It does. I'm at public health NGO, so the scope is a bit wider than it would otherwise be (if I were a "true" medical librarian at a hospital/med school). The newsletters I put together regularly are generally focused on things like HIV and Reproductive Health, but I do a lot with implementation research and management/governance resources, too.
They're generally not listed as non-degreed, but try assistant, clerk, or para-professional. Pages and shelvers are also non-degreed but also generally not full-time. (The non-degreed part is an absence of requiring the MLIS rather than spelled out explicitly).
Often, your local library association will have a job aggregator a la http://mblc.state.ma.us/jobs/find_jobs/ (PS consider joining the great classics contingent in Boston) local universities or library systems will have their own pages, too, if you've got specific targets in mind.
Archives stuff tends not to have such obvious patterns in keywords but turns up in most of the same places -- the universities up here have some great entry level archives stuff, but it's not always clear from the title what level of education/experience they're looking for.
no subject
Date: 2016-08-16 04:40 pm (UTC)They're generally not listed as non-degreed, but try assistant, clerk, or para-professional. Pages and shelvers are also non-degreed but also generally not full-time. (The non-degreed part is an absence of requiring the MLIS rather than spelled out explicitly).
Often, your local library association will have a job aggregator a la http://mblc.state.ma.us/jobs/find_jobs/ (PS consider joining the great classics contingent in Boston) local universities or library systems will have their own pages, too, if you've got specific targets in mind.
Archives stuff tends not to have such obvious patterns in keywords but turns up in most of the same places -- the universities up here have some great entry level archives stuff, but it's not always clear from the title what level of education/experience they're looking for.