Three Thousand Library Users Can’t Be Wrong: Demonstrating Library Impact Using One Open-Ended Survey Question

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Belanger, Jackie
Faber, Maggie
Oakleaf, Megan

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Association of College and Research Libraries

Abstract

Librarians seeking to balance quantitative value measures with qualitative methods should consider the inclusion of critical incident technique (CIT) questions into their library value inquiries. Even the addition of one well-conceived CIT question in a larger survey question pool can provide valuable stories in users’ own words describing the impact of the library’s services, resources, and spaces on teaching, learning, and research at their institution. This chapter will discuss the CIT question used by one large, multi-campus public research library to elicit over 3,000 undergraduate student, graduate student, and faculty responses: “Tell us in a few sentences about a time that Libraries staff, services, resources, or spaces had a positive impact on your academic work.” Taken as a whole, the comments point to the impact of library staff, spaces, and services on faculty and students, while individual responses can serve as callouts within larger reports and provide depth and description necessary to understand other quantitative results.

Description

Citation

Belanger, J., Faber, M, & Oakleaf, M. (2018).Three Thousand Library Users Can’t Be Wrong: Demonstrating Library Impact Using One Open-Ended Survey Question. In M. Britto & K. Kinsley (Eds.), Academic libraries and the academy: Strategies and approaches to demonstrate your value, impact, and return on investment (pp. 151-160). Chicago, IL: Association of College and Research Libraries.

DOI