Editorial
EBLIP9 Notes and
Highlights
John
W. Wiggins
Director
of Services and Quality Improvement
Drexel
University Libraries
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, United States of America
Email:
jww27@drexel.edu
Danuta
A. Nitecki
Dean
of Libraries, and
Professor,
College of Computing & Informatics
Drexel
University Libraries
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, United States of America
Email: dan44@drexel.edu
2017 Wiggins and Nitecki. 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.
The
ninth International Evidence Based Library and Information Practice Conference
(EBLIP9) was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA on June 18-21, 2017. The conference theme of Embedding and Embracing Evidence reflected the focus on promoting
evidence based practice throughout the information professions. The
Philadelphia conference followed successful events held previously at
Sheffield, Edmonton, Chapel Hill-Durham, Stockholm, Salford, Saskatoon, and
Brisbane (once in 2005 and again in 2015).
EBLIP9 in
Philadelphia
Drexel
University was proud to win the competitive selection process to host the
EBLIP9 conference in Philadelphia and especially to bring it back to the United
States for only the second time. The planners organized content activities,
driven by a strong objective of sharing the welcome spirit of this City of
Brotherly Love and creating a memorable conference experience.
Keynote
addresses, concurrent presentations, and poster sessions were held on the
Drexel campus in its stunning Papadakis Integrated Sciences building. The
convenience of assembly in one area added to building community among
participants. John Fry, the dynamic Drexel University President, gave a
thoughtful welcome. Many attendees tweeted impressions about the conference throughout
and included such comments, as “it is great to listen to a university president
who gets libraries.”
Figure
1
EBLIP9’s
opening remarks were delivered by Drexel University President John Fry.
In
addition, two off-campus venues for social events drew attendees to the Center
City district by walking, following guided paths, using city trolleys, or
hiring cabs. A sudden downpour on Monday did not deter attendees from arriving
at the Philadelphia Free Library for the first night reception. With a backdrop
view of the city skyline at sunset, the energizing President and Director of
the Free Library of Philadelphia, Siobhan A. Reardon, warmly welcomed the
attendees. Sunshine accompanied conference attendees on Wednesday as they made
their way to an elegant city venue, the Crystal Tea Room, for the conference
gala dinner. As one staff member observed, “the success of the conference was
evident when the dance floor was filled with energetic moves and lots of
laughs” to the pulse of music.
Over
140 attendees registered for EBLIP9 from seven countries: Australia, Canada,
Kenya, Norway, Sweden, the United Kingdom (including the Isle of Man), and the
United States of America. Unfortunately, the controversy over travel
restrictions to the USA had an impact on attendance from outside the country.
Some presenters declined invitations to speak at the conference. The conference
planners persevered to provide a rich and diverse array of experiences,
including three keynote addresses, 41 paper presentations, 13 posters, 1 panel
session, 2 sponsor presentations, and 3 workshops. Topics were many and varied,
with evidence based practice being critically explored in the context of big
data, collection management, decision making, information literacy, leadership,
open access, and website design and usability. The full conference program is available
online (http://easychair.org/smart-program/EBLIP9/).
This EBLIP conference continued the tradition of providing excellent
opportunities to network, and attendees met colleagues from around the world
while enjoying the opening reception, the conference dinner, box lunches, and
catered breaks throughout the conference.
Figure
2
Heather Holmes, Joanne Gard
Marshall, Jon Eldredge, Alison Brettle, and Denise Koufogiannakis gather at the
opening reception at the Free Library of Philadelphia.
Figure
3
Line dancing at the conference gala dinner at
the historic Crystal Tea Room!
The
afternoon before the conference began, preconference attendees opted to attend
one of the workshops on developing EBLIP skills, centred in archives and
special collections libraries, engaging assessment to show value and make
decisions, or learning tips to publish research on EBLIP. Many conference
attendees arrived early to register and to ask for tips for exploring the
city—some finding adventure, discovering local history, or sampling from the
vibrant food and brew scenes that Philadelphia offers.
Figure
3
EBLIP9 attendees engage with Patrick Milas and
Jenifer Gundry at their poster.
Featured
Speakers
The
conference featured three keynote speakers. Alison Brettle, Professor of Health
Information and Evidence Based Practice in the School of Nursing, Midwifery
& Social Work at the University of Salford, opened the conference with her
riveting keynote address, Collecting and
Using Evidence Routinely for Advocacy. Dr. Brettle closes the special
EBLIP9 feature section of this issue with a thoughtful commentary based on her
keynote.
Yi
Deng, Dean and Isaac L. Auerbach Professor at the College of Computing &
Informatics at Drexel University, spoke on Data
and the 21st Century Economy and the changes that might impact
the professional work of librarians and information professionals.
Pam
Ryan, Director of Service Development & Innovation at Toronto Public
Library, delivered the closing keynote address to the Philadelphia audience
from office in Toronto, and addressed EBLIP
and Everyday Practice for Librarians and our Libraries.
In
addition to the keynotes, papers, and posters, a panel treated conference
attendees to a discussion on Responding
Proactively to “Fake News,” moderated by Jon Eldredge with Heather Holmes,
Scott Walter, and Malin Ogland responding on the panel.
Other
Crowd Pleasers
Another
tradition, initiated at EBLIP6 in Salford, extended its run at EBLIP9: Poster
Madness! In a round of humble and
breathless promotion, all poster presenters opted to participate in strict
one-minute speed presentations. They certainly delivered, to the delight and
support of the audience, and as evidenced by the constant conversations during
the two formal poster presentation periods.
Figure
4
Dr.
Alison Brettle delivering the opening keynote.
