Best Careers 2009: Librarian

By Marty Nemko

Posted: December 11, 2008

Overview.Forget about that image of librarians as a mousy bookworms. More and more of today's librarians must be clever interrogators, helping the patron to reframe their question more usefully. Librarians then become high-tech information sleuths, helping patrons plumb the oceans of information available in books and digital records, often starting with a clever Google search but frequently going well beyond.

Librarianship is an underrated career. Most librarians love helping patrons solve their problems and, in the process, learning new things. Librarians may also go on shopping sprees, deciding which books and online resources to buy. They may even get to put on performances, like children's puppet shows, and run other programs, like book discussion groups for elders. On top of it all, librarians' work environment is usually pleasant and the work hours reasonable, although you may have to work nights and/or weekends

The job market for special librarians (see below) is good but is sluggish for public and school librarians. Nevertheless, persistent sleuthing—that key attribute of librarians—should enable good candidates to prevail.

That effort to land a job will be well worth it if you're well suited to the profession: love the idea of helping people dig up information, are committed to being objective—helping people gain multiple perspectives on issues—and will remain inspired by the awareness that librarians are among our society's most empowering people.

A Day in the Life. You work in a small municipal library, where you have to do a little of everything. You start your day by leafing through catalogs from online database publishers and book reviews in Library Journal to decide which titles to add to your collection. Next, it's out to the reference desk, where visitors regularly ask how to find something. Sometimes, it's esoteric; often, it's the bathroom. Later, you teach a class: an advanced lesson in Googling. Next, it's back to the reference desk, but you're soon interrupted by a group of boisterous kids, so you have to turn into schoolmarm: "You'll have to be quiet, or I'll have to ask you to leave." You end your day reading about "automated librarianship": data storage systems that let the public get needed resources without the help of a live librarian. Tomorrow, you decide, you'll start writing a grant proposal to develop a computer kiosk that will help patrons find health information.

Smart Specialty

Special librarian. All sorts of organizations need librarians, not just public libraries. They work for colleges, law firms, hospitals, prisons, corporations, legislatures, the military, and nonprofit agencies. In fact, special librarianship is the field's fastest-growing job market. Unlike public and university jobs, which require night and weekend hours, these jobs are mostly 9 to 5.

Salary Data

Median (with eight years in the field): $47,400

25th to 75th percentile (with eight or more years of experience): $42,800-$63,700

(Data provided by PayScale.com)

Training

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Are You Kidding Me?

I was studying library science at Pratt Institute and even the professors told us how difficult it was going to be to find a job In this age of Google, so I decided to save myself from school loan debt and dropped out. Shame on US News for publishing this misleading article.

Kelly of NY @ Nov 04, 2009 11:17:40 AM

Forget Librarianship!

Amen to what Benard Strong said about the field of librarianship. I finished the Master's program at L.S.U. after he did, but the place operated like the Junior League.

Library schools have closed all over the United States, so where is the real demand for librarians?

Sunny Eisenhower of LA @ Nov 02, 2009 10:09:26 AM

No Future in Librarianship

Any librarian who has worked in a factory or a warehouse knows the "future of librarianship" is an oxymoron. The program I completed in 1971 at Louisiana State University was mediocre. Since then, computers and Google have eliminated the demand for working librarians (i.e., those without connections).

Benard Strong of MD @ Oct 31, 2009 14:59:22 PM

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