Evidence Summary
Selecting Which Databases to Teach Students in Communication Disorders
by Considering Database Pairs that Index Core Journals in the Field
A Review of:
Grabowsky, A. (2015). Library instruction in communication disorders:
Which databases should be prioritized? Issues
in Science and Technology Librarianship (79). http://dx.doi.org/10.5062/F4707ZFB
Reviewed by:
Giovanna Badia
Liaison Librarian, Schulich Library of Science &
Engineering
McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Email: giovanna.badia@mcgill.ca
Received: 3 Jun. 2015 Accepted: 23 Jul. 2015
2015 Badia.
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/),
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provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial
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Abstract
Objective – There
are two objectives in this research article. The first is to identify databases
that librarians usually recommend to students for searching topics in
communication disorders. The second is to compare these databases’ indexing of
core journals in communication disorders, with the purpose of ascertaining
which databases should be taught first in a one-shot information literacy
session.
Design – A
comparative database evaluation using citation analysis.
Setting – 10
universities in the United States of America offering LibGuides for their
audiology or speech language pathology programs.
Subjects – Six
databases: CINAHL, ERIC, Linguistics and Language Behavior Abstracts (LLBA), PsycINFO,
PubMed/Medline, and Web of Science/Web of Knowledge.
Methods – The
author selected 10 universities from the top 20 included in the graduate school
rankings for audiology and/or speech language pathology from U.S. News & World Report. The 10
universities selected were chosen because their librarians published online
subject guides using LibGuides that suggest databases students can use for
searching topics in communication disorders. The LibGuides were then examined
to identify the most popular recommended databases that the author subsequently
used for comparing coverage of core journals in communication disorders. The
author generated a core journals list by selecting the top 20 audiology and
speech-language pathology journals from Journal Citation Reports, SCImago
Journal & Country Rank, and Google Scholar Top Publications. These three
sources produced lists of influential journals in different subject areas by
looking at the number of citations the journals have received, alongside other
factors. The author searched for 33 journals in total in each of the subject
databases previously identified.
Main Results – The
author found six databases that were mentioned in the LibGuides of at least
half the universities investigated. None of the 6 databases indexed all 33 core
journals. The breakdown of the number of journals indexed in each database is
as follows: Web of Science/Web of Knowledge indexed 32 of 33 core journals
(97%); PubMed/Medline indexed 28 (85%); PsycINFO indexed 27 (82%); CINAHL
indexed 25 (76%); LLBA indexed 23 (70%); and ERIC indexed 9 journals (27%).
Conclusion – The
author discovered that pairing certain databases allows for coverage of all 33
core journals. These pairings are: PubMed/Medline with PsycINFO, PubMed/Medline
with LLBA, PubMed/Medline with Web of Science, Web of Science with PsycINFO,
and Web of Science with LLBA. The author suggests that librarians can create
instructional materials for all recommended databases, “but use information
from this study together with institution-specific factors to decide which
databases to prioritize in face-to-face instruction sessions for
speech-language pathology and audiology students” (Conclusion).
Commentary
Other studies have employed LibGuides for identifying
recommended resources, or have used core journal lists for comparing database
coverage. This study is unique in that it is the only one thus far that
combines both methodologies to compare database coverage of the literature in
communication disorders for the purpose of helping librarians decide which
databases to teach first in information literacy workshops.
The article scores well for the applicable data
collection and study design questions in Glynn’s (2006) EBL Critical Appraisal
Checklist. The author provides a clear description of the steps used to conduct
the research, cites other studies to support the appropriateness of the
methodology used, and presents the results succinctly, making it easy for
readers to understand and replicate the study.
Further directions for research are not included in
the article, and this omission draws more attention to the limitations of the
study. These limitations are the creation of a core journals list that
concentrates on communication disorders in general, thus deemphasizing
subspecialties of the field and excluding journals from related disciplines
such as psychology and child development. Another limitation is the inclusion
of database suggestions from only those top ranked universities that use
LibGuides (10 of the 20 top ranked schools). According to the author, “it would
also be possible to examine library web sites of all top ranked schools to
determine databases recommended by any means and that method could produce
different results” (Limitations). Similarly, all of the journals from the lists
created by Black (2012) and Slater (1997) in communication disorders and speech
language pathology, both of which the author cites, could have been used to
create the core journals list the author utilized for database comparison, so
that the sample list would have been more representative of the field of
communication disorders. The number of journals checked across databases would
also affect the results.
Furthermore, this reviewer has questions about the
criteria the author used to determine whether a journal was indexed in a
database or not. The author states: “indexing had to be current in order for
the journal to be included” (Results). Did the author also take into account
the database’s depth of coverage for the indexing of a particular journal
title, specifically whether the database provides full or partial indexing of a
journal and how far back the indexing goes for that journal? This information
is not included in the article, and combined with the study’s limitations,
makes it difficult for readers to completely trust the results.
The easily replicable methodology presented in this
article might be of interest to librarians trying to find an evidence based
approach to help them decide which database(s) to teach in a one-shot
information literacy workshop for a specific discipline. Readers should keep in
mind that the core journals list used for comparing databases is the primary
data source in this type of study and will directly affect the results.
References
Black, S. (2012). How much do core journals change over a decade? Library Resources and Technical Services,
56(2), 80-93. https://journals.ala.org/lrts/index
Glynn, L. (2006). A critical appraisal tool for library and information
research. Library Hi Tech, 24(3),
387-399. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/07378830610692154
Slater, L. G. (1997). Mapping the literature of speech-language
pathology. Bulletin of the Medical
Library Association 85(3), 297-302. Retrieved from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/journals/72/