Evidence Summary
There is No Association Between Subject
Liaisons’ Perception of Their Work and Faculty Satisfaction with Their Liaisons
A Review of:
Arendt, J. & Lotts, M.
(2012). What liaisons say about themselves and what faculty
say about their liaisons, a U.S. survey. portal: Libraries and
the Academy, 12(2), 155-177. doi:10.1353/pla.2012.0015
Reviewed by:
Lisa Shen
Business Reference Librarian
Sam Houston State University
Huntsville, Texas, United States
Email: lshen@shsu.edu
Received: 22 Aug. 2013 Accepted: 18 Oct.
2013
2013 Shen.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons‐Attribution‐Noncommercial‐Share Alike License 2.5 Canada (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by‐nc‐sa/2.5/ca/),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial
purposes, and, if transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the
same or similar license to this one.
Abstract
Objective – To determine the relationship between librarians’
self-assessment of their liaison responsibilities and faculty’s satisfaction
with their liaison’s performance, and the factors influencing these
perceptions.
Design – Web-based survey questionnaire.
Setting – The survey was conducted over the Internet through
email invitations.
Subjects – 354 librarians and 140 faculty members from
selected universities and colleges in the United States.
Methods – 602 colleges and universities were selected based
on institution size, degrees offered, and financial status using U.S.
Department of Education’s 2008 institution data. Each institution was randomly
assigned one of three subject designations: chemistry, psychology, or English.
A randomly selected faculty member from the designated subject department and
their corresponding subject liaison librarian (“liaison”) were contacted for
the survey.
Institution websites
were used to locate faculty and liaisons. If a list of liaisons could not be
found, then a librarian from the website’s available contact list was randomly
selected instead. The chosen individuals were invited via email in April 2010
to participate in the online survey. Before the survey closed in mid-May, up to
two follow-up emails were sent to those who had neither responded nor asked to
be removed from the contact list. The survey questionnaire was delivered
through the Lime Survey platform and consisted of 53 items in 15 questions.
Main Results – The survey had an overall response rate 41.0%:
58.8% from librarians and 23.3% from faculty. Three hundred and four of the 354
librarians surveyed (85.9%) were self-identified liaisons, although researchers
were unable to identify 61 of them through their library websites.
Most liaisons surveyed
had responsibilities in the areas of collection development (96.1%),
instruction (87.2%), and reference (82.6%). They provided an average of eight
types of liaison services, some of which fall under these categories. The
liaisons worked with an average of four academic departments (M=4.12, SD=2.98)
and spent approximately 10 hours per week (M=10.36, SD=9.68) on their subject
responsibilities.
The majority of
liaisons felt they were successful (62.5%) or very successful (13.8%) in their
liaison services and were either satisfied (50.7%) or very satisfied (12.2%)
with the liaison relationship with their departments. E-mail (97.2%) was the
liaisons’ most frequently cited communication channel. The frequency of contact
with their departments had the highest correlation (gamma = -0.567, p <
0.05) with liaisons’ perception of their own performances.
Of the 140 faculty
surveyed, 104 indicated that their library had liaisons and 66.3% of them had
had some contact with the liaison within the previous 6 months. Faculty who
knew their liaison by name (gamma = 0.668, p < 0.05) or who had recent
contact with the liaison (gamma = -0.48) were more satisfied with the liaison
services than those who did not. Faculty who received more services from their
liaisons (gamma = 0.521) also indicated greater satisfaction than those who
received fewer services.
Faculty assigned
higher importance than liaisons did to three liaison services: faculty
participation in collection development, new publication notices, and copyright
information. On the other hand, liaisons ranked the importance of information
literacy-related services, including in-class library instruction sessions and
integration of library instruction into the curriculum, much higher than did
faculty.
Furthermore, 66 pairs
of liaisons and their corresponding subject faculty completed the surveys.
Forty-nine of the faculty members out of those matched pairs knew their
liaisons and were more satisfied with the liaison services than those who did
not. However, no other relationships, such as correlations between faculty
satisfaction of their liaisons and liaisons’ assessment of their own
performance, could be found between responses of these matched faculty and
liaison pairs.
Conclusion – This study highlighted the disparity between
faculty’s and librarians’ perceptions of library liaison programs. Most
notably, there were no statistically significant relationships between
liaisons’ perception and satisfaction of their work and their faculty members’
satisfaction of the liaison services. Faculty and liaisons also differed in
their assigned importance to various types of liaison services.
Moreover, while
faculty’s satisfaction with liaison services correlated with the frequency of
their contact with and the number of services received from their liaisons,
their satisfaction did not translate into approval of the library. No
statistically significant relationship could be found between faculty’s
familiarity or interaction with their liaisons and their satisfaction with
their libraries overall.
Commentary
Since much of the
research on library liaison services is limited to the perspectives of
librarians or to programs within a single institution, this article provides a timely
contribution to current scholarship. The study scored an overall rating of 84%
based on the Evidence-Based Librarianship (EBL) Critical Appraisal Checklist
(Glynn, 2006). Rating for each EBL sub-section was also equal to or greater
than 75%, indicating both an overall and section validity.
However, there is one
notable flaw in the study design: the authors chose English, chemistry, and
psychology as the representative academic disciplines without providing any
sound rationale for their choices. This selection included two subjects in the
humanities, but excluded all of fine arts, engineering, education, medicine,
and business. Since faculty members’ information needs vary across disciplines,
such unbalanced subject selection reduces the representativeness of the study
findings. Possible variations between responses from the three disciplines were
also unexamined, even though the findings could be valuable to liaisons working
with multiple academic departments.
In addition, while
selected survey questions are described in the results, readers would benefit
from complete copies of the questionnaires. In particular, it is unclear
whether the faculty survey effectively defined, or differentiated between,
liaison and general library services. For instance, a few faculty members
indicated that they received copyright information as a liaison service, even
though their corresponding liaisons did not provide copyright consultations.
Libraries commonly
offer faculty services through channels in addition to subject liaisons.
Therefore, faculty respondents may have mistakenly attributed all services from
the library as services from their liaisons, or vice versa. Since the authors
aim to differentiate between faculty satisfaction of their liaison and of the
library, providing the actual questionnaires would aide readers in determining
whether a lack of clearly defined service channels in the faculty survey had
significantly impacted the validity of selected findings.
Nonetheless, despite a
few areas for improvement, this study provides a timely examination of liaison
services and highlights the lack of evidence based research to support the
effectiveness of liaison programs and their values to academic libraries.
Furthermore, the findings not only provide practical implications for liaison
librarians to evaluate and prioritize the type of services offered based on
faculty feedback, but also offer directions for future scholarship, such as
comparisons of liaison service perceptions across multiple disciplines, or
interaction between liaisons and multiple faculty members from the
corresponding departments.
References
Glynn, L. (2006). A critical
appraisal tool for library and information research. Library Hi Tech, 24(3), 387-399. doi:10.1108/07378830610692154