Title: Effective, Sustainable and Practical Library Assessment
1Effective, Sustainable and Practical Library
Assessment
- Steve Hiller
- Director, Assessment and Planning
- University of Washington Libraries
- ARL Visiting Program Officer
- York, England
- 23 June 2008
2Building Assessment Capability in Libraries
through Consultation Services
- Association of Research Libraries (ARL) project
Making Library Assessment Work began in 2005
to Assess the state of assessment efforts in
individual research libraries, identify barriers
and facilitators of assessment, and devise
pragmatic approaches to assessment that can
flourish in different local environments - Funded by participating libraries
- Conducted by Steve Hiller and Jim Self under the
aegis of Martha Kyrillidou of ARL - 1.5 day site visit
- Presentation and best practices
- Interviews and meetings
- Report to the library with recommendations
3Key Catalysts for Developing an Assessment
Consulting Service
- LibQUAL results what to do with them
- E-Metrics data how to understand them
- New emphasis on outcomes-based assessment from
accreditation agencies and associations - Data driven university administrations
- Article by Jim and Steve, From Measurement to
Management . . . Library Trends , Summer 2004,
highlighted issues involved with data collection,
analysis and use in libraries. Long history of
collecting data but little application to
management and improvement.
4The University of Virginia
- 14,000 undergraduates
- 66 in-state, 34 out
- Most notable for liberal arts
- Highly ranked by U.S. News
- 6,000 graduate students
- Prominent for humanities, law, business
- Plans expansion in sciences
- Located in Charlottesville
- Metro population of 160,000
5University of Washington
- Located in Seattle metro population 3.2 million
- Comprehensive public research university
- 27,000 undergraduate students
- 12,000 graduate and professional students (80
doctoral programs) - 4,000 research and teaching faculty
- 800 million annually in federal research funds
(2 in U.S) - Large research library system
- 40 million annual budget
- 150 librarians on 3 campuses
6Steve and Jim in the Air and on the Road
- Whilst holding full-time day jobs at their
respective institutions - Visited 24 ARL libraries in U.S. and Canada in
2005-06 - Succeeded by Effective, Sustainable and Practical
Library Assessment in 2007 (open to all
libraries) - 14 libraries participating in 2007-08 (3 outside
North America)
7The Geographic Distribution of Participants
Canada
York
Steves Home University of Washington
USA
Jims Home University of Virginia
Haifa
ARL Participant
Non-ARL Participant
Other ARL Libraries
Cape Town
8Participant Distribution by Rank on the 2005-06
ARL Expenditures Focused Index (28 Libraries)
Median 43 out of 113 academic libraries
9Library Assessment Process
- Focuses on customer needs, defining measurable
outputs and offering services that meet those
needs - Collects, analyzes and uses data for management,
program development, and decision-making - Emphasizes ongoing communication with customers,
opportunities for collaboration, qualitative
measures and circular process of continuous
improvement
10MLAW/ESPData Collection Methods
- Pre-Visit
- Survey on assessment activities, needs etc.
- Telephone follow-up
- Mining library and institutional web pages
- Visit (1.5 days)
- Presentation on effective assessment
- Group meetings
- Follow-up and report
- Pursue leads and additional information
11Pre-Visit Survey
- Summary of recent assessment activity
- Important motivators/catalysts
- Organizational structure for assessment
- What has worked well
- Problems or sticking points
- Specific areas to address
- Expectations for this effort
- Inventory of statistics (separate survey)
12Most Commonly Used Assessment Methods (30
Libraries)
13Commonly Identified Assessment Needs (30
Libraries)
14What We Found Organizational Culture and
Structure Are Critical to Success
- Strong customer-focus and leadership support are
keys to developing effective and sustainable
assessment - Demonstrated interest in using assessment to
improve customer service and demonstrate value of
library - Effectiveness of assessment program not dependent
on library size or budget - Many libraries uncertain on how to establish,
maintain, and sustain effective assessment need
assessment skills - Each library has a unique culture and mission. No
one size fits all approach works.
