ALA Accreditation: The Non-Negotiable Starting Point
Roughly 60 graduate programs in the United States and Canada currently hold accreditation from the American Library Association, and that number is your starting filter before anything else matters.
Most professional librarian positions in public, academic, and special libraries specify an ALA-accredited degree as a minimum requirement. This is not a preference or a tiebreaker. Hiring committees at city library systems, university libraries, law firms, hospitals, and archives use accreditation as a hard cutoff. Without it, your application may not even reach a human reviewer.
How to Verify Accreditation
The ALA maintains a searchable directory of accredited programs on its official website. The process takes about two minutes: navigate to the accreditation section, search by program name or institution, and confirm the status listed. Do this before you spend time on any program's application requirements, tuition page, or course catalog.
Pay close attention to the status label. A program listed as "accredited" has met ALA standards and completed the full review process. A program listed as "candidacy" is in the pipeline but has not yet earned full accreditation. Candidacy programs are sometimes accepted by employers, but many are not, and you cannot predict which jobs will or will not count your degree when you graduate. Enrolling in a candidacy program is a calculated risk, especially if you plan to pursue positions in competitive markets or government agencies with strict credentialing rules.
The Costly Mistake Nobody Expects
Some universities offer degrees with titles like "Library Science," "Information Management," or "Library and Information Studies" that are not ALA-accredited at all. These programs can look credible in marketing materials, and they are sometimes cheaper than accredited alternatives, which makes them tempting. But earning one of those degrees and then discovering it disqualifies you from most professional librarian roles is among the most expensive mistakes a prospective student can make, in both time and money.
If the program does not appear on the ALA's accredited list, treat it as unaccredited regardless of how it describes itself. The credential needs to be verifiable, not just plausible.
Why the Universe Is Manageable
Sixty programs is actually a workable number to research. Other graduate fields have hundreds of comparable programs, which can make comparison paralyzing. In library science, you can realistically review cost, format, specialization offerings, and admission requirements across the full universe of accredited options. Once you have confirmed accreditation, the next step is learning how to choose a library science program that aligns with your career goals, budget, and preferred format.
Start with accreditation. Everything else, including cost, prestige, and format, only matters if the baseline is met.