{"title":"Structured Interviews Reveal That Reference and Liaison Librarians—as Engaged, Proactive Partners—are Vital to the Academic Enterprise","authors":"Joanne M. Muellenbach","doi":"10.18438/eblip30080","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A Review of:\nJohnson, A.M. (2020). Reference and liaison librarians: Endangered species or “vital partners?” Views of academic library administrators. Journal of Library Administration, 60(7), 784-799. https://doi.org/10.1080/01930826.2020.1786979\nAbstract\nObjectives – To investigate the current state and prospects of reference and liaison librarianship.\nDesign – Structured interviews consisted of 10 questions that lasted between 30 and 75 minutes.\nSetting – Fourteen medium-sized, urban universities geographically spread across the United States of America.\nSubjects – Fifteen library administrators with at least 10 years of experience. \nMethods – The author contacted academic library leaders from 17 benchmark institutions and head librarians from other R1 institutions whose libraries were members of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) or whose campus size and characteristics mirrored the author’s institution in that they were medium-sized urban universities. The study examined five primary questions and included an appendix with the 16-item survey instrument. The structured interviews included 10 questions about the current state and prospects of reference and liaison librarianship, along with questions related to demographics. The author transcribed the interviews and removed all identifying information. Since the interviews were structured and thus thematically similar, coding software was not used. The author compiled and analyzed the responses to the questions. \nMain Results – The concepts of connecting, discovering, listening, and partnering were inherent in the definition of being a liaison librarian. In general, the library administrators, all of whom had been in the profession for 10 years or more, felt that liaison librarians should be active in furthering scholarly activities in such areas as grant-writing, generating scholarship, or data curation. There was an emphasis on outreach, being proactive, and engaging with faculty, which raised an important question for administrators: Is this skill set too broad for any one person, and if so, how can the library profession collaborate to draw upon each other’s strengths? There was a consensus that while the work of reference and liaison librarians is vital to the academic enterprise, this work need not be situated at a central reference desk. Rather, librarians would be physically embedded or electronically linked to students and faculty, helping them to formulate answerable questions, locate high-quality, evidence-based information in specialized databases, or provide support in such areas as open educational resource development, augmented reality, or scholarly communications. \nConclusion – In the view of current library administrators, being a reference and liaison librarian means partnering proactively with students and faculty to ensure a deep understanding of their teaching, learning, and research needs while also maintaining a thorough knowledge of the libraries’ collections and resources. To accomplish this, the librarian must be visible to their constituencies, tell memorable, authentic stories of what they have to offer, and build lasting relationships. Reference and liaison librarians require traditional knowledge of library functions and systems and teaching skills and possess qualities such as collaboration, communication, and flexibility. Overall, library leaders believe that liaison librarians will continue to be vital partners and that without a central reference desk, there will be a deeper integration within the academic enterprise.","PeriodicalId":45227,"journal":{"name":"Evidence Based Library and Information Practice","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Evidence Based Library and Information Practice","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.18438/eblip30080","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"INFORMATION SCIENCE & LIBRARY SCIENCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A Review of:
Johnson, A.M. (2020). Reference and liaison librarians: Endangered species or “vital partners?” Views of academic library administrators. Journal of Library Administration, 60(7), 784-799. https://doi.org/10.1080/01930826.2020.1786979
Abstract
Objectives – To investigate the current state and prospects of reference and liaison librarianship.
Design – Structured interviews consisted of 10 questions that lasted between 30 and 75 minutes.
Setting – Fourteen medium-sized, urban universities geographically spread across the United States of America.
Subjects – Fifteen library administrators with at least 10 years of experience.
Methods – The author contacted academic library leaders from 17 benchmark institutions and head librarians from other R1 institutions whose libraries were members of the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) or whose campus size and characteristics mirrored the author’s institution in that they were medium-sized urban universities. The study examined five primary questions and included an appendix with the 16-item survey instrument. The structured interviews included 10 questions about the current state and prospects of reference and liaison librarianship, along with questions related to demographics. The author transcribed the interviews and removed all identifying information. Since the interviews were structured and thus thematically similar, coding software was not used. The author compiled and analyzed the responses to the questions.
