Showing posts with label role of librarians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label role of librarians. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 April 2015

My work year 2014-15


Image (c) Chris Piascik reproduced under
CC-BY-ND-2.0. Source
I'm often asked by friends and family what I do in work. Why does Welsh Government need librarians? This posting will hopefully give you an impression of my work.

There have been several excellent "day in the life" blogs of UK librarians which provide snap shots of career routes and often a sample list of activities and challenges experienced in a working day1. My account here is different, looking at a overview of a year's activity, it draws on my annual statistics.








Legal librarian.

My core role is to provide support to civil service lawyers and policy staff with their legal information needs. This includes providing:
  • access to amended UK legislation.
  • copies of supporting materials, such as official circulars, guidance, explantory notes, but also to legal commentary and analysis.
  • comparative legislation. What does legislation for "x" aim look like in other jurisdictions? How effective has it been? What have the issues been?
  • online databases that support these information needs. This includes involvement in selection, procurement, promotion within the organisation, training and ongoing support for users, as well as user account management, statistical analysis of usage, and feedback to the database providers.
  • a legal information service. Using my database search skills and knowledge to identify information that answers complex legal information enquiries. E.g. What case law is there on this aspect of law ; how was "y" aspect of legislation discussed during Bill debates. More recently I've also been supporting government lawyers in identifying candidates for amendments (consequential amendments) as a result of changes introduced under Welsh legislative powers.

In 2014-15 I provided:
  • 38 complex legal information searches, each taking a minimim of 15 hours, but often taking more that 30 hours. This isn't an increase on past years, but this work has become more complex, required more urgently, and can contribute to very high profile work, including preparations for Supreme Court cases and other judicial reviews.
  • 150 "long" enquiries. These are enquiries that take over 30 minutes to resolve, but aren't quite as involved as a complex searches. Some of these enquiries also relate to copyright matters, where librarians play a key role in providing information and in ensuring that our organisation meets the requirements of copyright legislation.
  • over 1000 short enquiries - anything less than 30 minutes to resolve. This number has increased over the years as we have lost support colleagues within the library team.
  • access to over 47 hours of database training and support to more that 210 colleagues.

Other roles?

  • team management - support to 3 team colleagues, assisting with their work, including supporting business information needs within government, providing and organising training.
  • management and supervision of the library computerised management system and our Publications Catalogue. This is a relatively new addition to my portfolio, again as a result of having a smaller library team within the organisation.
  • contributing to the capture, cataloguing and archiving our external publications so that they can be found within the Publications Catalogue, and deposited with copyright libraries. I catalogued more than 400 titles in this work year. In previous years this would have been cataloguing of purchased titles for addition to our library collections. In this year much of this cataloguing would have been for the Publications Catalogue.
  • Contributing to a current awareness service. Helping policy colleagues to keep up to date with key developments and news in their areas of operation.
  • advocating for high standards of information management, information ethics and professional librarianship within the organisation.
  • maintaining my own professional knowledge and skills.
What's missing? 

So, the balance in the pie-chart above is reasonably good. Two-thirds of time spent on enquiry work, and one-third on other roles indicated above. But you've probably spotted two potentially large omissions?
  • Meetings. Fortunately my schedule isn't dominated by meetings - in fact they are a very small part of my working week. That's not to say we don't communicate! We do, but this tends to be in short, highly effective, focused discussions.
  • Email. I find it difficult to quantify how much time I spend in reading, storing, responding to and writing emails. Off the top of my head perhaps 30 minutes per day?
I could break the green segment of the pie-chart down with some further estimates. Handling email approximately 20% of the "other work" or 7% of the total year's time. And cataloguing, 11% of "other work" or 4% of the total year.

Other aspirations?

Workloads are very high, but there's room for improvement, especially in the following areas:
  • our marketing and profile within the organisation. We aren't short of work, but awareness of Library Services remains poor.
  • how we demonstrate our value to the organisation. Not just a drain on resources, or an "overhead", we save time, equip officals with the information that they need, and help innovation. But how can we capture, chart and disseminate this information to prove our worth?
  • using technology to improve workflows, making us more effective but also helping us to innovate.


