Tagged with "conference"
DREaM Conference 9th July 2012
Category: Member Blogs
Tags: DREaM Project DREaM Project Conference Research British Library

The concluding DREaM conference (Monday 9th July at the British Library, London) was an excellent, enjoyable and thought-provoking day and I have learned a great deal from the conference keynotes, papers, panel sessions and networking and conversations with other participants. 

Professor Hazel Hall reiterated the aims of the DREaM project in her introduction – the project aimed to develop a UK-wide network of LIS researchers, to build a secure foundation for long-term research capacity, capability and quality and to embed notions of “value”, “impact” and “influence” among practitioners and researchers. 

Traditionally LIS researchers and practitioners have been good at the survey, focus group and interview data collection techniques but other methodologies and techniques have been less well-used.  DREaM has provided an accessible and comprehensive introduction to these lesser-well known methodologies. 

All sessions were extremely valuable but the ones which were most directly relevant to my practice as a health librarian were the two keynotes by Professor Carol Tenopir and Dr Ben Goldacre on “Building evidence of the value and impact of library and information services: methods, metrics and ROI” and “Research, evidence bases, decision making and policyrespectively.

The subject of Professor Carol Tenopir’s talk – articulating the benefits, value and impact of library and information services – is central to my work in the health sector and the topic as a whole is of major interest to both LIS researchers and practitioners. 

Carol made a distinction between two fundamentally different kinds of “impact” – 1) impact in terms of information as value in terms of purchase or exchange, making savings or saving time in that “time is money” 2) the “use value” of information, i.e. the valuable (or not!) consequences derived from reading and using the information.  NHS libraries have made a lot of use of the second kind of “value” (see for example the impact studies on the NHS SHA Library Leads Website at: http://www.libraryservices.nhs.uk/forlibrarystaff/impactassessment/) but it is important that they and other kinds of libraries/information services do not neglect the first kind.  

More practically, Carol’s talk highlighted 3 approaches to measuring value – 1) measurements of implied value (i.e. producing usage statistics and theorising as to the probable value of the usage “outputs” to LIS users), 2) explicit value (i.e. trying to define outcomes more specifically, including use of the critical incident technique) 3) derived values (i.e. contingent “economic” evaluation and return on investment (ROI). 

The critical incident technique highlighted in the second of these approaches is, I feel, a particularly important technique in LIS practice and research.  The critical incident technique asks information users to articulate the value of an information product or service in a specific instance (rather than provide more vague general expressions of the value and benefits derived).  This is a very practical technique which can produce potent examples of “impact” in terms of rich qualitative data which can be appealing to the organisations in which the information service is located.

As a health library practitioner, Dr Ben Goldacre’s talk was also vital and touches on many themes I encounter in my work.  Ben highlighted how the age-old problem of publication bias (the fact that health studies are more likely to be published if they produce “positive” results or results which are favourable to commercial companies) can ultimately harm patients because research findings which might affect patient care are sometimes not being made available to healthcare professionals.  More insidious practices can, and do, go on such as researchers reporting their final results by defining outcomes differently from that laid out in their protocols (i.e. statement of intention to conduct research and details of how this research will be carried out) or using a multitude of statistical tests (some of which may not be appropriate for the data) in order to manipulate a probability value at the level generally considered significant. 

Publication bias, selective reporting of studies and withholding research data can, as well as impeding health professionals’ access to important information, harm the work of the healthcare librarian. 

The concept of a clinical librarian working with health professionals has been around for 30 years.  Clinical librarians work in a variety of ways but central to the job is to facilitate access to the health evidence base for clinicians and managers.  (Sometimes this is done by the librarian producing “evidence summaries”; other clinical librarians act more as trainers/facilitators). 

There are a plethora of examples from the health literature of the benefits of clinical librarians to patient care and other clinical/professional activity in healthcare organisations.  However, in order to harness the potential of externally published research for the benefit of patients and healthcare organisations, clinical librarians are dependent on robust and transparent reporting mechanisms of this externally published research.

The continuing improvement of information architecture and the continuing articulation of the value and benefit of information/knowledge to healthcare are central to the healthcare librarians’ remit and the keynote by Dr Ben Goldacre showed how important it is that these issues are given proper consideration.

As a new professional I very much appreciate having the opportunity to attend this conference and I would like to thank the DREaM team for the travel bursary which was kindly provided to me to support my attendance.

LIRG Bursaries for DREaM Conference extended to cover non LIRG members Tags: DREaM Project Conference bursaries LIRG

LIRG Bursary announcements.

LIRG is pleased to provide 2 bursaries to cover registration at the DREaM Conference on 9th July 2012, at the British Library.  The awards will cover the conference registration fee (£95).

http://lisresearch.org/dream-project/dream-event-5-conference-monday-9-july-2012/

 Keynote Speakers at the conference include: Professor Carol Tenopir and Dr Ben Goldacre. 

