Title: Service Sea Change: Clicking with
1Service Sea Change Clicking with Screenagers
through Virtual Reference
- Lynn Silipigni Connaway
- and
- Marie L. Radford
- Association of College Research Libraries
- 13th National Conference
- Baltimore, MD
- March 29-April 1, 2007
2Presenters
- Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D.
- Consulting Research Scientist, OCLC Online
Computer Library Center, Inc. - Email connawal_at_oclc.org
- www.oclc.org/research/staff/connaway.htm
- Marie L. Radford, Ph.D.
- Associate Professor, Rutgers University, SCILS
- Email mradford_at_scils.rutgers.edu
- www.scils.rutgers.edu/mradford
- Grant Website (slides posted here)
http//www.oclc.org/research/projects/synchronicit
y
3Seeking Synchronicity Evaluating Virtual
Reference Services from User, Non-User, and
Librarian Perspectives
- 1,103,572 project funded by
- Institute of Museum Library Services (IMLS)
- 684,996 grant
- Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
OCLC, Online Computer Library Center - 405,076 in kind contributions
4Seeking Synchronicity Evaluating Virtual
Reference Services from User, Non-User, and
Librarian Perspectives
- Project duration 2 Years (10/05-9/07)
- Four phases
- Focus group interviews
- Analysis of 1,000 QuestionPoint live chat
transcripts - 600 online surveys
- 300 telephone interviews
5Screenagers
- Term coined in 1996 by Rushkoff
- Used here for 12-18 year olds
- Affinity for electronic communication
- Youngest members of Millennial Generation
6The Millennial Generation
- Born 1979 1994
- AKA Net Generation, Generation Y, Digital
Generation, or Echo Boomers - 13-28 year olds
- About 75 million people
- By 2010 will outnumber Baby Boomers (born
1946-1964)
7The Millennial Generation
- May be most studied generation in history
- 4x amount of toys than Boomer parents 20 yrs.
earlier - Born digital, most can not remember life without
computers - Confident, hopeful, goal-oriented, civic-minded,
tech savvy - Younger members most likely to display Millennial
characteristics
8The Millennial Mind(Sweeney, 2006)
- Preferences Characteristics
- More Choices Selectivity
- Experiential Exploratory Learners
- Flexibility Convenience
- Personalization Customization
- Impatient
- Less Attention to Spelling, Grammar
- Practical, Results Oriented
- Multi-taskers Collaborators
9Millennials, Screenagers
- Implications for academic libraries?
- For traditional virtual reference services?
- For the future?
- Research project designed to answer these
questions through focus group interviews
transcript analysis.
10Phase I Focus Group Interviews
- 8 in total
- 4 with non-users
- 3 with Screenagers (rural, suburban,
- urban)
- 1 with college students (graduate)
- 2 with VRS librarians
- 2 with VRS users (college students adults)
113 Screenager Focus Group Interviews33 Total
Participants
- Location
- 13 (39) Urban
- 12 (36) Suburban
- 8 (24) Rural
- Gender
- 15 (45) Male
- 18 (55) Female
- Age Range
- 12 18 years old
- Ethnicity
- 21 (64) Caucasian
- 6 (18) African- American
- 6 (18) Hispanic/Latino
- Grade Level
- 31 (94) HS
- 2 (6) JHS (Grade 7)
12Focus Group Interviews Major Themes
- Hold Librarian Stereotypes
- Prefer Independent Information Seeking
- Google
- Web surfing
- Prefer Face-to-Face Interaction
13Focus Group Interviews Major Themes
- Have Privacy/Security Concerns
- Librarians as psycho killers ?
