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Main Authors: Fagan, Jody Condit, Ostermiller, Hillary, Price, Elizabeth, Sapp, Lara
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1295809
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author Fagan, Jody Condit
Ostermiller, Hillary
Price, Elizabeth
Sapp, Lara
author_facet Fagan, Jody Condit
Ostermiller, Hillary
Price, Elizabeth
Sapp, Lara
Fagan, Jody Condit
Ostermiller, Hillary
Price, Elizabeth
Sapp, Lara
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Librarian, Faculty, and Student Perceptions of Academic Librarians: Study Introduction and Literature Review Fagan, Jody Condit Ostermiller, Hillary Price, Elizabeth Sapp, Lara Librarian Attitudes Academic Libraries Teacher Attitudes College Faculty Student Attitudes Literature Reviews Undergraduate Students Role Perception Expertise A survey concerning perceptions of academic librarians was conducted at a large, 4-year university with three populations: librarians, faculty, and undergraduate students. The high response rate and the use of an instrument based on previous studies offers the possibility of longitudinal comparison and the identification of relationships between groups within perceptions of librarians. Subsequent papers will present results from the three surveys and offer analysis across the three groups. The literature review focussed on research studies of perceptions of librarians. Subsequent papers will present results from the three surveys and offer analysis across the three groups. The literature review focussed on research studies of U.S. and Canadian academic libraries since 2000 with relevance to these major research questions: perceptions about what librarians know (expertise and skills), what librarians do (role and duties), and what librarians are like (motivations and affective behaviours). Librarians' perceptions of themselves as critically important yet underappreciated seem to have persisted, perhaps because they are the only group to see the university-wide scope of their jobs, whereas, non-librarian faculty and students have a more limited views of the profession. In contrast to previous studies, recent literature suggests that course-integrated information literacy (IL) instruction has increased the visibility of librarians as educators to both faculty and students. The influence of popular media on students' perceptions seems less powerful, opening the door wider for library marketing and branding programmes.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1295809
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2021
record_format eric
spellingShingle Librarian, Faculty, and Student Perceptions of Academic Librarians: Study Introduction and Literature Review
Fagan, Jody Condit
Ostermiller, Hillary
Price, Elizabeth
Sapp, Lara
Librarian Attitudes
Academic Libraries
Teacher Attitudes
College Faculty
Student Attitudes
Literature Reviews
Undergraduate Students
Role Perception
Expertise
Librarian, Faculty, and Student Perceptions of Academic Librarians: Study Introduction and Literature Review Fagan, Jody Condit Ostermiller, Hillary Price, Elizabeth Sapp, Lara Librarian Attitudes Academic Libraries Teacher Attitudes College Faculty Student Attitudes Literature Reviews Undergraduate Students Role Perception Expertise A survey concerning perceptions of academic librarians was conducted at a large, 4-year university with three populations: librarians, faculty, and undergraduate students. The high response rate and the use of an instrument based on previous studies offers the possibility of longitudinal comparison and the identification of relationships between groups within perceptions of librarians. Subsequent papers will present results from the three surveys and offer analysis across the three groups. The literature review focussed on research studies of perceptions of librarians. Subsequent papers will present results from the three surveys and offer analysis across the three groups. The literature review focussed on research studies of U.S. and Canadian academic libraries since 2000 with relevance to these major research questions: perceptions about what librarians know (expertise and skills), what librarians do (role and duties), and what librarians are like (motivations and affective behaviours). Librarians' perceptions of themselves as critically important yet underappreciated seem to have persisted, perhaps because they are the only group to see the university-wide scope of their jobs, whereas, non-librarian faculty and students have a more limited views of the profession. In contrast to previous studies, recent literature suggests that course-integrated information literacy (IL) instruction has increased the visibility of librarians as educators to both faculty and students. The influence of popular media on students' perceptions seems less powerful, opening the door wider for library marketing and branding programmes.
title Librarian, Faculty, and Student Perceptions of Academic Librarians: Study Introduction and Literature Review
topic Librarian Attitudes
Academic Libraries
Teacher Attitudes
College Faculty
Student Attitudes
Literature Reviews
Undergraduate Students
Role Perception
Expertise
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1295809