1 . 23 Librarians - Scotland, Wales, England, Northern Ireland

Saturday, 24 May 2014

Information sharing from a Government perspective

CILIP Cymu Wales Conference 2014 - image with thanks to @CLICLibraries
https://twitter.com/CLICLibraries/status/467297137328676864/photo/1 
At this year's CILIP Cymru Wales Annual Conference I was delighted to provide a workshop session on sharing of information to the internal and external communities of the Welsh Government.  This posting summarizes key points and discussions within the session.


The session considered:
  • Welsh Government (WG) as an information sharing organisation and how effectively it fulfills this role;
  • How WG Library & Archive Services (L&AS) works hard to maintain the comprehensive archive of WG Publications, making these easily available through the Publications Catalogue;
  • Considers a small project expanding the type of information included within the Publications Catalogue, and how this prompts reflection on characteristics of poor and effective information sharing.

The slides from my presentation are available in SlideShare (and see below). The session was designed to be participative, with the aim of gaining feedback from delegates about the WG web site, and the Publications Catalogue. The key points  were:

1. WG publishes in excess of 750 formal publications p.a.. L&AS captures on average 770 titles p.a. and manually adds these to Publications Catalogue. We publish policy documents, consultations, guidance information, some research and statistical information, in addition to documents about the performance and activities of the WG.

The Catalogue is available via the Welsh Government web site www.wales.gov.uk > About Us > Freedom of Information. The direct link is  http://welshgovernmentpublications.soutron.net/publications/ .

Awareness of the Publications Catalogue was low, but those who did know about it had found it increasingly difficult to find after  changes to the web site structure in Summer 2013.

2. The catalogue contains information from the times of the Welsh Office (1965 - ), although some older materials are also included.

3. More recent catalogue records include document file attachments which include Word documents, Excel spreadsheets, PDF files etc. We have supplemented some records for older materials with electronic full text provided from document scanning projects, and through documents retrieved from the web archives. Some of the scanned outputs may be in image format only, and therefore will not be text searchable. Excepting these image files, the catalogue provides options for searching for keywords or phrases from the attached document files.

4. Where electronic versions of documents are not linked to the catalogue then an online request can be made. The WG First Point of Contact Centre (FPCC) also welcomes enquiries by telephone or email. The FPCC is open Monday - Friday 08:30 - 17:30 and contact details are provided here.

5. Participant feedback indicated that it can be difficult to locate recent publications and information within the Welsh Government web site. Several people recommended using general internet search engines to locate recent Welsh Government information.This matches the experience of L&As.

6. Our experiences of using the various web archives for retrieving older information about publications has been mixed. Web archive snapshots, particularly of older versions of the site are limited with:
  • a lower frequency of snapshots taken, including some significant and long gaps of coverage missing;
  • limited scraping and capture to the full depths of the site. Many Web Archiving services only effectively scraped the top 3-5 layers of a site. The WG site often extends far deeper than this, with a consequence that much information is missing from the Web Archive.
  • no available keyword or phrase searching available within the web archives. Successfully locating information in the web archive is dependent either on having the original URL, or by navigating the site to the appropriate page. As previously indicated the complex structure of the WG site means that this is difficult, time-consuming and with low likelihood of success.
7. The appeared to be low awareness of Web Archiving services, especially in the context of retrieving old Welsh Government materials. Appropriate Web Archive services in this context are: 

8. Because of the limitations with web archiving services L&AS are experimenting with expanding the remit of the Publications Catalogue. We are piloting including Freedom of Information Request responses and Ministerial Decisions. The inclusion of this information within the Catalogue will provide a useful and more complete historical resource for Welsh governmental information.

However, our Publications Catalogue still doesn't adequately function as a full archive for our publications. Digital continuity issues have yet to be resolved. In light of this we continue to maintain a paper-based archive of publications too.

