Libraries are increasingly supporting the processes of research at their institutions (Dempsey, 2016). Digital scholarship, changes in scholarly communication practices, advancing technology, and the growing use of bibliometrics for research evaluation, are fuelling the evolution of Library Research Support Services. Researcher-facing librarians are increasingly being required to upskill and engage with the research process at deeper, more technical, levels. This exercise has been designed to collect data on the “inside-out” tasks being completed by researcher-facing librarians.

Stakeholders: Aotearoa library sector

A. Key stakeholders

The various Aotearoa library sectors are the key stakeholders for this project.

To co-create the library workforce capability framework, the following groups have been included in stakeholder engagement sessions:

  • New Zealand Library Partnership Programme

  • National Library

  • Library associations, including but not limited to:

    • LIANZA

    • SLANZA

    • Te Rōpū Whakahau

    • LIANZA Pacific Information Management Network (PIMN) SIG

    • Council of New Zealand University Librarians (CONZUL)

    • ALIA (Australia)

    • CILIP (United Kingdom)

  • Māori representatives in the library sector

  • Pacific representatives in the library sector

  • Library representatives from each NZ library sector:

    • public libraries

    • tertiary libraries

    • school libraries

    • special libraries (incl law, health, prison, Iwi)

  • Tertiary education providers offering library training and development:

    • The Open Polytechnic

    • Te Wananga ō Raukawa

    • Victoria University

    • New Zealand Qualifications Authority (NZQA)

  • Collaborators who have done earlier work in this area

  • Library staff across the sectors (including HR, managers, librarians etc).

B. Library sector profiles


Public libraries

Vision Literacy for all, for life

Values
Equity of access, Freedom of information, Trust in the democratic process, Respect for individual and collective
growth, Understanding and tolerance.
People development, partnership and collaboration, smart sustainable business practice

Key themes

  • Pānui / Read – Literacy for all, reading for pleasure

  • Pāngia / Relate – People connected to knowledge and each other

  • Parakitihi / Rehearse – Creative learning for life

  • Pupuri / Remember – Valuing the past to inform the future

Public Libraries Website

Public library roles and job requirements

Shelving Assistant/Library, Circulation Assistant, Ambassador, Student librarian / volunteer — Some physical fitness (as the main duties will be sorting and shelving library books), fluent in technology and have a flexible approach to taking on a variety operational tasks.

Library Assistant — No specific entry requirements needed. English, digital technologies, maths, social studies and te reo Māori useful.

Librarians — Undergraduate library qualification or undergraduate degree in any subject and postgraduate degree in library and information studies.

Shelving Assistant/Library, Circulation Assistant, Ambassador, Student librarian / volunteer — Some physical fitness (as the main duties will be sorting and shelving library books), fluent in technology and have a flexible approach to taking on a variety operational tasks.

Library Assistant — No specific entry requirements needed. English, digital technologies, maths, social studies and te reo Māori useful.

Librarians — Undergraduate library qualification or undergraduate degree in any subject and postgraduate degree in library and information studies.

Senior Librarian — Same requirements as a librarian with the added requirement of years of working experience as a librarian. Senior positions are more specialised – acquisition, cataloguing, collection development or reference services.

Team Leader — About 5 years’ experience as a librarian.

Library Manager — 5 – 10 years’ library experience with management and leadership skills to manage the operations, policy and planning of library services.

Children’s and Young Adult Services Librarian — Similar to a librarian (minimum of level 5 Diploma in Library and Information Studies, teaching qualification or equivalent) or equivalent experience) with knowledge of STEM, strategic planning, digital literacy, facilitation skills.

Māori Services Librarian — Recognised library qualification or tertiary qualification in a related discipline. LIANZA professional registration would also be beneficial. Fluency in te reo Māori would be advantageous.

Youth Engagement Coordinator — Tertiary qualification/Graduate. Sound knowledge of Tikanga Māori and Mātauranga Māori, and the ability to connect with the Māori and Pasifika Communities

Customer Service Librarian — Previous experience in customer service or in a library (no mention in the advert of any other qualification)


National Library

Duties

  • Providing for the preservation, protection, development, and accessibility, as appropriate, for all the people of
    New Zealand, of the collections of the National Library

  • Collecting, preserving, and protecting documents, particularly those relating to New Zealand, and making
    them accessible for all the people of New Zealand, in a manner consistent with their status as documentary
    heritage and taonga

  • Supplementing and furthering the work of other libraries in New Zealand

  • Working collaboratively with other institutions having similar purposes, including those forming part of the
    international library community.

Key themes of the strategic directions to 2030

  • Taonga

  • Knowledge

  • Reading

National Library website

National Library roles and job requirements

Assistant Librarian — This website mentions that the positions requires an associate’s degree or bachelor’s degree in a relevant field. Strong communication and organisational skills are important for the position.

Library Assistant — No specific entry requirements needed. English, digital technologies, maths, social studies and te reo Maori are useful.

Librarian — Undergraduate library qualification or undergraduate degree in any subject and postgraduate degree in library and information studies

Web/Digital Archivists — Qualification in archives, record management, information studies, information management.

