Editorial
The
C-EBLIP Fall Symposium: Librarians as Researchers
Virginia Wilson
Guest Editor
Director, Centre for Evidence Based Library and
Information Practice
University Library
University of Saskatchewan
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Email: virginia.wilson@usask.ca
2017 Wilson. 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.
I am very pleased to
introduce the special feature in this issue of Evidence Based Library and Information Practice: papers from the 2016 C-EBLIP Fall
Symposium: Librarians as Researchers. The C-EBLIP Fall Symposium is a day-long
gathering of librarians who are interested in or actively conducting research.
The symposium is presented by the Centre for Evidence Based Library and
Information Practice (C-EBLIP) at the University of Saskatchewan. The first
symposium was held in October 2014 with 52 attendees from across Canada (and
one from the US!). In October 2015, 62 interested library and information
professionals attended, and in October 2016, we had about 50 library folks
participate.
C-EBLIP officially
opened in July 2013 and has a mandate to support our librarians as researchers
and to promote evidence based library and information practice. The idea of an
event to gather library and information professionals from far and wide
occurred early in C-EBLIP’s existence. It’s nice to have internal research and
EBLIP support, but it’s even nicer to be able to connect with others outside of
our institution so that we’re not working in a vacuum. Additionally, the
C-EBLIP Fall Symposium presents another venue for librarians to disseminate
their work.
The day consists of a
single-track of sessions kicked off by an opening keynote address. What follows
are various types of presentations. Some presenters talk about their research
projects, current or finished. Some discuss why they do research. And there are
other sessions about the pitfalls of doing research, or tips and tricks. The
day is designed to have as many take-aways as possible for as many attendees as
possible. The sessions are quick (20 minutes including questions), and the day
is interspersed with plenty of time for networking, connecting, and getting to
know one another. As a side note, we have always received happy feedback on the
food after the events.
I’m excited that the
EBLIP journal offered us the opportunity for publication. There is a great
lineup of articles for you to enjoy from the 2016 edition of the Fall
Symposium. It all kicks off with the keynote from Margaret Henderson, Director,
Research Data Management at Virginia Commonwealth University. Margaret’s talk
is entitled “Collaborating to Increase the Evidence Base in Library and
Information Practice.” There are five additional articles for you in this
special feature. Three are about the nuts and bolts of research and of being an
academic from Lise Doucette, Western University, Shannon Lucky and Joe Rubin
from the University of Saskatchewan, and Marjorie Mitchell from UBC Okanagan
Campus. And there are two articles focusing on research projects – one from
Shailoo Bedi, University of Victoria, and Janaya Webb, University of Toronto,
and one from Carolyn Doi, University of Saskatchewan.
I would like to thank
everyone who has participated in our past three C-EBLIP Fall Symposia. The
events have been engaging, informative, and uplifting. Partnerships have been
created, friendships have emerged, and on that day especially, we all feel
proud and accomplished. I hope you will consider joining us at a future
symposium as a presenter or as an attendee. We are taking a break in 2017 but
hope to return in October 2018. Please watch for developments on Twitter
@CEBLIP or check out the C-EBLIP website at http://library.usask.ca/ceblip/. In the meantime, please enjoy these fantastic
papers!