15Using Data in Decision Making(From Pfeffer and
Sutton, 2006)
- What makes it hard to be evidence-based?
- Theres too much evidence
- Theres not enough good evidence
- The evidence doesnt quite apply
- People are trying to mislead you
- You are trying to mislead you
- The side effects outweigh the cure
- Stories are more persuasive anyways
16When the Evidence Isnt Used
17Some Reasons Why Libraries Arent Evidence-Based
- Dont know what evidence to collect
- Few libraries understand or are skilled in basic
research methods - Dont understand the evidence
- Few library staff have experience in data
analysis - Dont know how to present the evidence
- Difficulty in identifying what is important and
actionable - Dont want to use the evidence
- We know whats best for our customers
- Difficulty using the evidence for positive change
- All of the above and organizational
structure/culture
18Organizational Factors That Impede Effective and
Sustainable Assessment
- Lack of an institutional research
infrastructure - Emphasis on management and service
responsibilities - No assessment advocate within organization
- Library staff lack research methodology skills
- Library culture is skeptical of data
- Librarians have multiple time-consuming
responsibilities - Leadership does not view as priority
- Library organizational structure is silo-based
19Common Cognitive Biases Hypothesized to Occur in
Libraries (per Jon Eldridge)
- Anchoring
- Attribution
- Authority
- Confirmation
- Deformation Professionelle
- Group Think
- Halo or Horns Effect
- Outcome bias
- Perseverance of Belief
- Primacy Effects
- Recency Effects
- Selective Perception
- Storytelling
- Wishful Thinking
- Worst-Case Scenario
20Biases Common to Libraries We Visit
- Deformation Professionelle (Professional
Deformation) - Viewing a situation through the common
perceptions of ones profession rather than by
taking a broader perspective. - Halo or Horns Effect
- Allowing another persons positive or negative
characteristics to affect perception of this
person in other unrelated contexts. - Perseverance of Belief
- To persist in believing previously acquired
information even after it has been discredited - Wishful Thinking
- Assessing a situation incompletely according to a
desired rather than a likely outcome - Worst-Case Scenario
- Emphasizing or exaggerating those possible
negative outcomes disproportionate to all
possible outcomes
21Skeptical Staff
- Oh, people can come up with statistics to prove
anything Kent Brockman. 14 of people know
that. - Facts are meaningless. You could use facts to
prove any-thing that's even remotely true! - Homer Simpson
22Organizational Indicators of Effective
Assessment
- Library leadership/management truly supportive
- Customer focus is a shared library value
- Organizational culture receptive to change
improvement - Assessment responsibility recognized and
supported - Library has strategic planning process and
prioritizes - Evidence/Data used to improve services/programs
- Web sites (usability)
- Facilities (qualitative methods)
- Serial subscriptions (emetrics)
- LibQUAL results are followed-up
23Evidence of Effective and Sustainable Assessment
- Formal assessment program established
- Institutional research agenda tied to strategic
priorities - Training in research/assessment methodology
- Research balanced with timely decision-making
- Assessment results presented, understood and
acted upon - Results reported back to the customer community
- Library demonstrates value provided community
24What Difference Have MLAW/ESP Made?
- 10 libraries have assessment librarians/coordinato
rs - 15 libraries have assessment-related committees
- Most libraries have continued with LibQUAL on a
cyclical basis and undertaken additional
assessments - Libraries have become more active in their
institutional assessment efforts - Participating libraries are sending 55 staff to
the 2008 Library Assessment Conference with 40
involved in the program
25ARL Building a Community of Practice
- Biennial Library Assessment Conference
- 220 registrants for 2006 conference in
Charlottesville, VA - 380 registrants for August 2008 in Seattle, WA
- Workshops
- Biennial Service Quality Evaluation Academy
- Full day and half day workshops
- Library Assessment SPEC Kit (December 2007)
- Assessment tools
- LibQUAL (Millions served)
- MINES for Libraries
- DigiQUAL and more