Title: Seeking Sustainability
1Seeking Sustainability Singularity Evaluating
Virtual Reference From User, Non-user,
Librarian Perspectives
- Presented by
- Marie L. Radford
- and
- Lynn Silipigni Connaway
- American Society for Information Science
- and Technology Conference
- Austin, Texas
- November 3-9, 2006
2Authors
- Marie L. Radford, Ph.D.
- Associate Professor,
- Rutgers University, SCILS
- Email mradford_at_scils.rutgers.edu
- www.scils.rutgers.edu/mradford
- Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D.
- Consulting Research Scientist
- Email connawal_at_oclc.org
- www.oclc.org/research/staff/connaway.htm
- Grant Website (Slides will be posted)
http//www.oclc.org/research/projects/synchronicit
y
3Seeking Synchronicity Evaluating Virtual
Reference Services from User, Non-User, and
Librarian Perspectives
- 1,103,572 project funding
- Institute of Museum Library Services (IMLS)
- 684,996 grant
- Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
OCLC, Online Computer Library Center - 405,076 in kind contributions
4Seeking Synchronicity Evaluating Virtual
Reference Services from User, Non-User, and
Librarian Perspectives
- Project duration
- Two-year project
- October 2005-November 2007
- Four phases
- Focus group interviews
- Analysis of 1,000 QuestionPoint transcipts
- 600 online surveys
- 300 telephone interviews
5Phase IFocus Group Interviews
- 8 Focus Group Interviews
- 2 with VRS librarians
- 4 with VRS non-users
- Screenagers
- Rural
- Suburban
- Urban
- College students
- Graduate
- 2 with VRS users
- College students
- Graduate
- Undergraduate
- Adults
6 Participant Demographics8 Focus Group Interviews
- Total participants
- 21 Librarians (25)
- 40 Non-users (48)
- 23 Users (27)
- Total librarians
- 13 Academic librarians (62)
- 3 Public librarians (14)
- 1 Government Librarian (5)
- 4 Unknown (19)
7 Participant DemographicsLibrarian Focus Group
Interviews
- Ethnicity- Librarians
- 20 Caucasian (95)
- 1 African- American (5)
- Gender- Librarians
- 14 Female (67)
- 7 Male (33)
8Participant DemographicsUser Focus Group
Interviews
- Ethnicity- Users
- 15 Caucasian (68)
- 4 Asian (18)
- 2 African- American (9)
- 1 Hispanic/Latino (5)
- Gender- Users
- 13 Male (59)
- 9 Female (41)
9Participant DemographicsNon-user Focus Group
Interviews
- Ethnicity- Non-users
- 18 Caucasian (45)
- 7 African- American (17.5)
- 6 Hispanic/Latino (15)
- 2 Asian (5)
- 7 Missing (17.5)
- Gender- Non-users
- 23 Female (57.5)
- 17 Male (42.5)
10VRS Librarians Positive Themes
- Interactivity
- Opportunity to reach people and develop
relationships - Providing accessibility
- Access to librarians
- Access to services and databases
- Opportunity to learn
- No geographic boundaries
11VRS Librarians Negative Themes
- Performance/Staffing
- Job performance
- Human resource allocation
- Issues about pressure and accountability
- Technological problems
- Software
- Learning curve for VRS librarians and users
12Non-User (Screenager) Major Themes
- Librarian stereotypes
- Preference for independent information seeking
- Google
- Web surfing
- Trust own ability to evaluate web resources more
than librarians - Preference for face-to-face interaction
- Value interpersonal interactions in Face-to Face
13Non-User (Screenager) Major Themes
- Privacy/Security concerns
- Librarians as psycho killers
- Fear of cyber stalkers
- Concern for accuracy of information
- Chat takes too long
- Factors influencing future VRS use
- Recommendation
- Marketing
- Ability to choose a trusted librarian
14Non-User Graduate Students Major Themes
- Most students prefer face-to-face librarian
interactions - Reliable
- Developing a personal relationship with a
librarian - Utilize internet tools for information
- Library website, Google, other internet resources
15Non-User Graduate Students Major Themes
- Negative perceptions about VRS
- Sounds like a chat room, not professional, fear
of question unsuitability, technology/learning
curve - Fear of appearing stupid, or being negatively
evaluated by the librarian. - Privacy concerns/ transcripts revealed to
professors
16Non-User Graduate Students Major Themes
- Factors influencing future VRS use
- Recommendation by librarian/colleague
- Developing confidence in services use, speed
access - Promotional campaign
17VRS Users Positive Major Themes
- Convenience
- Research/Information retrieval independence
- Collaborative share work
- Knowledgeable service provider
18VRS Users Positive Major Themes
- Pleasant interpersonal environment
- Transcript of chat session
- Anonymity of VRS
- Immediacy of chat vs. email
- Allows multi-tasking
19VRS Users Negative Major Themes
- Just another search engine
- Generic responses
- Distrust in information provided
- Technical improvement suggestions
- Face-to-face interaction preferred
- Fear of overwhelming the librarian
- Concerns about librarians lack of subject
expertise
20Future Directions
- Phases II, III, IV
- 1000 Transcript analysis (in progress)
- 600 Online surveys (in progress)
- 300 Telephone surveys
- Build on Phase II, III, IV results
21Implications for Future Research
- Study of Millennials
- Implications for Library 2.0
- Services
- Technology
- Sources
22End Notes
- This is one of the outcomes from the project
Seeking Synchronicity Evaluating Virtual
Reference Services from User, Non-User, and
Librarian Perspectives. - Funded by IMLS, Rutgers University and OCLC,
Online Computer Library Center - Special thanks to Jocelyn DeAngelis Williams,
Patrick Confer, Julie Strange, Vickie Kozo,
Timothy Dickey. - Slides available at project web site
http//www.oclc.org/research/projects/synchronicit
y/
23Questions and Discussion
- Marie L. Radford, Ph.D.
- Email mradford_at_scils.rutgers.edu
- www.scils.rutgers.edu/mradford
- Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D.
- Email connawal_at_oclc.org
- www.oclc.org/research/staff/connaway.htm