Figure
5
EBLIP9
attendees engage with Frans Albarillo and Lee Ann Fullington at their poster.
The Biowall in Papadakis Integrated Sciences Building is visible in the
background.
Awards
Conference
attendees voted to select People’s Choice Award winners for paper presentations
and for posters. The EBLIP9 winners, three of which have research articles
accepted for inclusion in this issue, were:
People's Choice
Awards for Best Paper
People's Choice Awards for Best Posters
An Analysis of
Conference Content
The
guest editors of this feature editorial analyzed the abstracts of the EBLIP9
paper presentations. They determined that the 41 presentations included 24
addressing practice and 17 presenting research. Of these and including the
poster presentations, ten were accepted for publication in this special issue
of EBLIP Journal; three as articles
addressing the use of evidence in practice and seven as research articles.
Figure
6
People’s Choice
Awards for Best Papers: IPC chair Denise Koufogiannakis, Kirsten Kinsley,
Jingying Mao, Judith Logan, Kyla Everall, LOC co-chair John Wiggins.
Figure 7
People’s Choice
Awards for Best Posters: LOC co-chair John Wiggins, Lee Ann Fullington, Frans
Albarillo, Savannah Kelly, Rick Stoddart, IPC chair Denise Koufogiannakis.
Figure
8
Dana
Thomas presents her paper at EBLIP9.
Conference
presentations utilized several different research methods for gathering and
analyzing data. Among the most prevalent methodologies were surveys (13),
interviews, both focus group and individual (12), statistical analysis (8),
ethnographic methods (6), literature reviews (5), and content analysis
(4). Many combined qualitative and
quantitative methodologies to present mixed method designs.
Thirty-seven
presentations heavily favoured academic library settings, including two
describing groups of academic libraries. Also included were one presentation
addressing academic and medical libraries, and one on academic and public
libraries. Additionally, there were two presentations addressing public library
settings, and two addressing school library settings.
The
topics and content of the presentations ran the gamut of library programming.
The heaviest concentrations examined included library space, such as space use,
needs, and design/redesign, and also library collection development, such as
pricing of resources, budget decisions, cooperative collection development,
demand driven acquisitions approval plan profiles, inclusion of constituents in
budget/selection decisions, and user interactions with collections.
Other
themes found among conference presentations included library service design,
user-focused services, and library use by non-native born patrons and by
international graduate students. Reference and research support topics included
information literacy and program improvement, user knowledge, LibGuides
improvement, creation of online learning objects, reference service design,
impact of consultations, and assessment of chat services. Student success,
faculty productivity and research success, and communication of library impact
to stakeholders were also featured, along with library funding and allocations,
and library program impact on school readiness of preschoolers. Presenters also
explored supports for librarians and information professionals, with content
covering evidence based practice and embedded culture, staff training library
and information practice research skills (including support for working with
human research subjects), and conscious reflection to inform one’s own
practice.
Selected Publications
Appearing
as research articles in this EBLIP9 conference feature issue are nine papers
and one poster presentation.
Susan
Gardner Archambault and Alexander Justice used mixed methods to examine the
unexpected ways that students used a six year old information commons at an
academic institution. Christina R. Hillman, Kourtney P. Blackburn, Kaitlyn
Shamp, and Chenisvel Nunez collected and analyzed evidence from multiple
sources to develop a survey on campus interest in and use of library space.
Nora Almeida and Junior Tidal addressed the concern that too few librarians
consider user design preferences and non-critical approaches when designing
tools for academic student use.
Eamon
Tewell, Kimberly Mullins, Natalia Tomlin, and Valeda Dent used ethnographic
methods in their pursuit to improve academic library understanding of student
research and study needs to improve the student library experience. Kristin
Hoffman, Selinda Adelle Berg, and Denise Koufogiannakis sought to understand
factors that affect academic library and information professionals’ ability to
carry out and disseminate research, looking for correlations between research
productivity factors and research outputs, including the potential impact of
institutional supports.
Two
of the People’s Choice Award winners prepared research papers for this issue.
Jingying “Jean” Mao and Kirsten Kinsley explored how one might isolate an
independent variable and control for other inputs and environmental variables
in a scientifically rigorous way when studying success within academic student
populations. Savannah Lea Kelly investigated the impact of providing video
tutorials in traditional sessions to see if students who viewed tutorials
reported higher research confidence levels than those in control groups.
Also
included are two papers and one poster presentation focusing on the use
evidence in practice in this issue. Stacey Astill and Jess Web explored their
local practices collecting data on the in-library reference use of materials.
People’s Choice Award winners Kyla Everall and Judith Logan pursued the
objective of implementing an evidence-based service design framework for a
public service point at the University of Toronto’s public library. Susan
Breakenridge addressed the use of evidence to address information needs of
academic library administrations considering or assessing requests for
extending operations overnight.
Final
Words of Thanks
Reflecting
on the success of the EBLIP9 conference, we share our sincere appreciation for
the efforts of the international program committee and our on-site volunteers
for their dedicated efforts. Particular recognition for our deserving
colleagues on the organizing committee is also in order in light of their
months of continuous hard work:
We
also are grateful to our sponsors who helped make this event possible through
their generous funding: Elsevier; Centre for Evidence Based Library and
Information Practice at the University of Saskatchewan; Association of Research
Libraries; Association of College and Research Libraries; Pennsylvania Academic
Library Consortium Inc.; JSTOR; School of Information Science at the University
of Tennessee at Knoxville; Medical Library Association; Clarivate Analytics;
and Drexel University Libraries.
The
call for expressions of interest to host EBLIP10 went out recently. The
selected location will be announced early in 2018. We hope to see you there!