The University of Texas at Austin School of Information | |
City: | Austin |
State: | Texas |
Dean: | Eric T. Meyer |
Established: | 1948 |
Enrollment: | approx. 300 students |
The University of Texas School of Information is a graduate school and undergraduate school at the University of Texas at Austin, offering master's and doctoral degrees in information studies, as well as certificates of advanced study and an undergraduate minor. In 2021, they began offering a bachelor's degree in informatics. UT iSchool graduates find careers in archival enterprise, information architecture, information policy, information systems design and management, information usability, librarianship, multimedia design, museum work, preservation and conservation, and records management.[1]
The school was founded in 1948 as a part of the UT Graduate School as the Graduate School of Library Science, offering a Master of Library Science (MLS) degree as well as certification for school librarianship, an offering which has been continually provided to this day. In 1967 the school initiated a Certificate of Advanced Study followed in 1969-70 by a doctoral program, leading to the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.
The school's name was changed in 1980 to Graduate School of Library and Information Science in recognition of the increased emphasis on information science in the curriculum as it had evolved since the late 1960s. At the same time, the name of the master's degree became Master of Library and Information Science (MLIS). Change has continued into this century with the master's degree name changed again to Master of Science in Information Studies (MSIS) in 2000. In 2002 the faculty voted unanimously to change the school name to School of Information. The new name took effect in 2003 to better reflect the diversity of issues and the multidisciplinary nature of the studies in the information field.[2] The school is a founding member of the .[3]
The School of Information offers programs leading to the Master of Science in Information Studies degree, the Doctor of Philosophy degree, Certificates of Advanced Study, and the Learning Resources Certification for School Librarians. The school also offers a minor in information studies for undergraduate students at UT.[4] In 2015, the School of Information launched an executive education program in identity management and security (MSIMS) partnered with the University of Texas Center for Identity.[5] The school does not provide distance education.
All iSchool students are members of SASI: the Student Association of the School of Information.[6]
Archives and Preservation
Librarianship
Information Technology
In 2013, U.S. News & World Report ranked School of Information the number six library and information science program in the nation (tied with Rutgers University)[12] and in the top five among public universities.
The school was ranked number two nationally in law librarianship, number four in archives and preservation, number nine in digital librarianship, and number eleven in information systems.[13]
Since 1976, the School of Information has housed Information & Culture, an academic journal on the subject of information history.[14]