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Evaluating E-Reference: An Evidence Based Approach
Elaine Lasda Bergman and Irina I. HoldenUniversity at AlbanyPresentation for Reference RenaissanceDenver, CO August 10, 2010
Overview
What is Evidence Based Librarianship?
Methods What constitutes “evidence?” Systematic reviews and analyses
Systematic Review Process Research question Database Search Article Review Critical Appraisal Synthesize, analyze, discuss
Overview
Results of our review Methods of determining user satisfaction Comparison of variables Range of results
Conclusions, lessons learned About evidence based librarianship About research quality About user satisfaction with electronic reference
What is Evidence Based Librarianship?
Booth and Brice’s definition of Evidence Based Information Practice:
○“The Retrieval of rigorous and reliable evidence to inform… decision making”
(Booth and Brice, ix)
What is Evidence Based Librarianship (EBL)?
History
Gained traction in Medical fields in 1990’s and spread to social sciences after that
Medical librarians were the first to bring this approach to LIS research
Increasingly used in social sciences and information/library science
Sources: Booth and Brice, ix.
Don’t we ALREADY use “evidence”? Evidence is “out there, somewhere”
Disparate locations: many different journals, many different researchers
Evidence is not summarized, readily available and synthesized
No formal, systematized, concerted effort to quantify and understand if there is a pattern or just our general sense of things
Heirarchy of “Evidence”
Source: http://ebp.lib.uic.edu/applied_health/?q=node/12
Systematic Reviews vs. Literature Reviews
Literature Review Systematic Review
Narrative text Research methodolgy/process
Evaluation: author’s opinion
Evaluation: formal critical appraisal process
Usually single evaluator Best if multiple evaluators
Studies are categorized but separately summarized
Variables in studies are compared across studies, synthesized and analyzed
General sense of a pattern
Quantified, identified patterns and comparisons
Systematic Reviews: When Are They Useful?
Too much information in disparate sources
Too little information, hard to find all of the research
Help achieve consensus on debatable issues
Plan for new researchProvide teaching/learning materials
Process of Systematic Review
Formulate Research Question
Database Search
Review Results
Critical Appraisal
Analysis
Research Questions
Research question formulation Description of the parties involved in the studies
(librarians and patrons, for ex.) What was being studied (effectiveness of
instructional mode, for ex.) The outcomes and how they can be compared What data should be collected for this purpose
(either student surveys or pre/post tests, etc.)
Our Research Questions
1. What is the level of satisfaction of patrons who utilize digital reference?
2. What are the measures researchers use to quantify user satisfaction and how do they compare?
Database Search
LISTA (EBSCO platform): 123 articles retrieved
LISA (CSA platform): 209 articles retrieved
ERIC: no unique studies retrieved
Working with Results
279 Results after de-duplication
Only format retrieved: journal articles
Abstracts were reviewed applying inclusion and exclusion criteria
Sample Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria
Inclusion Peer reviewed journals
Articles comparing e-reference with face-to-face reference
Articles on academic, public and special libraries
Articles on e-mail, IM, and “chat” reference
Exclusion Articles describing how
to implement digital reference programs
Articles discussing quantitative or demographic data only
Reviews, editorials and commentary
Non-English articles
Working with Results
93 articles were selected based on inclusion/exclusion criteria
Full text was obtained and read by both authors independently to determine if at least one variable pertaining to user satisfaction was present; then the results were compared
Results of Full Text ReviewReason for Exclusion # of
Articles
No variable on user satisfaction 32
Advice or commentary 18
Not about e-ref transactions 5
About resources used 5
Showcased library experience 3
Literature review 2
Review of another study 1
Not scholarly 1
Not about electronic reference 1
Selected for critical appraisal 23
Found during citation search 1
Total 94
Critical Appraisal Tools
QUOROM (The Lancet, 1999, vol. 354, 1896-1900)
Downs-Black scale (“Checklist for study quality”)
CriSTAL (Critical Skills Training in Appraisal for Librarians (Andrew Booth)
Glynn’s Critical Appraisal Tool
PopulationData collectionStudy designResults
Critical Appraisal Process
24 articles were subjected to critical appraisal
Each question from Glynn’s tool was answered (either yes, no, unclear or N/A) and the results were calculated
12 research papers selected and subjected to the systematic review
Analysis (Findings of Review)
Settings and general characteristics: Multiple instruments in a single article 9 unique journals US based
Methods and timing of data collection 7 paper surveys 3 pop up surveys 3 transcript analysis
Similar Variables in Surveys
“Willingness to return” 11 surveys of all instruments (Nilsen) Staff person vs service
“Have you used it before?” Ranged from 30%-69% (email)
Positivity of experience 7 point, 4 point, 3 point scales 65% - 98.2% (email, small group) 14-417 respondents
Staff quality 7 point, 4 point, 3 point scales 68% - 92.8% (14 respondents)
Analysis
Other questions in obtrusive studies
“Were you satisfied?” “Would you recommend to a colleague?” each only asked in only 1 of the studies
Analysis:
Reason for variation:Nature of questions asked is
contingent on context in which satisfaction was measured • [correlate to guidelines, librarian behaviors,
reference interviews, etc.]
Unobtrusive studies: Transcript Analysis
2 Basic Methods: Transcript analysis by person asking the question
(proxy patron) (Schachaf and Horowitz, 2008, Sugimoto, 2008).
• 75% “complete”, 68% “mostly incomplete” Transcripts independently assessed for quality
and coded (Marsteller and Mizzy, 2003, Schachaf and Horowitz, 2008)
• 3 point scale, “+ or –” scale• 2.24 out of 3 (level of quality); 5 negatives/200
transactions
Research question: Efficacy of third party assessors vs. user surveys
Lessons Learned Lessons about user satisfaction with
electronic reference:Overall pattern of users being satisfied,
regardless of methodology or questions asked
Measurement of user satisfaction is contingent upon context
Researchers most often try to connect user satisfaction to another variable, satisfaction the sole focus of only one article
Lessons Learned
Lessons about library research Extensive amount of qualitative research makes
performing systematic reviews challenging
Inconsistency of methodologies used in original research makes the systematic review challenging, meta-analysis is more often than not impossible
Common pitfalls in LIS research that affect the quality of the published article
Lessons Learned
Benefits of undertaking a systematic review: Sharpens literature searching skills: benefits for
both librarians and their patrons who need this kind of research
Researcher gains the ability to critically appraise research
The practice of librarianship is strengthened by basing decisions on a methodological assessment of evidence
Systematic Reviews and EBL:Impact on the Profession
Formal gathering and synthesis of evidence may:Affirm our intuitive sense about the patterns in
current researchRefine, clarify and enhance a more robust
understanding of a current problem in librarianship
May, on occasion, provide surprising results!
Questions?http://www.slideshare.net/
librarian68Elaine M. Lasda Bergmanebergman@uamail.albany.edu
Irina I. Holdeniholden@uamail.albany.edu
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