Scarecrow Press
Pages: 216
Trim: 7 x 9
978-0-8108-5045-3 • Paperback • December 2004 • $80.00 • (£62.00)
Maurice B. Wheeler is Associate Professor at the School of Library and Information Sciences at the University of North Texas. He has been professionally active in the area of cultural diversity and leadership development for over 15 years.
Part 1 Foreword
Part 2 Part I:Environmental and External Forces
Chapter 3 1 and Its Effect on Libraries and Library and Information Science Education: Mapping and Storytelling a Historical Journey Fifty Years in the Making
Chapter 4 2 Evolving Issues: Racism, Affirmative Action, and Diversity
Chapter 5 3 In Union There Is Strength: Library and Information Science Educators and Librarians' Associations of Color
Chapter 6 4 The ALA Spectrum Initiative: A Student's View
Chapter 7 5 Affirmative Action: The Role of the LIS Dean
Chapter 8 6 Race-Based Financial Aid: An Overview
Part 9 Part II: Student Recruitment
Chapter 10 7 Minority Student Recruitment in LIS Education: New Profiles for Success
Chapter 11 8 A Web Model of Recruitment for LIS Doctoral Education: Weaving in Diversity
Chapter 12 9 Creating Opportunities and Opening Doors: Recruiting and Mentoring Students of Color
Part 13 Part III: Faculty and Curriculum Issues
Chapter 14 10 The Effect of Technology on Library Education and Students at Risk
Chapter 15 11 Curriculum Reform and Diversity
Chapter 16 12 Communication and Difficult Topics in LIS Education: Teaching and Learning about Diversity in the Classroom
Chapter 17 13 Faculty Development and Cultural Diversity in Teaching: LIS Education's Last Frontier
Part 18 Index
Part 19 About the Contributors
A must-read for everyone in the LIS educational chain, from those in admissions to those who regularly hire new graduates.
— Library Journal
Editor Maurice B. Wheeler and his team of essayists address how LIS programs have fallen short in the area of diversity, tackling issues from three perspectives—external and environmental forces, student recruitment, and faculty/curriculum—in Unfinished Business; Race, Equity, and Diversity in library and Information Science Education. Among the contributors are Em Claire Knowles, who discusses affirmative action and the role of the LIS dean, and Lorna Peterson, who examines curriculum reform and diversity.
— American Libraries
...an essential reader for LIS students and concerned practitioners. It should also be useful for specialists in higher education and multicultural studies.
— American Reference Books Annual
Unfinished Business provides perspective on how far we have come in examining the issues of race, equity, and diversity within our profession. Progress has been made; however, as the title suggests, there is still much work to be done. This book serves as a no-holds-barred wake-up call on the future of our profession.
— vol. 67, no. 6; College & Research Libraries, November 2006
Fifty years after Brown v. Board of Education, editor Wheeler and 17 academic contributors from education and library science provide evidence that few (if any) library and information science programs were ever integrated. The volume tackles the subject of diversity in US schools from three perspectives: external and environmental forces, including racism, affirmative action, and race-based financial aid; student recruitment, including mentoring in LIS education; and faculty/curriculum issues, including technology effects and faculty development.
— Reference and Research Book News