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The role of subject knowledge in academic health sciences librarianship. May 16, 2006 Erin Watson Health Sciences Library University of Saskatchewan. Methodology. 2004 web survey: 94 Canadian librarians - 32% response rate 2006 web survey: 711 American librarians – 21.7% response rate
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The role of subject knowledge in academic health sciences librarianship May 16, 2006 Erin Watson Health Sciences Library University of Saskatchewan
Methodology • 2004 web survey: 94 Canadian librarians - 32% response rate • 2006 web survey: 711 American librarians – 21.7% response rate • Difficult to identify prospective participants
Who were the respondents? • More than half (63.4% Canada; 58.9% U.S.) had more than 10 years experience • In 2003-2004, 66.7% of Canadian and American health sciences librarians had more than 10 years of experience1 1Annual Statistics of Medical School Libraries in U.S. and Canada 2003-2004
Job responsibilities • Canada: Non-typical duties combined with reference, administration, etc. • U.S.: more non-typical health sciences librarians: systems librarians, records managers and informationists
Degrees held • Canada: 6.7% with health science degree • U.S.: 11.7% with health sciences degree; 1.3% with diploma
Importance of Health Sciences Degree • Canada: 30.0% felt it was very or somewhat important • U.S.: 50.0% felt it was very or somewhat important
Importance of other areas • Many respondents felt computer science/technology, administration, statistics/research methods, basic sciences, education, liberal arts were as important • Several U.S. respondents mentioned importance of M.L.I.S.
Keeping up with Literature • Canada: 93.3% felt that keeping up with the health sciences literature was very or somewhat important • U.S.: 80% felt the same
Top 3 ways to become informed Ranking of activity as “very useful” • Canada: professional organizations (46.7%); web sites (43.3%); journals (39%) • U.S.: professional organizations (40%); websites (39%); journals (39%)
Professional Associations • Canada: 90% CHLA members; 36.7% MLA • U.S.: 89.2% MLA members • U.S.: 37.5% members of AHIP; Canada: 3.3% • Many respondents were members of local associations
Web sites • Difference between self-education and searches for patrons? • Canada: PubMed, CINAHL, news and consumer health sites • U.S.: Medlineplus, news sites and PubMed
Most popular journals • Canada – CMAJ (53.3%); JAMA (53.3%); BMJ (50%); NEJM (50%) None=30% • U.S. – JAMA (48%); NEJM (45.3%); BMJ (25.7%) Science (26.4%); None=35.8% • Many U.S. respondents mentioned RSS and TOC alerting
Discussion Lists • Canada: 70% CANMEDLIB; Medlib-L 36.7% • 33.3% said very useful • U.S. – 45.9% MEDLIB-L • 28% said very useful
Independent study • Canada: 33.3% very useful • U.S.: 28% very useful
University courses • Canada: 3.3% (1 respondent) was taking a class at the time of the survey • 25% said very useful • U.S. 3.3% were taking courses at time of the survey • 18% said very useful
TV and Radio • Canada: 13.3% said very useful • Top shows: Quirks and Quarks (33.3%), Nature of Things (23.3%) • U.S.: 10% said very useful • Top shows: NOVA (37.3%), NPR shows, especially Science Friday (18.1%) • « Fun » shows also educational?
Average Time Spent per week • Canada: 6.0 hours • U.S.: 4.4 hours • Large range for both
Other Useful activities • Top “other” ways to become informed: -Reference questions -Talking to users -Lectures, workshops and conferences (for librarians or for health professionals) -Following the news
Why is degree not valued more? • Librarians not aware of how much health sciences would help them? • Degree goes out of date quickly? • Health sciences are too varied?
Conclusions/Implications • Continuing education, although not necessarily degree studies, remains important • Professional organisations play an important part • What role does subject knowledge play in user perceptions of librarians?