The pilot accreditation at the Um exercise took place aru Musa Yar’adua University, Katsina and the University of Nigeria Nsukka.
Director of Public Relations at Council of Nigeria, Mrs Librarians Registration Ngozi Oboh quoted the Council’s Registrar/CEO, Jaáfaru Abdullahi Wase as disclosing this during the opening ceremony of the National Workshop on Application of New Technological Trends in Libraries held at the University of Port Harcourt on Tuesday.
Wase stated that the accreditation of library schools programme is part of the mandate the Council contained in the LRCN establishment act.
“The accreditation exercise is for quality assurance purposes and to ensure that libraries adopt standards set by the Council for academic libraries in terms of content, facilities and staffing as well as assessing their use of the curriculum and benchmarks set for different categories of libraries,’’ he said.
Wase also informed the participants that LRCN plans to accredit two more tertiary institutions by July 2023.
Stakeholders agreed that accrediting the library schools programme by the foremost regulatory agency in the sector is a step in the right direction. University Librarian of the University of Port Harcourt, Dr. Helen Emasealu said that the accreditation exercise is a welcome development so that library schools and other libraries will be aware that there are rules to follow in running their institutions.
“It is only when you do assessment that you have a bigger picture,’’ “Those who do not comply (with the standards) will be sanctioned.’’ she said.
On his part, the Vice Chancellor of the University of Port Harcourt, Professor Onwunari Abraham Georgewill, in his remarks at the ceremony commended the LRCN for its activities a university at all nd stated that a university without the library is no and that libraries occupy key position in the life of every university.