ACRL Diversity Alliance FAQ
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- How can my institution join the Diversity Alliance?
- What are the benefits of joining the Alliance?
- What does the annual fee cover?
- Can member institutions pay below an entry level salary, provided they use the difference for professional development for the residents?
- What is a residency and how is it different from an internship?
- Can a residency have a strategic focus or must it include a rotation of assignments?
- How can member institutions advertise for a resident when state law prohibits them from giving preference or discriminating in hiring?
- How can residency coordinators learn from each other?
- Does ACRL have any recommendations or effective practices? What kind resources are available for DA members?
- What are the goals of the Diversity Alliance?
- How will ACRL measure the success of the DA?
1. How can my institution join the Diversity Alliance?
Joining the ACRL Diversity Alliance requires just two things:
- An annual commitment to the principles of the program, signed by the library director/dean. Any institutions whose library dean/director signs a letter committing to these principles are eligible for participation/membership in the ACRL Diversity Alliance.
- A fee to support the program.
- $250 Foundational Level -or-
- $500 Bridge Levels
To join, download the ACRL Diversity Alliance Letter of Commitment, complete, and return to ACRL:
Allison Payne, ACRL Program Manager for Strategic Initiatives
Email: apayne@ala.org
Invoice will be sent upon receipt of the signed letter. ACRL Diversity Alliance badges will be delivered to participating institutions upon receipt of the letter of commitment and payment of annual fees.
2. What are the benefits of joining the Alliance?
There are many benefits to joining the Alliance. First, your library joins a national effort that, over the long run, improves the pipeline of diverse individuals who will compete for academic and research library jobs. Second, your library’s diversity committees or residency program coordinators have access to other Alliance institutions and coordinator insights, job postings, and residency rotation schedules. Joining the Alliance allows your library to connect with, gain encouragement from, and collaborate with institutions doing similar work around diversity. Finally, your library annually receives a digital badge that may be placed on your website committing yourself to the Diversity Alliance’s principles, and you may include language in your job postings that you are part of the Diversity Alliance. Some current members of the Diversity Alliance have already reported better, more diverse candidate pools since including Diversity Alliance information in their job postings.
3. What does the annual fee cover?
Fees for the Diversity Alliance are set by the ACRL Board of Directors as recommended by the Diversity Alliance Steering Committee/Task Force. Fees are $250 for the Foundational Level or $500 for the Bridge Levels and partially offset administrative costs for the program. The ACRL Diversity Alliance Program requires an annual commitment by individual institutions and consortial pricing is not available.
4. Can member institutions pay below an entry level salary, provided they use the difference for professional development for the residents?
Residents working in an institution who is a member of the ACRL Diversity Alliance must be paid at least the basic entry level salary for that institution. While we recommend three years for the residency, there are some institutions that have two year limits on temporary appointments. It is ideal to design the residency around introducing the dynamic work of academic and research libraries, not necessarily filling needed job duties. We believe this introduction/process should inspire residents to become passionate about academic and research library work, thereby retaining them in the field over the long term. Funds should also be budgeted to support the resident's professional development similar to other entry level librarians. These funds may come from existing professional development funds or from other sources at the discretion of the Library Dean.
For pre-career graduate students, institutiosn must provide pay for the practicum participant commensurate with the hourly salaries of equivalent library and archives professionals with library and archives degrees in progress.
5. What is a residency and how is it different from an internship?
The Diversity Alliance uses the definition adopted by the Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) when defining the difference between internships and residencies:
- Internships and Field Experience: The structured pre-professional work experience which takes place during graduate course work or after course work, but preceding the degree, usually for a short period of time.
- Residency: The post-degree work experience designed as an entry level program for professionals who have recently received an M.L.S. degree from a program accredited by the 91´«Ã½.
Further, the Diversity Alliance offers and encourages opportunities for residents to network through cohort building experiences at ACRL and 91´«Ã½ conferences and through regular communication with and support from the ACRL Residency Interest Group.
6. Can a residency have a strategic focus or must it include a rotation of assignments?
It is up to the library to design the experience and it is important for the residency to have a strong learning component. The residency should be designed to introduce the resident to all areas of the academic and research libraries. In many of the residency programs associated with the Diversity Alliance, a rotation happens in the first year, and then in the subsequent years, the resident may focus on an area of interest. As long as the residency schedule is flexible, exposure to other types of work could come from mentorships, professional development programs, etc.
7. How can member institutions advertise for a resident from a professionally underrepresented population when state law prohibits them from giving preference or discriminating in hiring?
The ad does not need to restrict the applicant pool to candidates from underrepresented populations. Institutions can encourage diverse applicants to apply by including their membership in the Diversity Alliance in their job ads. There are also ways to suggest in the language of the ad that the institution is looking for a diversity of talent, skills, and experience without stating that only individuals from diverse backgrounds need apply.
8. How can residency coordinators learn from each other?
We are considering how to best meet their needs. There is currently an electronic mailing list for residency coordinators and if there is interest we can easily create a community of practice for residency program coordinators. We may consider a needs assessment to see how the ACRL Diversity Alliance could best be a resource for coordinators. ACRL does have a member-led Residency Interest Group whose current focus is primarily on residents.
9. Does ACRL have any recommendations for effective practices? What kind of resources are available for DA members?
We are in the initial stages of the launch so our focus up to this point has been to encourage participation. This helps us gauge how many institutions we’ll be working with. Other than the principles outlined in the letter of commitment, ACRL does not have strict guidelines for designing and filling residency positions.
If you’re looking for guidance, the School of Information (iSchool) at San José State University, with grant funding from the Institute of Museum and Library Services, developed a residency model for recent MLIS graduates, focused on leadership development and integrating emerging technology in diverse types of libraries. Learn more about the Catalyst project and residency model and download the iSchool’s whitepaper on the project on the .
There is a task force overseeing the Diversity Alliance and one of the things we will be considering is a needs assessment so that we can better understand what resources would be helpful. Meanwhile, ACRL’s Residency Interest Group has some helpful resources available on their website ().
10. What are the goals of the Diversity Alliance?
In order to unite academic libraries committed to racial equity in their hiring and retention practices of qualified and talented individuals from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, the ACRL Diversity Alliance fosters the:
- Increased adoption of inclusive employment and onboarding practices.
- Development of inclusive healthy workplace cultures that support BIPOC colleagues.
- Creation of paid positions with no required years of experience through early career diversity residencies and graduate student practicums.
- Advancement of career path development of BIPOC early professionals.
- Building of professional network connections for BIPOC individuals.
- Retention of BIPOC librarians and archivists in the profession.
- Commitment of library leaders to the advancement of inclusive leadership and access to the profession.
11. How will ACRL measure the success of the DA?
We are determining interim measures of success but our long-term goal is: By 2050, the Diversity Alliance will have significantly increased the numbers of underrepresented library workers and librarians working in academic and research libraries.