Academic Librarians’ Attitudes about Civic-Mindedness and Service Learning

Maureen Barry, Laura A. Lowe, Sarah E. Twill

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Although discourse on the civic engagement of libraries as institutions is plentiful, there has been
little discussion of librarians as individuals. Librarianship is more than being a trustee of information.
It includes responsibility for the common good. Libraries provide tools for education on social
and political issues, but they can also collaborate in activities that improve well-being in their communities.
Participating in service learning is one way that librarians on academic campuses can get
involved. This study used a standardized scale to measure civic-mindedness among academic librarians
and examine characteristics and activities, including service learning, related to variation in its
scores. Results indicated that although most respondents made financial or service contributions,
the group mean on the civic-mindedness scale was only moderate. Librarians who volunteered,
had interest in service learning, or participated in community activities were more civic-minded than
professionals who did not. Implications for the profession are discussed.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalThe Library Quarterly
Volume87
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2017

Disciplines

  • Information Literacy
  • Library and Information Science

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