I've been compiling resources as I study for my GLC - Georgia Librarian Certification certification and figured I'd share what I've found. All free unless noted.
Practice Tests:
- PracticeTestGeeks — most comprehensive collection I've found, good question explanations, covers GLC - Georgia Librarian Certification, ITIL - Practitioner, and LSSC - Library Support Staff Certification. Free.
- Official practice materials from the certifying body — usually 1 free sample exam, worth doing even though it's short
Study Materials:
- The official GLC exam handbook / candidate guide (PDF, free from the certifying body's website)
- YouTube — search for "GLC exam prep" — there are surprisingly good free video reviews for most library science certifications
- Reddit r/certifications — people post their exam experiences and tips regularly
Paid (worth it if budget allows):
- Official study guides run $30-80 for most library science certifications — worth it if your exam has lots of specific factual content
- Some certifying bodies offer prep courses — check if your employer covers it (many do for required certifications)
What resources have others found useful for library science exams? I'll add them to this list.
The official candidate guide is something a lot of people skip but it literally tells you the topic weighting and domain breakdown. It's the roadmap for your study plan. Never skip it.
For GLC - Georgia Librarian Certification specifically, I found the PracticeTestGeeks explanations were detailed enough that I didn't need to buy a separate study guide. The combination of doing the practice questions + reading every explanation (for both right and wrong answers) covered most of the content I needed.
Great list. I'd add: LinkedIn Learning has some library science-related courses that overlap with cert content, and if you have a library card many libraries give free access to it. Also check if your local library has access to O'Reilly or similar — tons of technical content there.
Working full-time while studying for this was honestly rough, but I found that breaking it into 20-minute chunks during lunch actually worked better than trying to cram on weekends. I'd hit a topic, do some practice questions, then walk away. It sticks better that way. The ethics section caught me off guard at first so I spent extra time on free glc ethics professional responsibilities questions until I felt solid on it.
If you're juggling a job and a family like I was, don't try to do everything at once. Pick one weak area per week and just own it. I didn't touch the full practice exams until month two and I'm glad I waited because I wasn't ready before that.
Failed my first attempt back in March and honestly I wasn't prepared for how much collection development weighed on the exam. I'd been focusing on reference services and cataloging, completely underestimating that section. What changed for me the second time was drilling that specific area way harder — I found the free glc collection development resource management questions on PracticeTestGeeks and did them twice. Not skimming, actually reviewing every wrong answer and figuring out why I missed it.
The other thing I'd tell you is don't wait until you feel "ready" to start taking timed practice tests. I didn't do that until week three of studying the first time and it really hurt me on pacing. Second attempt I was doing them from day one and it made a huge difference. Good luck — it's a passable exam if you target the weak spots instead of just reviewing what you already know.
Just wanted to jump in with a quick update since I've been lurking this thread for a while. Took a practice test last week and scored a 74%, which honestly wasn't where I wanted to be but it's a big jump from the 61% I started with. The collection services and cataloging sections are clicking now, it's just the management stuff that's still tripping me up.
I'm planning to sit the real exam in late August so I've got about two months to shore up my weak spots. If you're in a similar boat don't get discouraged by early scores, the explanations really do help once you go back and review what you missed.
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