9. As a result of experiences of this pilot project, the barriers and enablers to effective information sharing were suggested to be:

The session reaffirmed for me:
  • The need to raise the awareness and of the Publications Catalogue;
  • To continue to advocate for a higher profile for the Publications Catalogue within the WG web site, and for improved "findability" of WG publications generally within the site;
  • How boundaries between the roles in the information profession are blurring. The context of this example demonstrates how librarians may also need to be champions for improved access to information, responsible for archiving information and digital continuity, in addition to the traditional roles of identification, capture, resource description, storage and retrieval. I wonder if these challenges are also true for colleagues working in other sectors?
I will welcome your comments, or requests for further information in relation to this session or the activities of the WG L&AS more broadly.

I am extremely grateful to CILIP Cymru Wales for this opportunity to facilitate a session at Conference, and for my attendance throughout the day. 

 

Tuesday, 18 September 2012

Thing 16: Advocacy - being a beacon for the profession and for libraries.

Be a beacon for the profession and for libraries!
Image (c) Stephen Gregory - Souter Lighthouse, National Trust


Lauren's post for Thing 16 outlines the variety of ways in which we can be engaged in professional advocacy. The brief goes further in suggesting that all professionals should consider their personal involvement and commitment to advocacy. I couldn't agree more, but can't help wondering if advocacy is role that we don't often recognise in ourselves? We might happily badge stuff that we do under the headings of marketing, service promotion, information needs analysis or user education, but advocacy probably doesn't feature on this list. I suggest that we do more advocacy than we think. Do you do any of the following?
  • Marketing your library service to your user communities and reaching out to non-users. In these sessions, briefings, articles or posts you will be expressing values in using the service, highlighting benefits and impacts for users and potential users.
  • Management reports. Updates on service utilisation, hopefully not just measures of inputs and outputs, but also those difficult to achieve measure of impact. Public libraries are now fantastic at highlighting how they can contribute to wider goals of their parent councils. For example aiding targets for health and well being, community cohesion, inter-generational interaction, as well as the traditional factors of improving literacy, supporting formal learning, servicing local businesses and innovators. As a workplace librarian I support not only the direct information needs of the organisation, but also support the health and well being of colleagues through book prescriptions, in addition to encouraging innovation through supporting personal development and learning.
  • Talking to your users and non-users, finding out about their information needs and requirements. This will probably involve discussion of your services, but may also suggest other services too. An academic librarian talking to students on a part time vocational course may well suggest using workplace or professional body libraries, in addition to their “home college” services. A workplace librarian may refer to local public libraries or near-by university / college facilities.
  • Professional groups may have collective formal remits for advocacy and therefore involvement in these will provide superb experience at national, local or subject specific level. My own experience of working for CILIP Groups (CDG, CoFHE) has demonstrated how valued this level of advocacy is. But I've also been impressed by BIALL's activities in this area, and those of UKOLUG in the past! Local information partnerships (e.g. Cardiff Libraries in Co-operation) also undertake valued advocacy work no behalf of libraries in and around their area.
These are just a few examples of things we do that may include advocacy, aside from the bigger scale political lobbying, newspaper articles, attending demonstrations, or talking to our elected representatives. I'm not dismissing these latter “big scale” and hopefully high profile advocacy activities. They are extremely important. It's just that many of us won't be able, inclined, permitted or suitably skilled to contribute to these large scale advocacy initiatives.

I also agree that in contributing to professional writing is an excellent form of advocacy, and a vital part of contributing to a vibrant, progressive and learning-centred profession. Again, it's easy to fall in to the trap of thinking that our work isn't innovative, or won't be of interest to others. We become blinkered by familiarity of our own roles. But sharing your learning, your achievements, or indeed your thoughts or questions, really will help the profession move on. I've written a couple of pieces in the past. The usual stuff of meeting reports and a book review, but I have also tried to provide a more informative and challenging pieces on how the legal information landscape is changing in Wales, and how this may impact legal practitioners and their librarians across the UK.

As Lauren's brief suggests, blogging is an excellent “way in” to this. Blogging encourages reflective practice, established a habit and practice of writing for another audience, and demonstrates your expertise, areas of interest and professionalism. I would still “advocate” for contributing to the traditional printed media, but acknowledge that online forums and media will become increasingly important.

