
This past year, Dr. Vanessa Irvin invited LIS students to partner with her Institute of Museum & Library Services (IMLS)-funded grant project, , to work with and observe Hawaiâi’s public library professional development. Recent grad Nicholas Cho capped his final semester by submitting a paper on community building in public libraries in Hawaiâi, which was .
Abstract:
Public libraries in Hawaiâi serve one of the most diverse populations in the United States. With 51 branch locations across six islands, Hawaii’s public libraries are central hubs for citizens, where community building can take place. This paper seeks to explore ways in which community building takes place at public libraries in Hawaiâi. Through on-site visits at public libraries, observations of training sessions of participants of a Hawaiâi-based public library professional development program (Hui âEkolu), and informal interviews with local public library patrons, key themes, reflections and analysis convey a common question across all groups: âWhat is a Native Hawaiian Library?â âWhat is Hawaiian librarianship?â This research is at an emerging stage where such meaningful questions are pointing towards a need to center Indigenous Hawaiian ways of knowing and perceiving public services in libraries as a primary tenet of cultural competence for public library workers in Hawaiâi. As a federally funded grant program, Hui âEkolu is an innovative opportunity to explore questions that emerge as an inquiry-based approach to determining what professional learning and development can look like within place-based contexts.

You can now! To learn how you can become a part of Hui âEkolu, visit their .

