Have the Most Relevant and Answerable Research Questions Facing Librarians Changed Between 2001 and 2006?

<b>Objective</b> ‐ To examine the similarities and differences between research questions asked by librarians in 2001 to those posed in 2006, and to explore to what extent the published research supports the questions being asked.<br><b>Methods</b> ‐ Questions collected...

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Main Authors: Suzanne Lewis, Lisa Cotter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2007-03-01
Series:Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/98/243
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spelling doaj-7e0112ccdc3d49929d86f7cdadb923bb2020-11-25T01:49:37ZengUniversity of AlbertaEvidence Based Library and Information Practice1715-720X2007-03-0121107120Have the Most Relevant and Answerable Research Questions Facing Librarians Changed Between 2001 and 2006?Suzanne LewisLisa Cotter<b>Objective</b> ‐ To examine the similarities and differences between research questions asked by librarians in 2001 to those posed in 2006, and to explore to what extent the published research supports the questions being asked.<br><b>Methods</b> ‐ Questions collected in 2001 by members of the Evidence‐Based Librarianship Implementation Committee (EBLIC) of the MLA Research Section were compared with questions collected in 2006 at a cross‐sectoral seminar introducing evidence based library and information practice to Australian librarians. Questions from each list were categorized using the domains of librarianship proposed by Crumley and Koufogiannakis in 2001, and examined with reference to a content analysis of the library and information studies (LIS) research published in 2001 by Koufogiannakis, Slater, and Crumley in 2004.<br><b>Results</b> ‐ In 2001 and 2006 the most commonly asked questions were in the domain of management (29%, 33%), followed by education (24%, 18.5%). In 2001 questions in the marketing/promotion category ranked lowest (1%), however representation was much greater in 2006 (18.5%) ranking an equal second with education. Questions in the lowest ranked domain in 2006 (collections, 6%) had been more common in 2001 where collections ranked third, representing 19% of the questions. Koufogiannakis, Slater, and Crumley’s content analysis of LIS research published in 2001 revealed that the most popular domain for research was information access and retrieval (38%) followed by collections (24%). Only 1% of published LIS research (seven articles) was in the domain of marketing/promotion. In contrast, 36 articles originally assigned to one of the six established domains could more appropriately have been included in a proposed new domain of professional issues.<br><b>Conclusion</b> ‐ The disparity between questions being asked by practitioners and the evidence being generated by researchers suggests that the research‐practice gap is still an issue. A content analysis of more recently published LIS research would be a useful comparison to Koufogiannakis, Slater, and Crumley’s analysis of research published in 2001.http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/98/243Research and DevelopmentEvaluationLibrarianshipResearch DesignTrends
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Suzanne Lewis
Lisa Cotter
spellingShingle Suzanne Lewis
Lisa Cotter
Have the Most Relevant and Answerable Research Questions Facing Librarians Changed Between 2001 and 2006?
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
Research and Development
Evaluation
Librarianship
Research Design
Trends
author_facet Suzanne Lewis
Lisa Cotter
author_sort Suzanne Lewis
title Have the Most Relevant and Answerable Research Questions Facing Librarians Changed Between 2001 and 2006?
title_short Have the Most Relevant and Answerable Research Questions Facing Librarians Changed Between 2001 and 2006?
title_full Have the Most Relevant and Answerable Research Questions Facing Librarians Changed Between 2001 and 2006?
title_fullStr Have the Most Relevant and Answerable Research Questions Facing Librarians Changed Between 2001 and 2006?
title_full_unstemmed Have the Most Relevant and Answerable Research Questions Facing Librarians Changed Between 2001 and 2006?
title_sort have the most relevant and answerable research questions facing librarians changed between 2001 and 2006?
publisher University of Alberta
series Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
issn 1715-720X
publishDate 2007-03-01
description <b>Objective</b> ‐ To examine the similarities and differences between research questions asked by librarians in 2001 to those posed in 2006, and to explore to what extent the published research supports the questions being asked.<br><b>Methods</b> ‐ Questions collected in 2001 by members of the Evidence‐Based Librarianship Implementation Committee (EBLIC) of the MLA Research Section were compared with questions collected in 2006 at a cross‐sectoral seminar introducing evidence based library and information practice to Australian librarians. Questions from each list were categorized using the domains of librarianship proposed by Crumley and Koufogiannakis in 2001, and examined with reference to a content analysis of the library and information studies (LIS) research published in 2001 by Koufogiannakis, Slater, and Crumley in 2004.<br><b>Results</b> ‐ In 2001 and 2006 the most commonly asked questions were in the domain of management (29%, 33%), followed by education (24%, 18.5%). In 2001 questions in the marketing/promotion category ranked lowest (1%), however representation was much greater in 2006 (18.5%) ranking an equal second with education. Questions in the lowest ranked domain in 2006 (collections, 6%) had been more common in 2001 where collections ranked third, representing 19% of the questions. Koufogiannakis, Slater, and Crumley’s content analysis of LIS research published in 2001 revealed that the most popular domain for research was information access and retrieval (38%) followed by collections (24%). Only 1% of published LIS research (seven articles) was in the domain of marketing/promotion. In contrast, 36 articles originally assigned to one of the six established domains could more appropriately have been included in a proposed new domain of professional issues.<br><b>Conclusion</b> ‐ The disparity between questions being asked by practitioners and the evidence being generated by researchers suggests that the research‐practice gap is still an issue. A content analysis of more recently published LIS research would be a useful comparison to Koufogiannakis, Slater, and Crumley’s analysis of research published in 2001.
topic Research and Development
Evaluation
Librarianship
Research Design
Trends
url http://ejournals.library.ualberta.ca/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/98/243
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