College and Research Libraries


training might include: (a) courses in ad-
ministration such as are found in the best 
university business schools and occasionally 
in graduate schools of education.; (b) intern-
ship in a university library, combined with 
a seminar in library administration based 
on the work carried on in the internship. 

If these two things are provided, after 
a man or woman has had basic library school 
training, in addition to a master's degree 
in a subject field, there should be a good 
prospect for a successful library administra-
tor if the individual was well selected at the 
outset. 

By RUDOLF HIRSCH and others 

University of Pennsylvania-In--Service Training Program 1 

Convinced that the tirrie is ripe for ex-
perimentation in library education based to 
some extent on theories expressed in .recent 
critical writings, the ·University of Penn-
sylvania Library outlines in this paper its 
projected in-service training program. We 
have no thought of attempting to start a new 
library school, neither do we believe that 
proposals like ours will make library schools 
obsolete. 

Among the specific considerations which 
have motivated us, we place first the present 
scarcity of librarians which, coupled with 
the inflationary trend of our economy, has 
raised beginners' salaries without propor-
tionate increases to more experienced mem-
bers of the profession. Such a discrepancy 
would be justified only if the basic qualifica-
tions and training of newcomers were su-
perior to that of their predec;:essors. This, 
howev<:r, is. not the case. Since a proper 
balance in the salary scale of the entire staff 
is essential in order to retain professional 
satisfaction, either we have to work towards 
a proper balance between the salaries of new 
members of the profession and those of more 
seasoned members, or we have to attempt to 
apply standards to new recruits which will 
justify a higher scale of pay. 

1 P a per presented at the Conference of Easte rn 
College LibraTians by Rudolf Hir sch; prepa red jointly 
by Charles W. David, Dorothy Bemis, Arthur T. Ham-
lin, and the speaker. 

The second consideration which has in-
fluenced us is admittedly controversial. 
We, and, with us, many colleagues, believe 
that the three fundamental qualifications. in 
,librarianship are: proper attitude toward 
books, adequate knowledge of books and 
clear understan.ding of the use of books. 
Admission to library schools in our era of 
mass education does not necessarily meet and 
perhaps cannot meet such specifications. 
Training is focused on techniques. and is not 
such as to equip librarians to apply a quali-
tative judgment to the collecting, recording, 
and servicing of books. We realize the im-
portance of technical aptitude, but we pro-
pose to supply technical training through a 
paid apprenticeship; we further propose to 
integrate this apprenticeship with an instruc-
tional program which will be developed 

- around books and bibliography rather than 
around techniques, administration, or spe-
cialization. The teaching program of the 
University of Pennsylvania Library is em-
pirical in parts only; it does not emphasize 
training for specific library operations. I 
should like to give a brief explanation for 
this departure from more generally accepted 
and more orthodox methods of library teach-
ing. 

We observe in almost all fields two con-
flicting trends: one toward greater special-
ization with a utilitarian outlook toward 

126 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



education; the second toward reintegration 
of the different branches of knowledge, pre-
supposing a high standard of general educa-
tion as a prerequisite before embarking on 
any high degree of specialization. It is our 
belief that librarians in responsible positions 
in institutions of learning ought to possess 
a basic understanding of all major research 
problems germane to books, libraries, and 
bibliographies before specialization can be 
successfully developed. 

The training program as planned for the 
fall of 1947 will be limited, at least for the 
present, to not more than five candidates, 
graduates of accredited colleges and· univer-
sities. Admission will be based on academic 
standards, including good knowledge of at 
least one foreign language, and personal in-
terviews. Only candidates of exceptional · 
qualifications, who believe that their in-
terests lie in _university and research li-
braries, will be accepted. Trainees will per-
form regular duties as library assistants dur-
ing a two-year period. Provisions will be 

- made to rotate them sufficiently through the 
several departments to acquaint them during 
the period of our training with the principal 
operations of a research and university li-
brary. While their working schedule will 
be shortened to thirty-five hours a week in 
order to allow time for instruction, the pro-
gram as a whole will be heavy. They will 
be classified as semiprofessional members of 
the staff and will receive compensation at 
the rate provided for such workers. 

