Beatrice Aboyade

Beatrice Aboyade (born 24 August 1935)[1] is a Nigerian librarian and retired professor of Library studies at University of Ibadan. Described as a pioneer in Librarianship in Nigeria by the World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services, Aboyade has worked in the University of Ibadan and University of Ile-Ife libraries.[2][3] She is noted for delivering university library expertise to rural Nigerian users.

Beatrice Olabimpe Aboyade
Personal details
Born (1935-08-24) 24 August 1935
Ijebu Ode, Ogun State
Spouse(s)Professor Ojetunji Aboyade (deceased)
Children4
Alma materUniversity of Ibadan
University of Michigan

Early life and education

Aboyade had her primary education at Christ Church Primary School, Porogun, Ijebu Ode. She proceeded to Queen's College, Lagos, for her secondary education between 1948 and 1951. Between 1952 and 1953, she completed her high school at Queen's College, Ede. She earned her first degree in English from the University of Ibadan in 1960, then obtained further degrees from University of Michigan in 1964. In 1970, she completed her doctorate from University of Ibadan. She was married to Prof. Ojetunji Aboyade, professor of economics, from 1961 until his death in 1994. [4]

Career

Aboyade did not immediately become a librarian, but spent a short time at the Nigerian Broadcasting Corporation before she joined the University of Ibadan library as an assistant librarian in 1962. She soon took up a new position as chief cataloger at the University of Ife in 1965. Three years later she returned to the University of Ibadan to lead their Reader Services. In 1972 she began to teach there when she became a university lecturer in the library science department.[1]

In 1978, she was promoted from senior lecturer when she was made a professor of library studies at Unibadan,[1] and she served as head of department of Library, Archival and Information Studies at the university.[4] She also ran the Rural Development Information System (RUDIS), which increased information access to rural people in Africa.[2] Her work with RUDIS revealed that Nigerian rural libraries primarily served a functional requirement. The library books were used to show how to improve utilities such as roads, electricity, finance and piped water. Readers would find out about non local employment opportunities as well as information about fertilisers and trading opportunities.[1]

gollark: I don't get anything like that on my *£120* Android phone from recently, except in Discord, in which the keyboard is occasionally ridiculously laggy due to what I assume is bad design on their end.
gollark: (very fermi estimation, but it's probably not THAT many orders of magnitude out)
gollark: If we assume you open the keyboard, I don't know, 50 times a day, and it takes 0.5 seconds each time, this is 25 seconds a day, or 144 days for it to cost an hour of time.
gollark: This seems dubious, even if we ignore the implication that there aren't reasonably fast Android phones.
gollark: I see no possible bad outcomes whatsoever, really.

References

  1. Robert, Wedgeworth (1993). World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services (3 ed.). America: America Library Association. p. 1. ISBN 0838906095. Retrieved 8 February 2019.
  2. Wedgeworth, Robert (1993). World Encyclopedia of Library and Information Services. Chicago: American Library Association. pp. 1. ISBN 9780838906095.
  3. Nigerian Women Annual: Who's Who. Benin City: Gito & Associates. 1990. p. 15. ISSN 0795-7807.
  4. "ABOYADE, Prof. (Mrs.) Beatrice Olabimpe". Biographical Legacy and Research Foundation.
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