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Shared values, new vision: Collaboration and communities of practice in virtual reference and SQA
Author(s) -
Radford Marie L.,
Connaway Lynn Silipigni,
Mikitish Stephanie,
Alpert Mark,
Shah Chirag,
Cooke Nicole A.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the association for information science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.903
H-Index - 145
eISSN - 2330-1643
pISSN - 2330-1635
DOI - 10.1002/asi.23668
Subject(s) - conceptualization , referral , sustainability , psychology , public relations , medical education , knowledge management , sociology , computer science , medicine , nursing , political science , ecology , artificial intelligence , biology
This investigation of new approaches to improving collaboration, user/librarian experiences, and sustainability for virtual reference services (VRS) reports findings from a grant project titled “Cyber Synergy: Seeking Sustainability between Virtual Reference and Social Q&A Sites” (Radford, Connaway, & Shah, [Radford, M.L., 2011]–2014). In‐depth telephone interviews with 50 VRS librarians included questions on collaboration, referral practices, and attitudes toward Social Question and Answer (SQA) services using the Critical Incident Technique (Flanagan, [Flanagan, J.C., 1954]). The Community of Practice (CoP) (Wenger, [Wenger, E., 1998]; Davies, [Davies, E., 2005]) framework was found to be a useful conceptualization for understanding VRS professionals' approaches to their work. Findings indicate that participants usually refer questions from outside of their area of expertise to other librarians, but occasionally refer them to nonlibrarian experts. These referrals are made possible because participants believe that other VRS librarians are qualified and willing collaborators. Barriers to collaboration include not knowing appropriate librarians/experts for referral, inability to verify credentials, and perceived unwillingness to collaborate. Facilitators to collaboration include knowledge of appropriate collaborators who are qualified and willingness to refer. Answers from SQA services were perceived as less objective and authoritative, but participants were open to collaborating with nonlibrarian experts with confirmation of professional expertise or extensive knowledge.

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