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Following Leads

Following Leads. [. ]. Using Faculty Focus groups to Spark Creativity and Enhance Collaboration. Michael Stoepel, AUP Josiah Drewry, AUC. Research objectives. Starting point at AUP: ongoing discussion on re-prioritizing activities (re-organization process)

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Following Leads

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  1. Following Leads [ ] Using Faculty Focus groups to Spark Creativity and Enhance Collaboration Michael Stoepel, AUP Josiah Drewry, AUC

  2. Research objectives • Starting point at AUP: ongoing discussion on re-prioritizing activities (re-organization process) • Starting point at AUC: awareness that faculty are at the center of everything • Belief that today’s faculty context, priorities, and practices have changed with regard to research and teaching • Idea of comparing faculty at AUC and AUP with regard to research and teaching • Use of feedback for further research, dialog with faculty

  3. Why focus groups? • Exploring the subject/research interest; deep discussions instead of easy answers • Strengthening relationships • Unifying visions • Building surveys based on outcomes

  4. Gathering Data • AUC: 5 focus groups with 25 faculty members from 7 disciplines (Fall 2012 and Spring 2013) • AUP: 3 focus groups with 14 faculty members from 10 disciplines (Spring 2012) • Recorded via iPad and then transcribed

  5. Research questions • Our questions were almost identical • Core questions about research, e.g., “When doing research, what makes you decide to use the library instead of something else?” • Teaching needs, e.g., “What do you expect from your students with regard to research/use of the library?” • Collaboration with librarians, e.g., “How well do we make you aware of collections in your field?” • Other questions about services, library space, and improving the collections

  6. Findings across groups: AUC and AUP • Each institution has its own culture • Faculty profiles, priorities, specifics of discipline • Many faculty do research outside • On the other hand, many others were surprisingly aware of what we had • Best practices, problems, and needs

  7. Findings at AUC: faculty research • Requests for faculty-only space in the library. • More access for off-campus collaborators • Journal impact factors • Confusion about e-books and databases • “Oh, I didn’t know you did that!” • Sometimes faculty would teach each other • They want us to take on some of their roles

  8. Findings at AUC: student success • Many requests for instruction, including a standardized set of research modules • Many didn’t realize they could ask for instruction. • Textbooks about the Middle East—only some chapters or cases • Different approaches to teaching research practices (lots of room for collaboration) • Desire for us to train their research assistants

  9. Liaison work at AUP • “Librarian has to show enthusiasm” (Computer Science Professor) • “Liaison has to fit” (Classics Professor) • “Librarians need time to dedicate for liaison work” (Classics Professor) • “I think that you [librarians] have to come into the class room.” (Political Science Professor) • “Collaboration should not be an Band-Aid but should sustain.” (Global Communication Professor)

  10. Following leads: AUC • Ordered materials they mentioned. • In some cases, one-on-one sessions and guidance (e-books, for example) • We are currently building modules that should work across the disciplines. • Reached out to some research assistants • Support for things the library has been considering, like faculty space in the library • Most important: strengthened relationships

  11. Following leads: AUP • Outreach, communication, and teaching • Prepared faculty survey (AUP) • New contacts • Extra one-shot classes • Sign up for research networks (ResearchGate) • AUP Library New Webpage • Adding faculty tab, offered services (instruction menu) • Orientation • Higher awareness for new incoming professors • Collection development • Adding an extra librarian in weeding process • Change of librarian’s attitude • Being active (new contacts, follow-up emails) • More time devoted to liaison work • Importance of assessment - show your value in outcomes • More ideas: tea party, thesisseminar, knowledge portal

  12. Barriers to Change • Budget is always an issue • There were some suggestions that are out of our hands, but communication solves some problems • The library’s mission evolves slowly. • Time, other priorities, politics • Active communication is hard to keep up • Staffing issues, turnover

  13. Three things we took away Active, Informed, Strategy Faculty-library liaison crucial for libraries to show their value

  14. Questions?Your experiences?

  15. Thank you Josiah Mark Drewry User Experience Librarian The American University in Cairo jdrewry@aucegypt.edu Michael Stoepel User Services Librarian The American University of Paris mstoepel@aup.edu

  16. Works cited Booth, Char. Informing Innovation: Tracking Student Interest in Emerging Library Technologies at Ohio University. Chicago: Association of College and Research Libraries, American Library Association, 2009. Print. Stoepel, Michael. How do you research? The Non-Use of Library Resources in Academic Research: A Case Study among Undergraduate Students at the American University of Paris.. Germany: Humboldt-Universitätzu Berlin, 2010. Print. Weber, Michael A., and Robert Flatley. "What Do Faculty Want?: A Focus Group Study of Faculty at a Mid-sized Public University." Library Philosophy and Practice 9.1 (2006): n. pag. Web. 16 May 2013. Rodwell, John, and Linden Fairbairn. "Dangerous Liaisons?: Defining the Faculty Liaison Librarian Service Model, Its Effectiveness and Sustainability." Library Management 29.1/2 (2008): 116-24. Print. Atif, Yousef. “Faculty Attitudes Toward Collaboration with Librarians." Library Philosophy and PracticeVol??.Iss?? (2010): n. pag. Web. 16 May 2013. Shumaker, David. “Who let the Librarians Out? The Promise of Embedded Librarianship.” Presented to the Agriculture Network Information Center Annual Meeting (Beltisville, Maryland) April 22, 2009 Louise Cooke , Michael Norris , Nial Busby , Thomas Page , Ginny Franklin , Elizabeth Gadd & Helen Young (2011): Evaluating the Impact of Academic Liaison Librarians on Their User Community: A Review and Case Study, New Review of Academic Librarianship, 17:1, 5-30 Pomerantz, Jeffrey and Harvey, Diane Preparing Students to Serve as Liaison Librarians. N.d. Web. 17 May 2013. Palmer, Parker J. The Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher's Life. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 1998. Print. Head, Alison J., and Michael B. Eisenberg. "How College Students Seek Information in the Digital Age." Project Information Literacy Progress Report. University of Washington, 01 Dec. 2009. Web. 17 May 2013. Pritchard, Sarah. "Deconstructing the Library: Reconceptualizing Collections, Spaces and Services." Journal of Library Administration 48.2 (2008): 219-33. Print. Kavanagh, Allison. Changing times: the changing role of assistant librarians in DIT’s Aungier St Library. Sconul Focus 45 (2009): 12-15. Web. Brewerton, Antony. ‘… and any other duties deemed necessary:’ an analysis of subject librarian job descriptions. Sconul Focus 51 (2011): 60-67. Web. Brown, Karen, and Kara J. Malenfant. Connect, Collaborate, and Communicate. A Report from the Value of Academic Libraries Summits. Rep. Association of College & Research Libraries, June 2012. Web. 17 May 2013. Oakleaf, Megan. Value of Academic Libraries. A Comprehensive Research Review and Report. Rep. Association of College & Research Libraries,2010. Web. 17 May 2013. Association of College and Research Libraries. Valueof Academic Libraries: A Comprehensive Research Review and Report. Researched by Megan Oakleaf. Chicago: Association of College and Research Libraries, 2010 Badke, William B. Can’t Get No Respect: Helping Faculty to Understand the Educational Power of Information Literacy. The reference Librarian 89-90 (2005): 63-80. Web. 21 May 2013. Lakos, Amos and Phipps, Shelly. Creating a culture of assessment: A catalyst for organizational change. portal: Libraries and the Academy, 4,3 (2004): 345–361. Oakleaf, Megan. Are They Learning? Are We? Learning and the Academic Library. Library Quarterly. 81.1 (2011). 63-82. Print.

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