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Dear ARLIS/NA Members:  Please excuse any cross-postings. Your input is
requested on the ARLIS/NA Core Competencies draft document, Core
Competencies for Art Information Professionals.  Please take a few
minutes to let us (the ARLIS/NA Professional Development Committee and
Core Competencies Subcommittee) know what you think!  An online survey
has been posted that allows participants to respond to each part of the
draft document.

 

Link to the survey from the ARLIS/NA PDC website:
http://www.uflib.ufl.edu/afa/pdc/. The survey will be taken down on May
7th, 2004. 

 

Explanation The Art Libraries Society of North America (ARLIS/NA) is
committed to increasing the effectiveness of art librarians and visual
resources curators by focusing efforts on professional and continuing
education, as well as professional development activities. In response
to this goal, an action item was assigned to the ARLIS/NA Professional
Development Committee (PDC) to make recommendations for a core
curriculum in art librarianship and visual resources curatorship.
Members of the committee and the Board agreed that a general statement
of core competencies would be needed first and that such a document
could help pave the way for future endeavors to design a core
curriculum.  In order to meet this goal, the Executive Board of ARLIS/NA
appointed a Core Competencies sub-committee of the PDC with the charge
to create core competency standards for the art library and visual
resources professions.  

 

What Are Core Competencies?  The competencies outlined in this document
represent the fundamental skills, professional knowledge and
philosophies generally acquired within the first few years in an art
library or visual resources position.  This document is not intended as
a checklist. Rather, it is intended to serve as a framework for thinking
about the profession in broad sense. Many library organizations,
including the Special Libraries Association, the Music Libraries
Association and American Association of Law Libraries, have created core
competencies standards in order to articulate to their members and to
future librarians what are the professional expectations and shared
values in their fields. 

 

What are the practical applications of a core competency framework? The
core competency framework is a tool used in writing performance
evaluations, interview questions, and position descriptions. Core
competencies aid in the design of mentoring and recruitment activities,
and have been used in order to develop LIS curricula. Employee training
programs and continuing education curriculum can be written based on
core competency guidelines.  A core competencies framework can help an
individual decide whether a career in the art information field is right
for them, and can also be useful in planning the development of a career
already underway. 

  

Heather Ball

ARLIS/NA PDC & Core Competencies Subcommittee Chair

Art and Architecture Librarian

Virginia Tech

302 Cowgill Hall

Blacksburg, VA 24062-9001

ph 540.231.9272

 


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