The· apprenticeship will be supplemented 
with an instructional prog~am which will 
provide between six and seven hours of in-
struction per week for eighty weeks spread 
over a two-year period. Coutses will be of 
the seminar or laboratory type. Teaching 
will be undertaken largely by members of · 
the library staff. No tuition fees will be 
charged. The program as it stands now 
does not provide for elective courses. We 

APRILJ 1947 

regret this fact, but we are forced to limit 
ourselves to a smaller number of required 
courses in order not to drain the resources 
of the institution. Should our experiment 
be successful, we shall probably attempt to 
add courses and permit freedom in selecting 
courses to be taken, instead of requiring sub-
mission to a rigid system. 

Outline of Instruction 

Details of courses as well as the method 
of instruction have not yet been fully de-
cided upon. It is . proposed to hold during 
the coming spring term a seminar within 
the existing staff, attended by those who 
migh~ act as instructors or supervisors in 
practice work, to discuss in full the entire 
program. Final decisions will be made on 
the basis of these discussions. However, we 
have prepared an outline of subject matter 
which may be summarized briefly. The in-
sfruction will fall under these five major 
headings: 

1. The book 
2. Documentation 
3· The library 
4· Reading 
5. The book trade. 

. Three seminars are contemplated to cover 
different aspects of ( 1) the book, i.e.J of 
writing and printing. The first will be on 
manuscripts and will deal specifically with 
materials, make-up, identification, and re-
cording. The second will be on printed 
books, periodicals, and newspapers, with 
treatment analogous to that given to manu-
scripts. The third will be directed at the 
forces which influence the diffusion of 
knowledge through printing. We ha_ve in 
mind · such problems as the appearance of 
~pecific works in print at specific periods--
the sociological, psychological, and economic 
factors which control the choice and produc-
tion of texts. 

( 2) Documentation will be concerned 

127 

I 



with the methods and types of bibliographi-
cal description, documentary reproduction, 
etc. and will include training in multi-
lin~ual bibliographical 1term.inology. 

A series of seminars on ( 3) the library 
will be divided quite conventionally into sec-
tions on book selection; classification, subject 
heading; and catalogi.ng; service, and ad-
ministration. 

The seminar on ( 4) reading will deal 
with the part which libraries play 9r should 
play in the diffusion of knowledge and in 
education. 

The seminar on ( 5) the book trade will 
deal with some basic problems of publishing 
and boo)cselling, with special emphasis on the 
librarian's relationship to these trades. 

The seminars will in no sense be survey 
courses. Ratner they will be devQted to 
specific problems or topics within the sub-
jects covered and the coverage will vary 
from year to year. It is our contention that 
a thorough knowledge of research and re-
search methods within a few segments of 
each proposed subject will be mote valuable 
than a superficial coverage of entire fields. 
It is also felt that, in order to . make the 
seminars provocative and to create a true 
interest in the topics treated, every effort 
should be made to prevent the forming of 
instructional patterns such as develop so 
easily when teaching becomes repetitious and 
standardized. 

At the end of the two-year period of ap-

prenticeship and instruction a comprehensive 
examination will be given to test ability and 
attitude. Upon the successful passing of this 
examination the trainees will be accepted as 
professional members of the University o~ 
Pennsylvania Library staff or will be recom-
mended as professionally competent for em-
ployment in other institutions. Though 
they will not be awarded degrees, they will 
receive a written statement or possibly a for-
mal certificate stating training and accomp-
lishments. Exceptionally qualified and more 
mature students might be granted profes-
sional rating after a single year, even though 
continuing to attend courses, or they might 
be granted permission to substitute during 
the second year, graduate courses in a sub-
ject field in which they have specialized or 

. desire to specialize. 

The program as outlined here, to prove 
successful depends in no small part upon our 
wisdom in pl~nning. We are only too 
aware of the difficulties which will have to 
be overcome in order to make this experi-
ment a success. They are; 

I. Can we find graduates of accepted col-
leges and universities who will meet the 
high standards set and who are interested in 
becoming candidates? 

2. Will instruction be successful, in accord-
ance with specifications set forth in this paper? 

3· Will we be able to place our trainees, 
once they have passed our examination, m 
professional positions in other institutions as 
well as in the library of the University of 
Pennsylvania? 

By BLANCHE PRICHARD McCRUM 

Education for . Librarianship op Trial: A Discussion 
The preceding two papers leave me little 

to do but agree with them and to apologize 
to the writers because it was necessary for 

them to curtail their own statements in order 
to save time for a third person to review 
them. That being the case, I am going to 

128 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES