Curriculum and Specializations
The UW-Madison MA in Library and Information Studies requires 36 credits, blending a compact core with generous elective space so you can tailor the degree to the career you actually want.1 Roughly one-third of the program consists of foundational coursework, while the remaining credits go toward a concentration, electives, and a required practicum.
Core Coursework
Every student begins with two prerequisite courses that also serve as the gateway to the practicum:
- LIS 601: Covers the foundations of library and information studies, including the profession's history, ethics, and institutional landscape.2
- LIS 602: Focuses on information organization, teaching cataloging principles, metadata standards, and classification systems.2
Beyond these two, expect additional required coursework in areas such as reference and information services and research methods. The core-to-elective ratio is designed to give you a shared professional vocabulary early, then let you specialize quickly. Most students complete the core within their first two semesters. These foundational courses build the skills you learn in an MLS program that employers consistently look for.
Concentration Pathways
UW-Madison's iSchool offers five formal concentration areas, all of which are available to online students unless a specific course section is offered on campus only in a given semester:3
- Librarianship: Public, academic, and special library tracks, including a school library media licensure pathway for students seeking Wisconsin DPI certification.1
- Digital Archives: Preservation, digital curation, and archival theory.
- Information Technology and User Experience: UX research, human-computer interaction, and systems design.
- Data and Information Management and Analytics: Data governance, analytics tools, and information policy.
- Organization of Information: Deep work in metadata, knowledge organization, and taxonomy design.
Because the program delivers coursework in both online and on-campus formats, most concentration electives rotate through online sections regularly. Check the semester schedule to confirm availability for any specific course. Students drawn to the Digital Archives track may also want to explore a dedicated archival studies degree for a deeper comparison of curricula across programs.
Practicum and Capstone Requirements
The capstone experience centers on a practicum (LIS 620), which requires a minimum of 120 clock hours at an approved site.2 Placements span libraries, archives, museums, corporations, and nonprofit organizations. Online and out-of-state students are allowed to arrange local placements, and the iSchool's practicum coordinator helps remote learners identify and vet sites in their area. The program also hosts a practicum fair where students can connect with potential host organizations.2
Before enrolling in LIS 620, you must complete both LIS 601 and LIS 602. Alternative practicum-equivalent courses (LIS 862, LIS 521, and C&I 620) may satisfy the requirement in certain circumstances, so check with your advisor if your career focus aligns with one of those options.2
In addition to the practicum, every student completes a Program Learning Outcomes (PLO) Assessment as part of the capstone process.4 UW-Madison does not require a traditional thesis for the MA, making this a practice-oriented degree rather than a research-heavy one.
Certificate Add-Ons
The iSchool and broader UW-Madison campus offer graduate certificate programs that MLIS students can pursue concurrently, potentially in areas like digital studies or data science. Stacking a certificate onto your 36-credit MA can strengthen a specialized resume without requiring a second degree. Availability and credit-overlap policies change, so confirm current options with the iSchool advising office.