International Journal of Academic Research in Library & Information Science https://science.eurekajournals.com/index.php/IJARLIS <p style="text-align: justify;">International Journal of Academic Research in Library &amp; Information Science&nbsp;(IJARLIS) warmly welcomes high quality papers of recent Research and Development work as well as theoretical applications in the field of Library and&nbsp;Information Science&nbsp;and interdisciplinary areas. This journal also opens doors&nbsp;for interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary research. Articles published in this&nbsp;Journal include original research papers, informative reviews, letters, short communications, case studies, articles of professional interest, and technical notes. All submitted articles&nbsp;are&nbsp;screened at a fast pace by the Editorial Board or other concerned members to make the publication process of manuscripts rapid.</p> Eureka Publications en-US International Journal of Academic Research in Library & Information Science Job Information Needs and Seeking Behaviour of University Graduates of Bayelsa, Rivers and Delta States of Nigeria https://science.eurekajournals.com/index.php/IJARLIS/article/view/292 <p>The study examined job information needs and seeking behaviour of university graduates of Bayelsa, Rivers and Delta States of Nigeria. The study adopted descriptive survey research design. The study population comprised 390, 000 participants in the Nigerian Federal Government-organised youth empowerment programme, “N-Power Nexit Training”. A sample of 649 university graduate participants was used. A questionnaire was adopted. The data<br>collected were analyzed using weighted mean and standard deviation. The findings showed that university graduates highly needed information on job vacancies, entrepreneurial opportunities, preparation for aptitude test/exam and job interview, resume preparation and time of job interview/aptitude test/exam; needed information on job location and discipline-related jobs; and fairly needed information on discipline-unrelated jobs and employer details; their sources of job information were the Internet, social media, print media, relatives and friends; their methods of seeking job information were starting, browsing, monitoring and extracting, while their obstacles in seeking job information were lack of information and communication skills, poor power supply, ignorance of sources of job information and abundance of inaccurate and unreliable job information.</p> Jerry Eyerinmene Friday Oyinkepreye Sawyer-George George 3 1