The document discusses the challenges of conducting reference interviews and how to properly understand a patron's information need. It notes that a patron's initial request is often vague or unclear and the librarian must clarify the true need through open-ended questions. Once the need is understood, the librarian can then collaborate with the patron to find an appropriate answer and ensure they understand how to find similar information in the future. The goal is to leave patrons feeling informed, reassured, and happy with their experience.
MS4 level being good citizen -imperative- (1) (1).pdf
Art Reference Interview Introduction
1. The Art of the Reference Interview An Introduction by Raina Bloom, Quasi-Librarian .
2. Our Problem ~ A patron’s first attempt to express his/her need is often incomplete, vague, tentative, and/or unclear, even when it seems that they’re being clear . ~ A classic example… ~ Katz and Taylor ~ Therefore, we must always assume that there is always more to the patron’s information need than is apparent - and ~ We must clearly understand this need before we are able to help him/her.
3. Why, Why, Why?! ~ Conventions of normal conversation ~ Sensitive topic (medical, legal, or any information that the patron perceives as embarrassing) ~ The patron is just beginning his/her research and has not formed a question. ~ Fear of appearing ill-informed ~ Fear of librarians/libraries ~ You are scary .
4. Why, Why, Why?! (Part Two) ~ Lack of knowledge about the library : ~ Patrons don’t know that you’re there to help them. ~ Libraries are easy, right? ~ Questions revolve around broad subjects because patrons “know” that libraries are organized around broad subjects. ~ Patrons don’t understand the size of the collection. ~ Patrons lack the vocabulary to ask the correct question. ~ Patrons believe that suggesting a source = being helpful.
6. Step One: The First Thirty Seconds P lace is right A vailable and listening C ontact has been made T opic (in general) understood
7. Step Two: Determining Need ~ Open vs. closed questions ~ Sense-making questions ~ Avoid premature diagnosis ~ Reiterate
8. Step Three: Providing an Answer ~ Inclusion ~ a collaborative process ~ Bibliographic Instruction (BI) ~ the teachable moment ~ Follow-up/Closure
9. ~ These skills translate: ~ telephone ~ email ~ IM reference ~ Remember to be conscious of: ~ language barriers ~ special needs ~ cultural differences Special Considerations
10. Six Common Problems 1. Thinking too broadly 2. The mismatch 3. System confusion 4. Ambiguity in vocabulary/pronunciation/hearing 5. Incorrect reconstruction of details 6. Errors or misconceptions
11. Sources Consulted Atlas, Michel C. (2005). “Library Anxiety in the Electronic Era, or Why Won’t Anybody Talk to Me Anymore?” Reference and User Services Quarterly . vol. 44, no. 4, p. 314-319. Jiao, Qun G. and Onwuegnuzie, Anthony J. (1997). “Antecedents of Library Anxiety.” Library Quarterly . vol. 67, no. 4. p372-389. Murphy, Sarah Anne. (2005). “The Reference Narrative.” Reference and User Services Quarterly . vol. 44, no. 3, p. 247-52. Ross, Catherine Sheldrick; Nilsen, Kirsti; and Dewdney, Patricia. (2002). Conducting the Reference Interview . New York, London: Neal- Schuman Publishers, Inc. Whisner, Mary. (2002). “Teaching the Art of the Reference Interview.” Law Library Journal . vol. 94, no. 1, p. 161-166.