Everyday Evidence-Based Practice in Academic Libraries: Case Studies and Reflections

ALA Member
$75.60
Price
$84.00
Item Number
978-0-8389-3985-7
Published
2023
Publisher
ACRL
Pages
376
Width
7"
Height
10"
Format
Softcover
AP Categories
A
I
P

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  • Description
  • Table of Contents
  • About the authors

Evidence-based practice (EBP) in academic librarianship is embedded in the way we approach our work. An EBP project might be a yearlong study with many types of evidence collected or a simple assessment that helps you make a small adjustment to your work. Large or small, EBP is a way of operating day-to-day.
 
Everyday Evidence-Based Practice in Academic Libraries: Case Studies and Reflections collects excellent, thorough examples of EBP across functional areas of academic libraries and includes many evidence types in a variety of contexts. Five sections explore:

  • Understanding Users
  • Leadership and Management
  • Instruction and Outreach
  • Collections
  • Open Initiatives 

Chapters include studies on how to understand the experiences and needs of diverse student populations; interviewing faculty to build scholarly partnerships; evidence-based strategic planning; incorporating intersectionality in information literacy instruction; conducting a diversity audit; and assessing open educational resources initiatives. The conclusion calls for librarian reflection to be incorporated into evidence-based decision-making, as reflection is key to understanding the ways that a librarian chooses to embody librarianship.
 
Everyday Evidence-Based Practice in Academic Libraries offers high-quality evidence from a variety of perspectives and inspires a commitment to evidence-based practice in your day-to-day work and library culture.

Introduction
 
Chapter 1. The Evolving Model of EBLIP in Research and Practice
Denise LaFitte and Alison Brettle

PART I. Understanding Users
Chapter 2. Understanding the Experiences and Needs of Diverse Student Populations
Joyce Chapman and Emily Daly
 
Chapter 3. Engaging Research: Interviewing Faculty to Build Scholarly Partnerships
Eric B. Toole, Allison Martel, Alicia Hopkins, Mackenzie Dunn, and Sheri Sochrin
 
Chapter 4. Many Hands at Stake: Incorporating Tutoring Services into a Small Academic Library
Rosalinda H. Linares-Gray
 
Chapter 5. The Research Support Refresh: A Team-Based Approach
Kelly Durkin Ruth and Amanda B. Click
 
Chapter 6. Launching a Collaborative Research Data Management Services Program at Rowan University
Shilpa Rele and Benjamin Saracco
 
Chapter 7. Collaborative Communication with Library Student Workers in Unexpected Places: Digital Reference Analysis
Adrianna Martinez, Kate Bellody, and Emily Smith
 
Chapter 8. Ahoy! Discovering New Lands! Park University’s Journey Toward Faculty Services and Resources Improvement
Camille Abdeljawad and Danielle Theiss
 
PART II. Leadership and Management
Chapter 9. Evidence-Based Strategic Planning: Practical Strategies
Erinn Aspinall, Carissa Tomlinson, and Catherine Johnson
 
Chapter 10. “We Don’t Have Time for That!” Evidence-Based Practice During a Time of Crisis
Balladolid (Dolly) Lopez and Britt Foster
 
Chapter 11. Reimagining the Library Liaison Model: An Evidence-Based Approach
Michelle Wilde, Meggan Houlihan, and Meg Brown-Sica
 
Part III. Instruction and Outreach
Chapter 12. Everyday Evidence to Assess Teaching and Learning:
A Programmatic Assessment of Library Instruction
Matthew Weirick Johnson, Michelle Brasseur, Monica Hagan, Diane Mizrachi, and Jimmy Zavala
 
Chapter 13. Incorporating a Lesson Study Approach to the Development of an Evidence Synthesis Workshop Series
Zahra Premji and K. Alix Hayden
 
Chapter 14. Out of Context: Incorporating Intersectionality in Information Literacy Instruction
Matthew Chase

Part IV. Collections
Chapter 15. Using EBLIP for Collection Assessment
Courtney Fuson and Paige Carter
 
Chapter 16. Special Collections: Exceptions to Every Rule
Jennifer R. Culley and Sarah R. Jones
 
Chapter 17. A Systematic Approach to Conducting a Diversity Audit in an Academic Library
Laura Walton, Jeff Lash, and Emily Gratson
 
Chapter 18. If It Pleases the Court, I Present Exhibit One:
An Evidence-Based Law Collection Evaluation
Chad Kahl
 
PART V. Open Initiatives
Chapter 19. Looking Back Before Looking Forward: Data-Driven Open Access Initiative at Texas Tech University
Jingjing Wu and Joy Perrin
 
Chapter 20. Where to Start? Laying the Groundwork for an OER Program at a Regional Campus
Beth South
 
Chapter 21. Everyday Evidence Applied to Assess Academic Library OER Initiatives
Kathy Essmiller and Cristina Colquhoun
 
Conclusion
Chapter 22. We are the Evidence: Uncovering Everyday Library Practices Through Critical Reflection
Rick Stoddart
 
Biographies

Claire Walker Wiley

Claire Walker Wiley is a research and instruction librarian at Belmont University. In this position, she serves as the liaison to the Colleges of Business and Entertainment and Music Business. Her research interests include information literacy, business information literacy, the use of evidence synthesis methods in LIS, and librarians as academic advisors. Claire has a BA in English and French from Harding University, an MLIS from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and an MSM from Austin Peay State University.

Amanda B. Click

Amanda B. Click is the head of research and instruction at the Nimitz Library at the U.S. Naval Academy. Previously, she was the business librarian at American University in Washington, DC. She earned a PhD in information science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where she studied the cultural adaptation of international students to higher education in the United States. Prior to entering the doctoral program, Amanda was the coordinator of instruction at the American University in Cairo. Amanda also holds an MLIS from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and a BS in science, technology, and culture from the Georgia Institute of Technology. Her research interests include the globalization of higher education, academic integrity, information literacy, and scholarly communications. She has published her research in College & Research Libraries, Evidence Based Library & Information Practice, In the Library with the Lead Pipe, and Library & Information Science Research. Recently, she has explored topics such as cultural humility in the context of international librarianship, and the disciplinary values of openness, inclusivity, and equity in the LIS scholarly landscape.

Meggan Houlihan

Meggan Houlihan is the director of the Open Society University Network (OSUN) library resources program, where she provides creative leadership for instruction, outreach, and collections efforts for the organization. She directs the OSUN open educational resource program where she works to promote diversity, representation, and open pedagogy. Prior to her role at OSUN, Meggan served in leadership roles at Colorado State University, New York University Abu Dhabi, and the American University in Cairo. Her research interests include information literacy, international students, and the use of evidence synthesis methods in LIS. Meggan has a BA in history from Eastern Illinois University, a MA in modern history from the University of Reading (UK), and an MLS from Indiana University.