LIS curriculum in French-speaking West Africa in the age of ICTs: The case of Benin and Senegal

Resource type
Journal Article
Author/contributor
Title
LIS curriculum in French-speaking West Africa in the age of ICTs: The case of Benin and Senegal
Abstract
Summary LIS training programme in Africa date from early independence period. In French-speaking West African area, few countries have an LIS school. The existing schools have been created in partnership with either an international organization or a northern country. The curriculum delivered is not always updated as in developed countries. The main objective of this article is to measure the gap between LIS curriculum as actually delivered in developed and developing countries in the age of the information and communication technologies (ICTs). A couple of schools were chosen—English and French-speaking area—from Northern America and Western Europe; their curriculum served as basis for evaluating those in West African French-speaking countries. The conclusion that can be drawn from the study is that LIS curriculum in Africa has changed less since the schools’ first creation and ICTs are not present as in Western countries. This trend brings out the problem of the curriculum pertinence and the competitiveness of the graduate students in the international employment market.
Publication
The International Information & Library Review
Date
2007
Language
en
Loc. in Archive
LOCAL-DOI:10.1016/j.iilr.2007.02.007
Citation
Mêgnigbêto, E. (2007). LIS curriculum in French-speaking West Africa in the age of ICTs: The case of Benin and Senegal. The International Information & Library Review. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.iilr.2007.02.007