Finally for this blog, I hope to increase my own expertise and experience in professional advocacy work in the near future with an exciting secondment opportunity with CILIP Wales. More on this to follow ...

To protect, warn, guide, inform, illuminate and broadcast?
Souter Lighthouse, National Trust. Image (c) Stephen Gregory

Sunday, 24 June 2012

Information professionals providing information synthesis and analysis (value-adding)

A recent article in the Journal of Librarianship and Information Science1 provides the results of a fascinating small scale study of Canadian business and industry librarians and their involvement in information synthesis and analysis (ISA). This prompted reflection on the extent of my work involving ISA, or what I had previously loosely termed “value adding”. It also encouraged me to consider whether my colleagues and I should be providing more ISA within a British devolved government library service. This blog structures my thoughts and reflections.

The study – a brief overview.

Patterson & Martzoukou (2011) surveyed 98 Canadian business and industry librarians in October 2007, with in-depth follow-up interviews with eight respondents. The study sought to identify:
  • whether business librarians were undertaking more ISA as part of their roles,
  • whether this was in response to increasing demand for this type of activity,
  • undertake such work by collaborating with colleagues, through team work; and
  • how have librarians equipped themselves with skills to perform synthesis and analysis.

The authors identified similar past studies and found a lack of clarity in the definitions for ISA. Indeed this activity may also be called information packaging / re-packaging, intelligence provision, or intelligence analysis. Patterson & Martzoukou therefore suggest these definitions:

    Synthesis was defined as the process of putting raw data / information together in a logical way, while analysis is the process of finding relationships between different pieces of information and then drawing inferences from the relationship to convert information into actionable intelligence” (p.50)

Patterson and Martzoukou found that 37% of respondents undertook both synthesis and analysis work, 35% did one or the other, while 28% considered that they didn't do any . Level of ISA undertaken was suggested to be associated with level of experience (length of time working in the organisation/ business information sector), as well as knowledge and understanding of the subject area. The study further investigated the nature of work roles (Figure 1). One third of Canadian business librarians (34%) reported roles that involved activities of collecting data or information; a fifth (21%) summarized literature, and nearly a fifth summarized market information (18%). There was lower activity in the more advanced ISA roles of drawing conclusions (13%) or making recommendations (14%).




Patterson & Martzoukou conclude that nearly three-quarters of business librarians surveyed are undertaking synthesis and analysis, and suggest that the demand for this type of work has increased over time. The internet provides an easily available source of information for end-user searching, and therefore requests received by business librarians tend to be increasingly more complex, and result because the user has been unable to find the information for themselves. The authors also conclude:

It is believed that the role of the informational professional as an intelligent provider will continue to evolve and therefore it is important to ensure that effective mechanisms that support this transition are present in the workplace.” (p. 58)

So how does this resonate with me?

I work in a library and information service within a UK devolved nation, providing a legal information service, supervising and providing backup support for the business librarian. This article was of immediate significance for me for three reasons:
  • As a comparator for levels of ISA undertaken by other business librarians;
  • As a further stimulus for reflection on levels of ISA in my own legal information work;
  • As a catalyst for evaluation of our whole service approach to ISA.

When I first considered the amount of value-adding or information synthesis and analysis work undertaken by my colleague and I it didn't seem terribly significant. However, delve a little more deeply into the nature of our outputs and it soon becomes clear that whilst we may not undertake much analysis we certainly do a wide range of synthesis. In terms of business information while much of our work falls within the traditional category of “collecting data / information” there are still elements of analysis and synthesis:
  • is this company report up to date, is it complete and accurate? We substantiate information where possible by providing several sources for the information. (Critical analysis)
  • Similarly with Director reports, is there variation in director name, do dates of birth, other business associations make sense? (Critical analysis)
  • market intelligence from a number of key suppliers, and also identifying what we don't have direct access to. (Synthesis + Critical Analysis). Evaluations of markets via different means: newspaper articles; complex searches within company information databases, journal articles etc. (Synthesis)
  • literature search results – carefully selected references, presented consistently, often with clear statements of limitation or perceived information gaps. (Selection and synthesis)

Similarly, in legal information work I spend time checking facts, presenting information as concisely and in a format that will suit my requester. Typical outputs include:
  • listings of relevant case law, prioritised by key cases where listings are extensive (selection and synthesis)
  • identify legislative provisions of relevance to particular queries, (analysis)
  • provide literature searches (Selection and synthesis)
  • undertake more detailed research looking at Hansard / National Assembly for Wales debate proceedings on a specific aspect of a bill. (Pepper & Hart research). (Analysis and synthesis).

