Our Partnerships Enhance Your Education
Successful library and information professionals place a high value on partnerships and collaborations. The School of Information Studies is no different. Working together with partners who have similar or complementary strengths, needs and goals enables all of us to achieve more than we could on our own.
Our partnerships include:
College of DuPage (COD)
91ÖÆÆ¬³§ and College of DuPage offer a partnership program allowing students to complete an LTA certificate or associate's degree at COD, then transfer to Dominican to complete a bachelor's degree and Master of Library and Information Science—all in as little as five years. The program allows students interested in careers in library and information science to become highly qualified regardless of their current education level.
Roosevelt University
SOIS has partnered with Roosevelt University in Chicago to offer the opportunity for students in Roosevelt's MA program in history to seek SOIS's Certificate in Archives and Cultural Heritage Resources and Services. The intersection and complementary nature of these two areas of study and professional preparation create a logical disciplinary partnership. History students are frequently attracted to careers such as the curation and management of special historical collections of manuscripts, artifacts, and media. This opportunity provides advanced history students with an additional career avenue.
Skokie Public Library
This innovative partnership represents a competitive opportunity for three SOIS students to work as interns in an award-winning public library—and earn six hours of course credit and two courses’ worth of tuition waiver. Opportunities include public services, community engagement, virtual initiatives and more; mentorship from library staff; registration for the ALA Midwinter Meeting in Chicago; guidance from a SOIS faculty advisor; and monthly cohort meetings with advisors, mentors, students and staff.
Community Archives Partners
SOIS partners students with community archives and small cultural heritage institutions. These include Bethel West Evangelical Lutheran Church, IPIKU, Austin Coming Together, Southwest Organizing Project, Haitian American Museum of Chicago, the Puerto Rican Cultural Center, The Fred Hampton House and the Fred Hampton, Jr. Radio Podcast, the Gerber Hart Library and Archives, the Claretian Missionaries of Chicago Archives, and the John David Mooney Foundation. Some of the partnerships are funded through the Mellon Foundation Public Knowledge Grant Program. SOIS students help document, process, preserve, and provide access to records and stories; ensure that the voices of small, often marginalized communities are included; apply knowledge of standard archival principles and practices; reflect on how standard principles and practices can be challenged by community rules and norms; and propose ways in which community rules and norms are respected in the archives discipline.
Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators
With the Butler Children’s Literature Center, SOIS partners with the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators to support the vibrant Illinois children’s literature community. This includes professional development events for students, creator access to the Butler Center’s review/mentor text collection, a network of local speakers for school talks, guest book reviewers and more.
Illinois Storytelling, Inc.
Illinois Storytelling and SOIS joined forces in 2005 to cultivate storytelling as art and storytellers as artists. The collaboration now includes a monthly event, Traditions and Truth: A Virtual Open Mic, which features national and international storytellers. An annual Fall Festival of Stories, the Ellin Greene Storytelling Tea, as well as shared resources for new and established tellers, add to this partnership.