Association for Library and Information Science Education
Formation | 1915 |
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Type | Non-profit NGO |
Purpose | "promotes innovation and excellence in research, teaching, and service for educators and scholars in Library and Information Science and cognate disciplines internationally through leadership, collaboration, advocacy, and dissemination of research." [1] |
The Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) promotes innovation and excellence in research, teaching, and service for educators and scholars in Library and Information Science and cognate disciplines internationally through leadership, collaboration, advocacy, and dissemination of research. [2]
ALISE is the successor organization to the Association of American Library Schools (AALS) which was founded in 1915.[citation needed] AALS replaced the American Library Association (ALA) Roundtable of Library School Instructors (1911-1915), but was not affiliated with the American Library Association until 1953.[3] Organizationally, AALS and ALA had many connections, especially in the first 30 years of AALS’s existence.[4] Donald G. Davis traced the efforts within ALA for the improvement of library education.[5]
External links
References
- ^ ALISE. Expanding our Horizons: Strategic Directions, 2011-2014 http://www.alise.org/strategic-direction
- ^ ALISE. Expanding our Horizons: Strategic Directions, 2011-2014http://www.alise.org/strategic-direction
- ^ Shove, R.H. “AALS before 1915.” Journal of Education for Librarianship 1960, 1 : 81–86.
- ^ Shirley Fitzgibbons . Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) In Encyclopedia of Library and Information Sciences, Third Edition. Taylor and Francis: New York, Published online: 09 Dec 2009; 328-340.
- ^ Davis, Donald Gordon. 1974. The Association of American library schools, 1915-1968: an analytical history. Metuchen: N.J.