Career Outcomes and ROI
Emporia State's School of Library and Information Management (SLIM) has been producing library professionals for over a century, and its alumni network stretches well beyond the Midwest. Graduates fill a broad range of roles, and the program's comparatively low tuition creates a shorter path to a positive return on investment than many competing degrees. That said, librarian salaries are moderate, so realistic expectations matter.
Where SLIM Graduates Work
Most SLIM alumni land in traditional library and information roles, including:
- Public librarian: Community-facing positions at city and county library systems.
- School library media specialist: K-12 positions that often require both the MLS and a state teaching credential or licensure endorsement.
- Academic librarian: Reference, instruction, and collection development roles at colleges and universities.
- Archivist or records manager: Positions at government agencies, museums, historical societies, and corporate archives.
- Information specialist: Roles in healthcare, legal, and corporate settings that center on organizing and retrieving information.
Common employers include public library systems across Kansas, Missouri, Colorado, and Utah (states where SLIM maintains a physical or instructional presence), as well as school districts, state agencies, and academic institutions nationwide.
Salary Context
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the national median annual wage for librarians and media specialists (SOC 25-4022) is approximately $65,000, while archivists (SOC 25-4011) earn a national median near $63,000. For a more detailed breakdown, see our guide to library science salary by state. In Kansas, librarian wages trend somewhat lower, with a median in the mid-to-upper $50,000 range, while Missouri median wages sit closer to the low $60,000s. These figures reflect mid-career medians; entry-level salaries in smaller communities or rural districts may start in the high $40,000s.
When you set those earnings against SLIM's estimated total tuition of roughly $16,000 to $22,000 (depending on residency and fee structure), the math is encouraging. At a total cost well under $25,000, most graduates can expect to recoup their investment within the first few years of full-time employment, a timeline that grows considerably longer at programs charging $40,000 or more.
School Librarian Certification
SLIM's School Library Media concentration is designed to meet Kansas licensure requirements for school library media specialists. Graduates pursuing licensure in other states should verify reciprocity with their state's department of education. Many states accept an ALA-accredited MLS plus relevant coursework, but some require additional state-specific exams or a separate teaching certificate. SLIM advisors can help you map your coursework to your target state's requirements, though final approval always rests with the licensing authority.
The ROI Verdict
ESU SLIM offers one of the more favorable cost-to-outcome ratios in library science education. The total investment is modest, the degree carries full ALA accreditation, and the career paths it opens are stable if not lavishly compensated. If you are entering the profession with a clear sense that librarian and archivist salaries are comfortable rather than high, SLIM's affordability means you will carry less debt and reach financial equilibrium faster than graduates of pricier programs. For students who prioritize a practical, low-debt path into the library profession, that tradeoff is well worth considering.