Rwanda: Librarians Are Key Pillars in Education
By Christine Osae
It has been rightly predicted that the digital age will
not only wipe public bookshelves clean, but also permanently end the old era of
libraries.
As the library's relevance comes into
question, librarians face an existential crisis at a time when students need
them the most. Despite their perceived obsolescence in the digital age,
libraries are irreplaceable much more the librarians.
Admittedly, libraries are no longer
both the beginning and ending point of all scholarly research. The internet is
effectively pulling students away from the stacks and revealing a wealth of
information, especially to one who is equipped with the tools to find it.
Indeed, the dream of cutting out the middleman is possible to attain -but at
what price?
Undoubtedly, the internet is a great
resource and so is the library; hence, to talk about one replacing the other is
absurd. It might also suffice to mention that the Internet isn't free. Numerous
academic research papers, journals, and other important materials are virtually
inaccessible to someone seeking to pull them off the web for free.
Rather, access is restricted to
expensive subscription accounts, which are typically paid for by institutional
libraries.
Besides, the highly social nature of the web makes it
greatly susceptible to, for example, sensationalised, low-quality information
with the sole merit of being popular. Libraries, in contrast, provide quality
control in the form of a stopgap. Only information that is carefully vetted is
allowed in. Libraries are likely to stay separate from the internet, even if
they can be found online. Therefore, it is extremely important that libraries
remain alive and well, as a counterpoint to the fragile populism of the web.
The point is, rather than lope blindly
through the digital age, guided only by the corporate interests of web
economics, society should foster a culture of guides and guideposts. Today,
more than ever, librarians are extremely important for the preservation and
improvement of our culture.
Precisely put, the librarians keep the
libraries alive. They fundamentally keep the fountains of knowledge flowing.
The textbooks, reference books, set
books and many others are used year after another with the assurance that they
will still be usable in the next ten years because someone is responsible for
them. Although some people may argue that Rwanda only has librarians because we
are yet to evolve technologically, librarians are a precious symbol - a symbol
that we uphold literacy, a symbol of proof that "if you hide anything in a
book," we shall find it, a symbol that we still love the old fashion
satisfaction we get from reading authentic books, a symbol of our heritage.
They are the unsung heroes who not only place orders for
the reading materials you need but also cleans after you when you have made a
mess. Similarly, the librarians replace the lost books and fix the torn ones.
They help to upgrade the shelves that contain archaic books should new volumes
exist. The tedious long days and nights of taking inventory are equally worth
noting.
They know where every material is and
most of the time even go out of their way to ensure you actually read in a
quiet environment. When books are assigned for assignments, the librarian saves
you the headache of searching for them and quickly suggests where they could be
found. Many would argue that with the digitalised catalogue system the books
are but a click away; yet such arguments can only hold water if the contender
were not in Rwanda or Africa for that matter.
Ever imagined what the internet would
be like if there were no web moderators? Librarians are the irreplaceable
counterparts to internet/web moderators. Individuals who voluntarily devote
their time to moderating online forums play a similar role to librarians who
oversee the stacks and those who visit the stacks, minus the Master's degree in
library sciences.
The chief difference between
librarians and moderators is that while the former guides users through a
collection of highly authoritative, published works, the moderator is
responsible for taking the helm as consensus is created.
Regards
Pralhad
Jadhav
Senior
Manager @ Library
Khaitan
& Co
Best
Paper Award | Received the Best Paper Award at TIFR-BOSLA National Conference on
Future Librarianship: Innovation for Excellence (NCFL 2016) on April 23,
2016. The title of the paper is “Removing
Barriers to Literacy: Marrakesh VIP Treaty”
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