Patterson and Martzoukou provide a framework for what they consider to be ISA roles. I have used this to reflect on our current provision and also to identify possibilities for future training and development (Table 1).

Table 1. Synthesis and analysis activities. What are they, do we currently do them and what is the scope for further development?

Work Process
Routines
Business Librarian
Legal Librarian
Potential for further development?
Reference Interview
Clarify client's information needs: keywords, type of information required. Wider context of request. How will information be used?
Yes
Yes
Re-look at process and supporting documentation. Many of these interviews are now conducted remotely, (phone / email interaction). How can we make this remote query taking more effective?
Brainstorm
Thinking of keywords, sources and approaches.
Yes
Yes
Could be more collaborative?
Strategise
Decide final search terms, search strategies, sources, Consider limitations, and how these may be overcome
Yes
Yes

Is this process done formally / at all – or do we skip straight to Pilot Search?
Pilot Search
Informal “quick and dirty search” - provides sense of what is available and how likely search strategy is to be successful. Can be more systematic / formal – with review and client feedback at the end.
Yes
Yes
Consider more formal approach with client dialogue for more involved searches?
Plan Again
Depending on results of the pilot search. Also an iterative process throughout searching stage
Yes
Yes
Opportunity for further client dialogue
Searching for information
Search evolves over time as new keywords / concepts are identified.
Yes
Yes

Distil and evaluate
Evaluation as the search progresses, with continuing refinement as required. Quality and fact checking / confirmation undertook. Selection of useful references in accordance with criteria. Bibliographic software may be used to collate results, de-duplicate.
Yes
Yes
Refining this phase, developing expertise / confidence.
Use of bibliographic management software.
Synthesis and analysis

“Synthesis was defined as the process of putting raw data / information together in a logical way, while analysis is the process of finding relationships between different pieces of information and then drawing inferences from the relationship to convert information into actionable intelligence” (p.50)

Synthesis: keeping most of raw data intact; highlighting relevant passages, text and data that are particularly pertinent; producing a reference list. Data extraction sheets / spreadsheets. Often undertaken in parallel with info gathering.
Analysis: only undertaken when subject knowledge / confidence is high. But may include evaluating information found, strengths / weaknesses of the search sources / results. Analysis also includes inclusion / exclusion of findings for relevance.
Yes
Yes
Promote this role. Recognise what we do in terms of synthesis and analysis, but also clearly differentiate how other professionals' expertise is vital.
Format and distribute
Creation of the report to transfer findings. Taken to a refined level could mean providing a “one pager” of significant findings, pin-pointing more detailed information sources. May also mean compiling information into formats that are quick and easy to digest (e.g. tables, charts).
Yes
Yes
Scope for really adding value in providing a “one pager” or key findings. Restructuring our literature search results files?

From this analysis it becomes clear that there are significant elements of ISA work currently undertaken. This quick evaluation therefore does much to dispel my original hunch that we don't do much value-add or ISA work. I feel confident that when evaluated against Patterson & Martzoukou's framework my colleagues in the Policy Support Library Team would also rank highly for ISA work.

Scope for further development?

Table 1 details many areas for further developing, from re-evaluating our practices in the reference interview, seeking greater and longer interaction / involvement with the requester and their information needs, reconsidering the pilot search stage, increasingly collaborative working within the library team, using bibliographic management software, redesigning our search results template to provide a brief summary or “one-pager”, and possibly a new focus on effectively marketing our information distillation, evaluation and synthesis skills.