Main Results – The concepts of connecting, discovering, listening, and partnering were inherent in the definition of being a liaison librarian. In general, the library administrators, all of whom had been in the profession for 10 years or more, felt that liaison librarians should be active in furthering scholarly activities in such areas as grant-writing, generating scholarship, or data curation. There was an emphasis on outreach, being proactive, and engaging with faculty, which raised an important question for administrators: Is this skill set too broad for any one person, and if so, how can the library profession collaborate to draw upon each other’s strengths? There was a consensus that while the work of reference and liaison librarians is vital to the academic enterprise, this work need not be situated at a central reference desk. Rather, librarians would be physically embedded or electronically linked to students and faculty, helping them to formulate answerable questions, locate high-quality, evidence-based information in specialized databases, or provide support in such areas as open educational resource development, augmented reality, or scholarly communications.
Conclusion – In the view of current library administrators, being a reference and liaison librarian means partnering proactively with students and faculty to ensure a deep understanding of their teaching, learning, and research needs while also maintaining a thorough knowledge of the libraries’ collections and resources. To accomplish this, the librarian must be visible to their constituencies, tell memorable, authentic stories of what they have to offer, and build lasting relationships. Reference and liaison librarians require traditional knowledge of library functions and systems and teaching skills and possess qualities such as collaboration, communication, and flexibility. Overall, library leaders believe that liaison librarians will continue to be vital partners and that without a central reference desk, there will be a deeper integration within the academic enterprise.
回顾:Johnson, A.M.(2020)。参考和联络图书馆员:濒危物种还是“重要伙伴”?高校图书馆管理者的观点。图书管理学报,60(7),784-799。https://doi.org/10.1080/01930826.2020.1786979AbstractObjectives -调查参考和联络图书馆关系的现状和前景。设计-结构化访谈包括10个问题,持续时间在30到75分钟之间。环境- 14所中等规模的城市大学分布在美国各地。主题- 15名具有至少10年经验的图书馆管理员。方法——笔者联系了17所基准院校的学术图书馆负责人和其他R1院校的图书馆长,这些院校的图书馆均为研究型图书馆协会(Association of Research libraries, ARL)成员,或者校园规模和特点与笔者所在院校相对应的中型城市高校。该研究调查了5个主要问题,并包括一份附有16项调查工具的附录。结构化访谈包括10个关于参考和联络图书馆关系的现状和前景的问题,以及与人口统计相关的问题。作者将采访记录下来,并删除了所有识别信息。由于访谈是结构化的,因此主题相似,因此没有使用编码软件。作者对问题的回答进行了整理和分析。主要结果-联系、发现、倾听和合作的概念是作为联络馆员的定义所固有的。一般来说,所有从事这一职业10年或以上的图书馆管理员都认为,联络员应该积极促进诸如资助写作、产生奖学金或数据管理等领域的学术活动。它强调拓展、积极主动和与教师互动,这给管理者提出了一个重要的问题:这种技能对任何一个人来说都太宽泛了吗?如果是这样,图书馆行业该如何合作,利用彼此的优势?大家一致认为,虽然参考和联络图书馆员的工作对学术事业至关重要,但这项工作不需要设在一个中央参考服务台。相反,图书馆员将与学生和教师进行物理嵌入或电子连接,帮助他们制定可回答的问题,在专门的数据库中找到高质量的、基于证据的信息,或者在开放教育资源开发、增强现实或学术交流等领域提供支持。总结——在当前的图书馆管理者看来,作为一名参考和联络馆员意味着积极主动地与学生和教师合作,以确保深入了解他们的教学、学习和研究需求,同时保持对图书馆馆藏和资源的全面了解。为了实现这一目标,图书馆员必须让他们的读者看到,讲述他们所提供的令人难忘的、真实的故事,并建立持久的关系。参考和联络馆员需要传统的图书馆功能和系统知识和教学技能,并具备协作、沟通和灵活性等素质。总的来说,图书馆领导相信,联络馆员将继续是重要的合作伙伴,没有中央参考咨询台,学术企业内部将有更深层次的整合。