LIRG will be holding its AGM immediately after the formal close of the conference.

Applicants should provide a brief statement (up to 50 words) outlining how attendance at DREAM conference will impact on their professional practice.  The two best statements (as judged by two LIRG committee members) will receive the bursary.

Closing date for applications: Friday 22 June.

Conditions: Applicants will be responsible for meeting their own travel, accommodation and subsistence costs

To apply for the bursary, please email the following details to the LIRG Awards and Prizes Co-ordinator, Alison Brettle at LIRG.Awards@gmail.com

Name

Email Address

Employer Details

Please include a statement on how attendance at the DREaM conference will impact on your professional practice (50 Words Maximum).

2012 DREaM project conference - places and bursaries still available Tags: DREaM Project Conference bursaries
Places still available for the 2012 DREaM project conference which takes place at the British Library Conference Centre, London on Monday 9th July.

The exciting programme includes a keynote speech from best-selling author, broadcaster, medical doctor and academic Dr Ben Goldacre. Dr Goldacre will also present the Library and Information Science (LIS) Practitioner Researcher Excellence Award.

Other sessions include a review of the DREaM project by Professor Hazel Hall; an opening keynote presentation on the value and impact of library and information services by Professor Carol Tenopir; a series of short delegate-led “one minute madness” presentations; an invited paper that analyses the DREaM network by Dr Louise Cooke; and an open panel discussion on how a UK network of LIS researchers can be sustained. Panellists include Dr Carla Basili of the Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (Italy), CILIP’s Annie Mauger and DREaM cadre member Jo Alcock.

To book your place, please register here. Registration costs £95 inclusive. There are a number of bursaries available but you need to be quick 

  • We are offering 10 travel bursaries of up to £90 to help new professionals and full-time PhD students located outside London with their travel costs. These are being awarded on a first come first served basis. If you joined the profession in 2008 or since then, or are a full-time PhD student, please tick the box on the registration form to indicate your interest in a bursary place – but hurry, there are just a couple of bursary places left!
RSS
Blog Categories
Search

July 2012 (9)
June 2012 (3)
Recent Comments
"Hi Alison Thanks for putting all that into context for someone who..."
In: RiLIESing the DREaM
by: Rosalind McNally
"Book your freeplacenow. Visit the LIRG website for further details http://bit.ly/RiLIES_briefing..."
In: Research into Practice: Library and Information Science Research Resources Briefing
by: Christine Irving
"Thanks for your review and thoughts Paul. All the hard work is worth..."
In: LIS DREaM Workshop 3
by: Christine Irving
"Reminder that the RiLIES research resource poll closes on Monday 30th April -..."
In: Invitation to complete the RiLIES2 project poll about LIS Research Resources
by: Christine Irving
"Not sureyet...still processing. Blogged some brief thoughts after the second workshop...."
In: Impact of DREaM
by: Lesley Thomson
"Introduction to a diverse set of research methods and to useful sources on..."
In: Impact of DREaM
by: David Haynes
"It's great to hear news of the project. Thanks forposting it here :-)..."
In: Supporting the mobile library community - update
by: Hazel Hall
"Great presentations Hazel and Gunilla - very social and informative."
In: LIS research events at Edinburgh Napier University 14-16 March
by: Christine Irving
"At the reflective writing workshop on March 21 in Dundee there will be..."
In: Reflective Writing Workshop
by: Christine Irving
"Thanks for your thoughts on the speakers. Pleased to hear that you thought..."
In: LIS DREaM Workshop 2: British Library
by: Christine Irving
"Would agree that Nick raised some really important issues including the importance of..."
In: LIS DREaM Workshop 2: London
by: Christine Irving
"Library Trends 60:2, Fall 2011 - contents "Information Literacy Beyond the Academy,..."
In: Information Literacy Beyond the Academy, Part: Towards Policy Formulation
by: Christine Irving
"Look forward to seeing you there Claire. I found co-writing with someone boosted..."
In: Library and Information Research Group - Writing for publication 2012 workshops
by: Christine Irving
"I'll be there too!Really need to get motivated, and also hopefully gainsome confidence..."
In: Library and Information Research Group - Writing for publication 2012 workshops
by: Claire Stevens
"I went over the Scrivener too. It fought a bit at first with..."
In: Scrivener madness
by: Ella
"Hi Hazel, Thank you for those links. I'm getting used to Sente,..."
In: Scrivener madness
by: David Jarman
"Thank you for the update Jo. It's great to see how the project..."
In: Supporting the mobile library community
by: Hazel Hall
"Hi David Thanks for the update. I hadn't heard of Sente before,..."
In: Scrivener madness
by: Hazel Hall
"Congratulations on your book chapter Christine!"
In: Information literacy in the workplace and the employability agenda
by: Hazel Hall
"That's great Jo. See you there."
In: Library and Information Research Group - Writing for publication 2012 workshops
by: Christine Irving

This website is powered by Spruz

David Furman