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Beyond the Stacks: The Evolving Role of Librarians

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Author(s)

Nika Anschuetz

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Writer"

Nika.Anschuetz@du.edu

Graduates of 吃瓜大本营鈥檚 MLIS program bring their skills to archives, classrooms, creative industries, and corporate spaces, shaping information and making a real-world impact.

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exterior of a library

In a world overflowing with information, librarians are more than keepers of books and knowledge鈥攖hey鈥檙e guides who help us make sense of it all.听

Pursuing a (MLIS) at the 吃瓜大本营 may sound like a traditional choice, but its impact is anything but. Today鈥檚 librarians shape how we access, organize, and understand knowledge across every kind of setting鈥攆rom classrooms and archives to corporations and creative industries.听

吃瓜大本营 grad charts a new course as a modern librarian听

Beth Mawhinney鈥檚 journey at 吃瓜大本营 began in 2020. After a decade working in social work and community mental health, she was looking for a change.听

鈥淚 was looking for a space that would continue to allow me to use the soft skills that I had鈥 attention to detail, prioritizing, change management, and managing information,鈥 Mawhinney says.听

After earning her MLIS degree in 2022, Mawhinney worked in a few special library settings. First, she worked as an archivist at the Mike Kelley Foundation for the Arts. The foundation maintains a collection of original papers and materials related to artist Mike Kelley's life and work.听

Shifting to a more corporate setting, Mawhinney worked for TMZ's broadcast channel as an IT application projects and metadata manager, overseeing the company's digital asset management systems. She drew on the core principles of information architecture鈥攚hich come from library science鈥攖o shape her work in user experience, usability testing, product design and more. It鈥檚 a reminder that librarianship extends far beyond the library walls.听

鈥淲hen we think about librarianship, we think about managing all the resources in a catalog or a system,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 think the most important part of that is the interaction between the person using the resource and the system that鈥檚 holding the resource鈥攈ow is it displayed and interacted with?鈥

Mawhinney鈥檚 journey has come full circle. She鈥檚 now back at 吃瓜大本营 as a digital initiatives librarian, using her previous experiences to support departments across In this role, she helps develop tools that others use to streamline workflow and problems.

鈥淲orking on technical teams lets me use my training in a different way. I get to solve problems with technology, and the work is constantly evolving which keeps it fun and interesting," Mawhinney says. "Even though I鈥檓 behind the scenes, the tools and systems we build directly support a larger mission of research and scholarship, which provides a sense of meaning to the work.鈥澨

Bringing information to life on campus and beyond

curator of special collections and archives at University Libraries, has spent much of her life around academic libraries. Both of her parents worked in the field鈥攈er father was the dean of libraries at the University of Kansas, and her mother worked in academic libraries and what鈥檚 now called machine learning. Crowe watched as her parents dedicated their lives to an uncommon career, doing what they loved.听

Now, as a curator and archivist, Crowe helps support 吃瓜大本营 faculty, students, and staff find and use current and historical information. One of her recent projects was helping design an observational research exercise鈥攊n this case, a historical photo scavenger hunt鈥攆or a writing class. Working in teams, students in the class will explore campus, engaging with historical materials and practicing interpreting visual information. This project gives them a hands-on introduction to research methods while fostering collaboration and a stronger connection to campus history.

鈥淟ibrarianship is not just about books or managing data. Your goal is to add context, make sure there鈥檚 a data taxonomy, creating consistent and constant data,鈥 Crowe says.听

Contrary to popular stereotypes, librarians aren鈥檛 quiet bookworms hiding away in the stacks of books. They鈥檙e committed service-oriented professionals.听

鈥淵ou have to talk to people. You have to want to help people find what they need. I really hope people don鈥檛 think we read all day鈥 although I wish I did,鈥 Crowe laughs.听

Whether you choose a more traditional route or explore a non-traditional one, libraries are everywhere. As information continues to grow at an exponential rate, it needs to be managed. And that means there are countless opportunities waiting to be discovered.听

鈥淲hen you go to library school, there are hard skills that you鈥檙e learning. But what you鈥檙e really doing is fine tuning a lens to look at and analyze information and to organize it meaningfully. It鈥檚 invaluable to businesses and organizations,鈥 Mawhinney says.听

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