The African University Librarian In The Information Age
The African University Librarian In The Information Age
INTRODUCTION
Since
their inception, libraries have maintained their sovereignty as the
main storage of knowledge in society. Today, novel information
technologies equipped with the computer, telecommunications and optical
media are seriously affecting libraries. ICTS, for short, is used here
to include computer hardware, software and telecommunication equipment.
It has been an indispensable tool and has great impact globally. Of all
the diversified technologies of our time, progress in information and
communication technology has no doubt had, and continues to have
considerable influence on the global economy. It makes it possible to
collect, process and transmit information at breathtaking speed and
declining cost. It increases productivity, improves quality and
efficiency in all types of services.
The
impact is seen in diverse areas such as health-care, finance and
banking, transportation, publishing and management. Information
technology is already changing our lives in various ways. It facilitates
communication irrespective of distance, relieves one of a great deal of
hard, dirty and repetitive work and gives control over the natural
environment. As Knopp (1984) realistically observed, the library is
presently standing on a crossroad and must try to find a useful balance
between the traditional library functions and methods, and the new
challenges. The African university librarian will pay a tremendously
high price in preserving traditional services and embracing the
technological advances. This notwithstanding, it must be paid if the
African librarian wants to interpose or remain the mediator between the
user and information. It is the librarian's role to ensure that the
resulting use of computers and telecommunication and any other
appropriate technology contributes in cost effective ways to the needs
of scholarship and research since "he librarians have the expertise in
acquiring materials in a variety of formats and make them accessible for
a variety of purposes" (Simpson, 1984, p.38).
THE AFRICAN UNIVERSITY LIBRARIAN
Two
programmes of the International Federation of Library Associations and
Institutions (IFLA), the Universal Bibliographic Control (UBC) and the
Universal Availability of Publications (UAP), have contributed immensely
to a wide and easy access to print information. Something similar can
be done to provide the same access to electronic information. African
university librarians could take the legacy of the aforementioned
programmes and tranpose them into a new vision for an electronic future.
At
the second meeting of the Ad Hoc Committee on University Libraries held
in Accra in 1999, the need to give priority to the improvement and the
issues of access to the new information technologies were stressed. It
was emphasized that university management structures must acknowledge
the centrality of the library as a pedagogic tool (AAU, 199). Continuing
education programmes for African libraries to facilitate reskilling,
which meets the dynamic information environment, must be supported
because there must be a concentration in training for technology
regardless of the area of librarianship one specializes in. It is a
truism that "librarians need to know how to access and filter what is on
the web" (Rosenberg, 2000, p.15).
IMPLICATIONS OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGIES
A
school of thought forcefully argues that the advantages of information
technology are double-edged. Technology too appears to have increased
rather than decreased the woes of African university libraries in the
provision of information. Special equipment is needed to access and to
retrieve information that comes in electronic format. There are problems
of storage and conservation even when the equipment is available.
Technology can only be installed and utilized if adequate and sound
funding supports it. It is incontrovertible that the most important
factor worth investigating seriously is the economic side of the issue.
In Sierra Leone, the university administration initially centrally
budgeted about six percent for its college and institute libraries.
Central funding however has been replaced by collegiate funding which is
inadequate (Rosenberg, 1997). Management must acknowledge and support
the centrality of its academic nerve centre and ensure the
sustainability of the library programmes and services.
The
development of systems for the organization of knowledge and
information retrieval has reached a plateau, with names of fundamental
system characteristics now adequately tried and tested. Nevertheless,
news of the core concepts, the use of inverted files to aid in retrieval
and the context in which many systems operate need constant revision.
Researchers are pursuing a variety of approaches in their search for
better systems, categorized into the following:
1.
System design, where the general objective is to optimize the
efficiency and effectiveness of the system, including storage and its
retrieval speed; and
2.
The human computer interface (human factor) where the objective is to
improve the quality of interaction between the user and the computer so
that the former can be more successful in extracting what they require.
THE NATIONAL GOVERNMENT
National
governments should give more prominence to African university libraries
in the area of provision of infrastructure and funding. It is a truism
that the government of Sierra Leone like other African governments is
seeking ways and means to curtail the amount of money spent on tertiary
education (Duah, 1999). The New Educational Policy for Sierra Leone
(1995) is committed, in principle, "to establish, equip, manage,
maintain and develop an efficient library service in the capital,
provisional towns and districts" (p.41). Until such a policy is
implemented, the library system would go Rip Van Wrinkle. Information is
a factor of production. Consequently, the institutions that acquire,
organize, store, preserve in a manner that facilitates retrieval and
provide it to potential users deserve government support and attention.
The Ministry of Education in Ghana for instance launched several
initiatives to enhance both computerization and access to the internet
for educational institutions. The Educational Management Information
System (EMIS) project was launched in October 1997 to provide internet
services/access to educational administrators across the country.
CONCLUSION
In
spite of the novel technology, the mission of the library will remain
unchanged though the ways in which librarians fulfill this mission
changes. African librarians must find a very useful balance between the
conventional/traditional library functions and the methods of the new
challenges in order to maintain their leadership role in the information
age. The university library should consider operating an automated
system that will be accessible to students, lecturers and the general
public in order to support teaching, learning, research and extension
services of the university. This system can be worked through
collaborative efforts of all concerned.
LIST OF REFERENCES
AAU Newsletter (1999). The role of the university libraries in Africa, 5(2), pp.1-12.
Duah, V. (1999). The AAU and higher education in the next millennium. AAU Newsletter, 5(2), pp.1-2.
Knopp,
W. (1984). The library in a technological world: problems and queries
put forward by the client. IFLA Journal, 10(1), pp.57-62.
New Education Policy for Sierra Leone. Freetown: Department of Education.
Rosenberg, D. (1997). University libraries in Africa. London : International African Institute.
___________ (2000). Internet training for libraries. INASP Newsletter, 15, p.15.
Simpson, D. (1984). Advancing technology: the secondary impact on libraries and users. IFLA Journal, 10 (1), pp.43-48.
AUTHOR SIGNATURE
Oliver
L.T. Harding, who obtained his GCE O & A Levels from the Sierra
Leone Grammar School and the Albert Academy respectively, is currently
Senior & Acting Librarian of Fourah Bay College, University of
Sierra Leone. He is a part time lecturer at the Institute of Library,
Information & Communication Studies (INSLICS), Fourah Bay College
and the Extension Programme at the Evangelical College of Theology
(T.E.C.T) at Hall Street, Brookfields; Vice President of the Sierra
Leone Association of Archivists, Librarians & Information Scientists
(SLAALIS); a member of the American Theological Library Association
(ATLA) and an associate of the Chartered Institute of Library &
Information Professionals (CILIP). His certificates, secular and sacred,
include: a certificate and diploma from the Freetown Bible Training
Centre; an upper second class B.A. Hons. Degree in Modern History
(F.B.C.); a post-graduate diploma from the Institute of Library Studies
(INSLIBS, F.B.C) a masters degree from the Institute of Library,
Information & Communication Studies (INSLICS, F.B.C.) and a masters
degree in Biblical Studies from West Africa Theological Seminary,
affiliate of the University of Nigeria, Nsukka, where he won the prize
for academic excellence as the Best Graduating Student in 2005. Oliver, a
writer, musician and theologian, is married (to Francess) with two
children (Olivia & Francis).
Email: oltharding@yahoo.com
Mobile: 232-2233-460-330
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/expert/Oliver_Harding/112404
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/1186333
~ (By Oliver Harding).
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