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$1 Million Grant Will Help Meet Need for American Indian and Hispanic Librarians

TUCSON, Ariz.

A program to increase the number of American Indian and Hispanic librarians has received a grant of nearly $1 million, the University of Arizona announced.

The grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services to the UA’s School of Information Resources and Library Science (SIRLS) will fund the UA’s Knowledge River program. For six years, it has offered outreach services to the community and educational opportunities for Hispanics and American Indians seeking careers as librarians or information professionals.

“There are two key issues in librarianship: the United States’ changing demographics and the small number of librarians from underrepresented cultural groups,” said Jana Bradley, the school’s director.

“In 2050, it is projected that we will be a nation of minorities,” Bradley added. “Libraries will be called upon to serve a huge diversity of clientele and it is extremely important that librarians are educated to be culturally fluent. And it is a high priority within our school and with the American Library Association to increase the number of librarians from underrepresented groups of all kinds.”

SIRLS also has finalized an agreement with the Pima County Public Library that will lead to assistantships for about six Knowledge River scholarss.

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