Oral Historian — No formal requirement. There is a code of ethical practice and technical practice provided by NOHANZ (National Oral History Association of New Zealand).

Reading Services Assistant — no data

Research Librarian — no data

Team Leader — no data

National Librarian — no data

Chief Librarian — no data

Associate Chief Librarian — no data

Programme Director — no data


School libraries

Purpose
The purpose of your school library is to help every member of your school community — students, staff, families and whānau — gain new knowledge, skills, and dispositions for learning and personal development that they will use throughout their lives.

Pedagogy of the library
The role that sound library and effective library services can play in supporting teaching and learning:

  • Students at the centre of its programme

  • The library is inclusive

  • The library is for readers

  • The library supports the construction of knowledge

  • Library staff are educators and enablers

Services to Schools

School libraries in Aotearoa New Zealand 2019 Reports (pdf, 2.10MB)

School library roles and job requirements

Library Assistant — No specific entry requirements needed. English, digital technologies, maths, social studies and te reo Māori are useful. A tertiary qualification in library studies may be useful.

Librarian — Undergraduate library qualification or undergraduate degree in any subject and postgraduate degree in library and information studies.

Library Manager/Library Resource Manager — Library qualification and experience with library management systems, preferably Access-IT.

Note from Libraries in Aotearoa 2014 (PDF):

School library staff are paid on the support staff scale which does not acknowledge specialist training. School library staff have no job security as their role is based on management budgeting and is the most vulnerable to funding cuts. Many schools are currently dependant on the goodwill of librarians working with reduced hours, budgets and rates of pay or untrained staff finding their way with little guidance or professionalism.


Tertiary libraries (University/Polytechnic/Wānanga)

Vision: Each university library has their own set of values and vision.

Tertiary library roles and job requirements

Library Assistant — No specific entry requirements needed but a tertiary qualification in library studies may be useful. English, digital technologies, maths, social studies and te reo Māori are useful.

Librarian/Subject Librarian — Undergraduate library qualification or undergraduate degree in any subject and postgraduate degree in library and information studies

Academic Engagement Adviser — Degree in a library and information related, education or equivalent discipline. Experience and understanding of working in partnership with academics/students/other stakeholders. Experience of leading change and innovation in a service delivery context.

Pacific Library Liaison

  • A bachelor’s degree and a postgraduate qualification in Library and Information Studies or equivalent experience working in education sector libraries is desirable.

  • RLIANZA (Registered member LIANZA) or equivalent is desirable.

  • 5+ years’ work experience in a library, preferably in a tertiary environment.

  • An in-depth knowledge Pacific library resources, knowledge of Pacific cultural values, and experience working in Pacific communities on campus or within the wider Pacific community.

Kaitakawaenga

  • a bachelor’s degree or equivalent

  • a comprehensive knowledge of tikanga Māori, particularly in relation to the provision of library services

  • knowledge of mātauranga Māori library resources

  • proficiency in te reo Māori

  • experience delivering library services

  • strong interpersonal and team working skills, including ability to work collaboratively

  • demonstrable cultural competence and confidence to work in a bicultural and intercultural environment

  • an understanding of Te Tiriti o Waitangi and how it relates to libraries

Library Manager — Bachelor’s degree in a relevant field. A Master of Library Science degree is preferred. Supervisory experience is required.


Special libraries

Definition:
“A special library is typically a unit within a public or private corporation, government agency, or a non-profit organisation. Within the academic world, libraries with specialised collections such as engineering or computer science also fit under the specialised classification. There are also public libraries with specialised units like a business library which fit into this category. These special libraries or information centres support the mission of their parent organisations. The units excel at providing highly specialised information and value added data with a very specific focus on the internal customers” (Vargha, 2005) (13)

Categories (defined in the paper in the footnote): Categories taken from the above report:

Commercial organisations

2000 Number of Libraries

2000 FTE staff numbers

2006 Number of Libraries

2006 FTE staff numbers

Agriculture / primary produce

13

24.50

9

17.50

Pharmaceutical / food / chemical, plastics and building materials

2

3.50

2

3.00

Energy

14

25.00

9

13.00

Manufacturing, engineering and architects

18

30.00

18

24.50

Financial

20

50.72

13

36.40

Legal

25

80.74

29

77.15

Information consultants

4

4.00

8

8.00

Media / publishing

17

35.50

17

37.75

Tourism / telecommunications

2

7.00

2

10.00

Lotteries / Standards

3

6.40

3

3.50

Total commercial organisations

118

110

Cell

Total commercial staff numbers (FTEs)

267.36

230.80

Non-commercial organisations

2000 Number of Libraries

2000 FTE staff numbers

2006 Number of Libraries

2006 FTE staff numbers

Science / Environment

25

54.56

24

51.80

Central government

46

195.10

52

213.90

Local government

6

14.50

6

7.50

Health and medical

48

104.50

51

110.40

Theology

13

23.25

13

23.25

Museums and galleries

20

87.80

19

108.30

Industry and professional organisations

1

2.00

3

3.00

Other organisations including embassy, fire, military and voluntary

13

31.50

14

37.50

Total non-commercial organisations

172

182

Total special libraries

290

292

Total non-commercial staff numbers (FTEs)

513.21

555.65

Total staff numbers (FTEs)

780.57

786.45

Special library roles and job requirements

Librarian — Undergraduate library qualification or undergraduate degree in any subject and postgraduate degree in library and information studies.
Solo librarian — Same requirement as a librarian. Does the work of three people – performs all the required activities involved in research, technical services and administration. (14)


Number of library roles in NZ

Overview roles
According to Libraries in Aotearoa 2014 (15) : in 2013 there were 6,198 New Zealanders who identified themselves as working as librarians.

According to the 2018 Census:

  • 4,038 librarians worked in New Zealand in 2018. (16)

  • According to the Census, 2,037 library assistants worked in New Zealand in 2018. (17)

Overview of current development pathways for growth

A. Approved library education providers, prior to becoming a librarian in New Zealand

Open Polytechnic Kuratini Tuwhera

  • NZ Certificate in Library & Information Services for Children and Teens (Level 6)

  • NZ Diploma in Library & Information Studies (Level 5)

  • NZ Diploma in Records & Information Management (Level 6)

  • Bachelor of Library & Information Studies

  • Graduate Certificate in Library & Information Leadership

Open Polytechnic Kuratini Tuwhera

Victoria University of Wellington

  • Master of Information Studies

  • Postgraduate Diploma in Information Studies

  • Postgraduate Certificate in Information Studies

Victoria University of Wellington

Te Wananga-o-Raukawa

  • Te Heke Puna Maumahara (1 year diploma)

  • Te Poutuaronga Puna Maumahara (3 year degree)

Te Wananga-o-Raukawa

Charles Sturt University

  • Library and Information Studies qualifications

  • Includes post-graduate Certificate in Teacher Librarianship

Charles Sturt University

B. Library workforce professional development in New Zealand

LIANZA Bodies of Knowledge (BoK)

The Bodies of Knowledge (BoK) identify the different areas of competency for the Library and Information Profession. The 11 BoKs are clustered in six manageable groups, which makes it easier to gather evidence to revalidate. Familiarity and practice with each of the six clusters of 11 BoKs ensures New Zealand library and information professionals have a broad knowledge base and skill set. The BoKs are used to ensure comprehensive coverage in your revalidation journal, and help registrants stay up to date with the changes in the sector.

LIANZA Bodies of Knowledge (BoK)

LIANZA Professional Development

LIANZA offers support and coordination around professional development for various special interest groups (SIGs) in the sector.

LIANZA Professional Development

Career development and future skills work

Te Rōpū Whakahau Professional Development

Professional development in Mātauranga Māori, te Ao Māori and Māori initiatives.

Te Rōpū Whakahau Professional Development

LIANZA / SLANZA Tertiary Grants Project

The project is aiming to upskill the current workforce with tertiary qualifications, attract new people to achieve tertiary qualifications and gain employment in the sector, ensure the workforce is qualified and future-ready to demonstrate the value and impact of library and information services.

LIANZA / SLANZA Tertiary Grants Project

C. Current versus future state of library development pathways in Australia

Across the next few years the Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA) is undertaking its boldly ambitious initiative to strengthen the profession, increase diversity and help create a future-ready workforce named Professional Pathways.

On 30 November 2020, ALIA released the Professional Pathways plan for the future of the library and Information profession, as the culmination of consultations across the sector over the past year, with close to 450 active participants. This document provides a detailed outline of the initiative.

In its recently released draft competencies and pathway framework (for consultation), ALIA depicts what professional pathways could look like for a few different roles.

Professional Pathways

D. High-level overview of each sector and roles

The spreadsheet shows initial research to help create an understanding of the sectors and its roles, which helped inform the co designs and the first draft of the framework.

[Understanding Library sector — Current state analysis inital research (xls, 45KB)](/files/nzlpp/understanding-library-sector-current-state-analysis-inital-research.xlsx0

Footnotes

  1. IFLA Trend Report

  2. IFLA Trend Report Update 2021

  3. The Future of Library Services in 3 Visualisations

  4. Future Trends and Services in Libraries (April 2021)

  5. The Next Normal: The Post-Pandemic Future of Library Services. David Shumaker

  6. Trends Set to Impact Libraries in 2021

  7. Future Skills for the LIS Profession

  8. 2021 Update to ALA's Core Competences of Librarianship

  9. New Zealand Libraries Partnership Programme

  10. ALA’s Core Competences of Librarianship

  11. ALA Knowledge and competencies statements

  12. Competencies for Information Professionals

  13. Ralph and Sibthorpe, (2009) Emerging trends in New Zealand special libraries

  14. Lucidea — What is a Special Library?

  15. Libraries In Aotearoa New Zealand 2014

  16. Careers.govt.nz — Librarian

  17. Careers.govt.nz — Library Assistant