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Not Just Content

Not Just Content. Adam Worrall LIS 6279, Fall 2009 Dr. Melissa Gross 11/12/09. Supporting Community-Building and Collaboration in Digital Libraries. Research Problem. Existing DLs do not support well, through their content and services, the social context surrounding and within them

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Not Just Content

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  1. Not Just Content Adam Worrall LIS 6279, Fall 2009 Dr. Melissa Gross 11/12/09 Supporting Community-Building and Collaboration in Digital Libraries

  2. Research Problem • Existing DLs do not support well, through their content and services, the social context surrounding and within them • Should improve this support of social interactions to integrate better with social groups and communities (Lynch, 2005) • Propose that problem be examined with exploratory qualitative study • Examine role a digital library prototype plays in community-building and collaboration, and if it successfully supports them, through intensive interviews LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  3. Field Setting • D-Scholarship2 • Prototype of a digital library for scholarly publications and gray literature • Currently under development and testing at FSU • Testing group: 500 total students and faculty • May be opened to broader population before end of study • Everyone at FSU • General public / other universities LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  4. Research Questions • What role does the D-Scholarship2 digital library prototype play in community-building behaviors by those users, communities, and networks that use its content and services? Is this a successful role? • What role does the D-Scholarship2 digital library prototype play in collaboration behaviors by its users? Is this a successful role? LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  5. Literature Review Additions • Baltimore Learning Community (BLC) project(Marchionini, Plaisant, & Komlodi, 2003) • Another project that tried to apply “sharium” model (Marchionini, 1999) • Intended to support creation and sharing of instructional modules amongst middle school teachers • Rarely added reflections, comments • Rarely used modules created by others • Faced number of technical issues • Progress deemed “very slow” and “arduous” (p. 132) • Cannot be considered successful LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  6. Literature Review Additions • Prairienet (Bishop, 1999) • Another digital library studied using situated context (Bishop, 1999; Bishop et al., 2000) • Web browsing, e-mail, discussion groups, collection of digital information from local organizations • Found many of the same issues identified in DeLIver • Difficult to use and learn because of lack of knowledge • Training classes, connecting problematic • Bus schedules not matching with training times • Missing or unplugged power cords • Login ID forgotten • Information behavior of users dependent on social networks LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  7. Literature Review Additions • Convergence (Star, Bowker, & Neumann, 2003) • Another promising theoretical framework • Communities of practice • “Information artifacts” (p. 244) • Information tools, systems, interfaces, devices • Convergence between: “information world” (from Chatman) • Should be “fitted to each other” (p. 244) • Three case studies; one of particular relevance • 38 research scientists and students • Convergence deepest for those with most experience in field • “Closing off” of other possibilities sometimes an issue • New members faced process of convergence that was “rarely smooth” (p. 248) LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  8. Literature Review Additions • Implications of convergence • Community-building efforts should establish, maintain, deepen convergence • Already existing communities must be supported • Can’t close off other possibilities, overlapping communities and networks • Reiterates that DLs must be considered in organizational, institutional, cultural, cognitive, situated, and above all social context • Still need for “holistic and dynamic” model, framework or theory (Star et al., 2003, p. 261) LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  9. Research Design • Intensive interviews of users of D-Scholarship2 • “Engages researchers more actively” (Schutt, 2009, p. 340) • Best choice for this particular setting • Maintain control • Less scheduling problems • Less expense • No peer pressure • Opinions and experiences obtained directly • Interviews will use critical incident technique • All interviews conducted by researcher • Expected to average 45 minutes • Unit of analysis: D-Scholarship2 itself LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  10. Participant Selection • List of e-mail addresses and roles of testing group (sampling frame) • Entire population e-mailed a letter • Purpose of study • Augments ongoing evaluation of D-Scholarship2 • Benefits • Contact information for researcher, IRB • Invitation to participate • Initial convenience sample • 24 total; at least 8 of each role expected • Further samples • Convenience, purposive, snowball sampling • At least 50 members (recommended by Flanagan, 1954) LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  11. Data Collection Procedures • Critical incident technique (Flanagan, 1954; Fisher & Oulton, 1999) • Obtains “certain important facts concerning behavior in defined situations” (p. 335) • Five stages; fall into three broader areas • Operational definitions and structure • “functional description of an activity” (p. 336) • Successful community-building • Satisfying information needs of one or more users • Supporting community / network linkages • Presence of high levels of convergence • Successful collaboration • Actual solving of an information problem LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  12. Data Collection Procedures • Interview procedures • Introduction • Reminder of purpose, researcher affiliation, benefits • Thank you for participating in study • Establish rapport • Establishment of critical incident • “Think of a time within the last month when you faced a problem finding, seeking, or obtaining information, and you turned to other people to help you.” • “Tell me about this occasion and about the involvement of other people.” • Discussion should ensue • Provides background material on nature of incident LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  13. Data Collection Procedures • Interview procedures (continued) • Discussion of D-Scholarship2’s role • Gently steered there by interviewer • A few possible questions (more in paper): • “Did you feel D-Scholarship2 supported that?” • “Which features of D-Scholarship2 did you find useful during this?” • “Did you find that D-Scholarship2 caused any difficulties during this?” • Closing question • Know anyone else using D-Scholarship2 for collaboration, community-building activity (snowball sampling) LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  14. Data Collection Procedures • Interview procedures (continued) • Note taking • Careful not to disrupt participants or discussion • Video recordings of interviews • Permission given as part of informed consent • If feel uncomfortable, interviewer will ask if they wish to stop • Video recording wiped • Replaced with another participant from sample • Analysis, interpretation, reporting • nVivo software • Informed by literature • Situated context, social constructionism, convergence • Other themes that emerge entertained and welcomed LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  15. Validity and Reliability • Critical incident technique • “both reliable and valid in generating a comprehensive and detailed description of a content domain” (Fisher & Oulton, 1999, p. 115) • Validity very high • Qualitative, personal, subjective experiences • Less disadvantages than focus groups, participant observation • Use of literature to inform analysis • Use of both video recording and interviewer’s notes • Reliability reasonably high • Within given population • Subjective measures; tradeoff with validity LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  16. Limitations • May not capture all experiences • No random sampling • Impractical, cannot force users to participate (unethical) • Individual interviews • Focus groups have disadvantages in this setting • Users may withhold “failed” incidents • Confidentiality to be maintained • Narrow population and research setting • Results limited to testing group population • Potential transferability to other settings • Further research required with other digital libraries and user communities LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  17. Ethical Considerations • Informed consent to be obtained in advance • No major harm or risks expected • May feel uncomfortable as interview progresses • May choose to leave; video will be wiped • Loss of a small portion of their time • Identity, affiliation of researcher will be known • Confidentiality of participants maintained • Maintaining appropriate boundaries • Remaining safe in research setting • Not expected to be issues LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

