Mentoring, Cataloguing Self-Efficacy and Expectancy among Early-Career Librarians in Federal Universities in South-East Nigeria: A Social Cognitive Career Perspective

Authors

  • Emenike Nkamnebe Academy Library, Nigeria Police Academy Wudil, Kano State, Nigeria Author
  • Olugbade Oladokun Department of Library and Information Studies, University of Botswana, Gaborone Author
  • Beomo Jorosi Department of Library and Information Studies, University of Botswana, Gaborone Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17851704

Keywords:

Mentoring Programmes, Early-Career Librarians, Cataloguing, Academic Libraries, South East Nigeria.

Abstract

Effective cataloguing remains the cornerstone of librarianship, yet the complexities of modern cataloguing standards and technologies often present significant challenges for early-career librarians, thus highlighting the importance of targeted support through structured mentoring programmes. The present study investigated the role of mentoring in shaping the cataloguing experiences of early-career librarians, focusing on how mentoring influences their cataloguing self-efficacy and outcome expectation beliefs. It aims to identify the mentoring programmes early-career librarians are exposed to, and determine the impact of mentoring on their cataloguing self-efficacy and outcome expectation beliefs. Using a quantitative research approach, data were collected through a survey questionnaire administered to 63 early-career librarians. The data were analysed using SPSS (version 25). Findings revealed that early-career librarians have been exposed to 13 different mentoring programmes, with One-on-one Mentoring (90.5%), Supervisory Mentoring (88.9%), and Staff Rotation (87.3%), being the most commonly cited. In contrast, Reverse Mentoring, External Mentoring, and E-mentoring were the least cited, with (28.6%), (23.8%), and (23.8%) of participants respectively reporting exposure to these programmes. Overall, the mean (7.90) showed that early-career librarians have a moderate level of exposure to mentoring, thus indicating a positive leaning towards exposure to mentoring. Furthermore, the descriptive statistics of Mean and Standard Deviation computed to determine early-career librarians’ levels of self-efficacy and outcome expectation beliefs in cataloguing revealed a very high level in each variable (Mean=4.30, Mean =4.32, respectively). Regression analyses demonstrated that mentoring significantly influenced cataloguing self-efficacy (β = 0.41, p =.000) and outcome expectation beliefs (β = 0.24, p =.043) of early-career librarians. This study, therefore, concluded that mentoring plays a crucial role in enhancing the cognitive belief factors essential for skill development in cataloguing by boosting self-efficacy and outcome expectations among early-career librarians. Among other recommendations, the study highlighted the need to prioritise institutionalising and formalising mentoring programmes, particularly the one-on-one, supervisory, and job/staff rotation types to enhance early-career librarians’ skill development in cataloguing, while expanding or strengthening other mentoring programmes, to cater to their diverse learning styles, needs and preferences.

Downloads

Published

2025-12-08

Similar Articles

31-40 of 250

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.