So although we undertake considerable information seeking, synthesis and evaluation work, might we undertake more analytical work in the future? I would caution against such a role change for the following reasons:

  • Our organisation is large and we employ specialist professionals (e.g. social researchers, economists, statisticians, business analysts, lawyers etc). Much of our work involves providing these professionals with our findings so that they can undertake the complex and specialist analysis. In a recent survey of library users we asked if there was demand amongst our users for librarians to conduct analysis. A very clear response was received, along the lines of, “definitely not! That's my job”. This mirrors Patterson & Martzoukou's findings that half of librarians worked collaboratively with others. However, this fails to recognise the extensive work undertaken in information synthesis, and evaluation of sources, search strategies, limitations and strengths.
  • We aren't the experts, and therefore there is a real danger that we could draw incorrect or inappropriate conclusions. Our expertise lies in understanding the information landscape, in knowing how to gain the most from it, and understanding potential limitations and restrictions. Some of our subject remits are incredibly broad, preventing us from truly getting to grips with the full range of topics required. Business and legal librarians work across policy directorates, and exemplify the difficulties of being able to become fully competent within all subject areas.
  • Lack of training and confidence in undertaking analysis work, and a pressured work environment that doesn't encourage development in this direction.
  • Lack of time. ISA work would require far more time than we have available to us.
  • Requester confidentiality / reluctance to divulge the “full picture” to the librarian. This mirrors findings with Patterson & Martzoukou. We are often provided with broad search terms because were the requester to be more specific then confidentiality may be breached. However, do requesters appreciate how we value our Code of Ethics and Professional Practice, and how closely we work to this Code? Can we be more “assertive” within the reference interview in order to understand the real and full intent of the enquiry and the actual information requirement that lies beneath the initial approach?

So where to next?

This study has provided, for me, a fresh perspective on ISA. I had previously fallen into the trap of lumping all extended information handling skills into one “value adding” category, and in doing so underestimated and undervalued elements of this work. Patterson and Martzoukou provide a framework for considering aspects of ISA, providing stimulus for a revised consideration of how our service can move forward. This helps identify areas where we won't “tread on others' professional roles”, and where we can add real value to our organisation. It may also help in identifying activities that are viable given current resources and staffing, and those which are not. Crucially it will also hep us promote the extensive work that we already undertake!

One challenge will be in providing training and mentoring for colleagues to develop and expand their information synthesis and analysis roles. External courses may be suitable, but I also think closer dialogue with our users may provide an excellent opportunity for training and development. For instance working closely with a requester well beyond the point of information delivery will be helpful in allowing us to see, first hand, how information is used by the requester. This will provide us with direct experience of some of the problems of how to work with the information supplied, what conclusions are or should be draw, what additional information is required. This may therefore provide librarians with greater skills in structuring information so that it can optimally meet user's needs. The adoption of peer support and review of work undertaken by colleagues could also offer opportunities for development and advancing our practices

These aspects really aren't new or innovative but this reflection demonstrates the value of reconsidering service provision from time to time, using benchmarks to identify potential for service development, promotion and marketing.

Final thoughts

This was a survey of Canadian business librarians. Are there cultural differences that need to be considered? Does the role of North American librarians and information professionals differ significantly from those working in the UK? I suspect roles and expectations do not differ greatly, but nevertheless this would need to be proven.

Perhaps more significantly the survey took place just prior to the global economic recession that started in 2008. What impact has the recession and the associated changes in the library and information sector employment landscape had on the nature of work undertaken by librarians? There has been significant reduction of employment within the commercial, legal and financial sectors as a consequence of the recession. Many organisations will have reduced or totally removed librarians and information professionals from their labour force. For those who remain does this mean that pressures of routine work are too great to enable the same detailed focus and allocation of time to ISA roles? Or has the converse happened, acknowledging that greatest benefit can come through ISA output from librarians, requiring end-users to do more of the routine / basic information sourcing for themselves. The push for a growing “self service” culture within my own organisation, freeing up time for librarians to undertake more value-adding work, is still being considered as a viable, cost and resource effective model for future provision.

1Patterson, Liane & Martzoukou, Konstantina (2011). An examination of Canadian information professionals' involvement in the provision of business information synthesis and analysis services. JOLIS 44 (1) pp. 47-64