Colorado Librarian Career Paths: Public vs. School vs. Academic
Colorado offers three primary librarian career paths, each with its own credentialing structure, education requirements, and typical employers. Understanding how these tracks differ is essential before you invest time and money in a degree or certification program. The most important distinction to grasp early: Colorado law does not require a master's degree for every type of librarian role, but many employers still expect one.
Public Librarians: The Most Accessible Entry Point
Public librarianship in Colorado has the lowest formal barrier to entry. The Colorado State Library oversees a voluntary certification program, meaning state law does not mandate that public librarians hold an MLIS or any specific credential.1 The baseline education requirement is a high school diploma or GED, and there is no required exam.2 To earn voluntary certification, candidates complete a structured program that includes 2,000 hours of supervised library experience and 240 contact hours of continuing education coursework.
Here is the catch: while the state credential is voluntary, many public library systems, particularly larger districts along the Front Range, prefer or require an MLIS for professional-level positions. Entry-level paraprofessional or library technician roles may accept candidates without a graduate degree, but advancement into management or department-head positions typically favors those who hold one. Candidates interested in this route can explore online master's in public librarianship programs to strengthen their qualifications.
- Governing body: Colorado State Library2
- Minimum education: High school diploma or GED (voluntary certification); MLIS preferred by many employers
- Credential status: Voluntary1
- Required exam: None2
- Renewal: 45 contact hours every 3 years1
School Librarians: A Teaching License Is Non-Negotiable
If you want to work as a librarian in a Colorado K-12 public school, the requirements are significantly more structured. The Colorado Department of Education requires a Teacher Librarian endorsement, which is added to an existing Colorado teaching license.3 That means you must first hold at least a bachelor's degree and a valid teaching license before you can pursue the endorsement.
Candidates must also pass the Praxis II Library Media Specialist exam.3 Many aspiring school librarians complete coursework in library science or a full MLIS alongside their endorsement preparation. You can review school librarian certification requirements across all states for a broader perspective. The renewal cycle follows the standard Colorado teacher license timeline.
- Governing body: Colorado Department of Education3
- Minimum education: Bachelor's degree plus a Colorado teaching license3
- Credential status: Required for K-12 public schools3
- Required exam: Praxis II Library Media Specialist3
- Renewal: Aligned with Colorado teacher license renewal cycle
Academic Librarians: The MLIS Is Virtually Always Expected
Academic librarians work in colleges and universities, and while no state-level credential exists for this track, hiring standards are set by the institutions themselves. In practice, an MLIS degree from an ALA-accredited program is nearly universal as a minimum qualification. Many academic librarian positions at research universities also prefer or require a second master's degree or a doctorate in a subject area.
Typical employers include community colleges, four-year universities, and specialized research institutions. Because hiring is institution-driven rather than state-regulated, there is no mandated exam or renewal process, though professional development is generally expected for tenure-track or continuing-appointment faculty librarian roles.
- Governing body: Individual institutions (no state credential)
- Minimum education: MLIS from an ALA-accredited program (often required); second graduate degree sometimes preferred
- Credential status: No state requirement; employer-driven
- Required exam: None at the state level
- Renewal: Varies by institution
Choosing Your Path
The right track depends on where you want to work and how quickly you want to start. If you are looking for the fastest entry into library work, the public librarian track lets you begin with minimal formal credentials, though an MLIS will open more doors over time. If your passion is working with students in schools, plan for the longer timeline of earning both a teaching license and the Teacher Librarian endorsement. And if your goal is an academic library career, an MLIS should be your first priority. Later sections of this guide walk through the specific steps, timelines, and costs for each pathway.