  18. References • Bishop, A. P. (1999). Making digital libraries go: Comparing use across genres. In E. A. Fox & N. Rowe (Eds.), Digital Libraries ’99: Proceedings of the fourth ACM conference on digital libraries (pp. 94-103). New York, NY: ACM Press. • Bishop, A. P., Neumann, L. J., Star, S. L., Merkel, C., Ignacio, E., & Sandusky, R. J. (2000). Digital libraries: Situating use in changing information infrastructure. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 51, 394-413. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(2000)51:4<394::AID-ASI8>3.0.CO;2-Q • Fisher, S., & Oulton, T. (1999). The critical incident technique in library and information management research. Education for Information, 17, 113-125. • Flanagan, J. C. (1954). The critical incident technique. Psychological Bulletin, 51, 327-358. • Lynch, C. (2005). Where do we go from here? The next decade for digital libraries. D-Lib Magazine, 11(7/8). doi:10.1045/july2005-lynch • Marchionini, G. (1999). Augmenting library services: Towards the sharium. In Proceedings of International Symposium on Digital Libraries 1999 (pp. 40-47). Tsukuba, Japan: University of Library and Information Science. Retrieved from http://www.dl.slis.tsukuba.ac.jp/ISDL99/proceedings_ISDL99/isdl-1999-40.pdf • Marchionini, G., Plaisant, C., & Komlodi, A. (2003). The people in digital libraries: Multifaceted approaches to assessing needs and impact. In A. P. Bishop, N. A. Van House, & B. P. Buttenfield (Eds.), Digital library use: Social practice in design and evaluation (pp. 119-160). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. • Schutt, R. K. (2009). Investigating the social world: The process and practice of research (6th ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press. • Star, S. L., Bowker, G. C., & Neumann, L. J. (2003). Transparency beyond the individual level of scale: Convergence between information artifacts and communities of practice. In A. P. Bishop, N. A. Van House, & B. P. Buttenfield (Eds.), Digital library use: Social practice in design and evaluation (pp. 241-269). Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. LIS 6472 | Fall 2009

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