- Fear of cyber stalkers
- Factors Influencing Future VRS Use
- Recommendation of trusted librarian or friend
- Marketing
- Choice of librarian
14Phase II Transcript Analysis
- Random sample
- 7/04 to 11/06 (18 months)
- 479,673 QuestionPoint sessions total
- Avg. 33/mo. 600 total, 492 examined so far
- 431 usable transcripts
- Excluding system tests tech problems
- 191 of these highlighted today
- 65 identified as Screenagers
- 126 identified as primary/college/adult
15Classification Method
- Qualitative Analysis
- Development/refinement of category scheme
- Careful reading/analysis
- Identification of patterns
- Time intensive, but reveals complexities!
16Interpersonal Communication Analysis Results
- Relational Facilitators
- Interpersonal aspects of the chat conversation
that have a positive impact on the
librarian-client interaction and that enhance
communication. - Relational Barriers
- Interpersonal aspects of the chat conversation
that have a negative impact on the
librarian-client interaction and that impede
communication.
17Transcript Examples
- Positive Example Relational Facilitators
- Natural Resources of Washington
- Question Type Ready Reference
- Subject Type Economics
- Duration 19 min., 21 sec.
- Negative Example Relational Barriers
- Bumper Cars
- Question Type Subject
- Subject Type Physics
- Duration 39 min.
18Barriers Differences Screenagers (n65) vs.
Others (n126)
- Higher numbers/avg. (per transcript) for
- Abrupt Endings 26 (.4) vs. 37 (.29)
- Impatience 6 (.09) vs. 2 (.02)
- Rude or Insulting 2 (.03) vs. 0
- (n191 transcripts)
19Facilitators Differences Screenagers (n65)
vs. Others (n126)
- Lower numbers/averages (per occurrence)
- Thanks 72 (1.1) vs. 163 (1.3)
- Self Disclosure 41 (.63) vs. 120 (.95)
- Seeking reassurance 39 (.6) vs. 87 (.7)
- Agree to suggestion 39 (.6) vs. 93
(.74) - Closing Ritual 25 (.38) vs. 69
(.55) - Admit lack knowledge 10 (.15) vs. 30 (.24)
- (n191 transcripts)
20Facilitators More Differences Screenagers
(n65) vs. Others (n126)
- Higher numbers/averages (per occurrence)
- Polite expressions 51 (.78) vs. 40 (.32)
- Alternate spellings 33 (.51) vs. 19 (.15)
- Punctuation/repeat 23 (.35) vs. 28 (.22)
- Lower case 19 (.29) vs. 24 (.19)
- Slang 9 (.14) vs. 3 (.02)
- Enthusiasm 8 (.12) vs. 9 (.07)
- Self-correction 7 (.11) vs. 6 (.05)
- Alpha-numeric shortcuts 3 (.05) vs. 0
- (n191 transcripts)
21Implications for Practice
- VRS is a natural for Screenagers (especially
live chat reference) - Do recommend/market your VRS services
- Do reassure that VRS is safe
- Do not throw wet blanket on their enthusiasm
- Do encourage, mentor, learn from them
- Do use basic service excellence skills
- Do try new social software applications
22Future Directions
- Complete Phase II
- Analysis of 1,000 QuestionPoint transcripts
- Complete Phases III IV
- Online Surveys (in progress)
- Telephone Surveys (coming soon, if interested in
participating e-mail us vrsgrant_at_rci.rutgers.edu)
23End Notes
- This is one of the outcomes from the project
Seeking Synchronicity Evaluating Virtual
Reference Services from User, Non-User, and
Librarian Perspectives. - Funded by IMLS, Rutgers University, OCLC Online
Computer Library Center, Inc. - Special thanks to Jocelyn DeAngelis Williams,
Susanna Sabolsci-Boros, Patrick Confer, Julie
Strange, Vickie Kozo, Timothy Dickey. - Slides available at project web site
http//www.oclc.org/research/projects/synchronicit
y/
24Questions
- Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D.
- Email connawal_at_oclc.org
- www.oclc.org/research/staff/connaway.htm
- Marie L. Radford, Ph.D.
- Email mradford_at_scils.rutgers.edu
- www.scils.rutgers.edu/mradford