Editorial
Collaboration
and Growth
Lorie Kloda
Editor-in-Chief
Assessment Librarian, McGill University Library
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Email: lorie.kloda@mcgill.ca
2015 Kloda. This is an Open Access article
distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons-Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike License 4.0 International (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/) which
permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial
purposes, and, if transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the
same or similar license to this one.
After the success of the journal’s Feature section on
the 2010 Library Assessment Conference which appeared in issue 8(2) in 2013, I
am pleased to present the current issue, which includes a Feature section on
the 2012 Library Assessment Conference. The conference took place in
Charlottesville, Virginia, and I was lucky enough to be in attendance. It was,
in fact, my first Library Assessment Conference, as I was a newly minted
Assessment Librarian at the time. In the present issue, six papers are
included: one Commentary and five peer reviewed articles, based on the original
conference proceedings. In addition, our Feature section Guest Editor, Martha
Kyrillidou who served co-chair of the 2012 conference, has an editorial. The
Editorial Board at of EBLIP is
delighted to continue its collaboration with the Library Assessment Conference
and to provide an open access venue to publish scholarship on library
assessment.
This issue also includes the final EBL 101 column,
which made its first appearance in issue 3(3) in 2008. Published every issue,
the column’s first 11 installments were meant to cover all the steps of
evidence based library and information practice. The following 14 installments
introduced various research methods. Virginia Wilson, who authored 23 of the 25
columns, says goodbye to the EBL 101 column but not to the journal. Read her
last column to find out her plans for a new column.
Given all the successes of the EBLIP journal over the past decade, it’s no surprise to me to see
new opportunities arising and to see the journal flourish. This success is due
to past and current members of our Editorial Board. This past year, as the
Board prepared for Alison Brettle, to step down from her role as
Editor-in-Chief, we discussed possible ways in which previous Board members
could continue to serve the journal. (I’ll confess to a mild panic at the
thought of Alison’s sudden disappearance from editorial meetings.) What we
conceived was a group of experienced editors to help guide the journal’s
direction and provide support during times of high volume of submissions.
It was decided that anyone who has served for a
minimum of one year as a member of the Editorial Board of EBLIP, (as Editor-in-Chief, Associate Editor, Production Editor, or
Lead Copyeditor, for instance) would be invited to become an Editorial Advisor.
I am thrilled to be able to announce that we invited four prior Editorial Board
members who met these qualifications, and all of them readily accepted! Our new
Editorial Advisors are Lindsay Alcock, Alison Brettle, Katrine Mallan, and Pam
Ryan.
Lindsay Alcock (formerly Glynn) is Head, Public
Services at the Health Sciences Library, Memorial University of Newfoundland in
Canada. Lindsay served as Editor-in-Chief of EBLIP from its inaugural issue in 2006 until 2008 (volume 3, issue
4). She is also currently a member of the Evidence Summaries writing team, and
has served as a peer reviewer for the journal. Alison Brettle is a Senior
Lecturer and Information Specialist in the School of Nursing, Midwifery and
Social Work at the University of Salford in the United Kingdom. She served as
Associate Editor (Articles) of EBLIP
and more recently as its Editor-in-Chief. Katrine Mallan is Head of
Acquisitions at the University of Ottawa in Canada. Pam Ryan is the Director of
Collections and Technology at Edmonton Public Library in Canada. Katrine and
Pam both served as Production Editors for EBLIP,
and Pam has also been a peer reviewer.
The role of Editorial Advisor, like other members of
the Editorial Team, is completely voluntary. The purpose of the Editorial
Advisor is to act in an advisory role within the Editorial Team: to offer
guidance, provide support when needed, and to maintain continuity in the
journal as it evolves. Editorial Advisors serve for a three-year term, which
may be renewed. The entire team here at the journal is very excited about this
new development, and we look forward to expanding our group to include these
experienced members in order to continue to propel EBLIP into another decade of high-quality content.