Top Banner
Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association
49

Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Dec 16, 2015

Download

Documents

Silas Wilkerson
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Talking to Strangers

Personalizing the Reference Interview

Rita VineUniversity of Toronto Libraries

February 2 2008Ontario Library Association

Page 2: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

The 55% Answer Rate

Dervin, 1970’s Information or communication? Study groups – urban poor, libraries

Dervin, 1986 Neutral questioning

Hernon & McClure, 1986 55% answer rate

Dewdney & Ross, 1994 55% accept initial question @ face value 60% “willing to return”

Page 3: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Why is reference failure (still) so high?

Page 4: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

The Dual Disconnect

Early-stage interview quickly streams users to our silos Catalogue (books) Databases (journal articles)

Post-interview disengagement from user to focus on information-retrieval activities

Page 5: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

“I need information on flying.”

“I’m writing a term paper for my senior year travel health class on the effectiveness of different remedies for jet lag.”

Page 6: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

“I need information about flying.”

Are you interested in books or journals? Is this for a paper you’re writing? Sure, I’ll check the catalogue for you to see if

we have some books. Sure, in the business library most of our

materials on flying will be about the airlines and aviation industry. Is that what you’re interested in?

Page 7: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

“I’m writing a paper about how to combat jet lag.”

I’m going to show you how to use our PubMed database to find articles on jet lag.

“I’m going to see if we have any books or journal articles about jet lag.”

Page 8: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

What’s Wrong Here

Information is the only focus Steer away from the personal We hear their question not their problem Our goal: hit the information target!

Page 9: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Existing Reference Model

Initial Question

Question Negotiation

Real Question

Find/show route to information/answer

Scary/busy/shushing/hard to use library

Information Believer

Page 10: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

The Busy Librarian

Page 11: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.
Page 12: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.
Page 13: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

The Hard-to-Use Library

Page 14: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

The Quiet Library

Page 15: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.
Page 16: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

You Can’t Fight the Feelings

Users form impressions before ever asking questions

Librarians must use very deliberate body language to overcome barriers

Page 17: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

The Body Language Thing

With strangers, first impressions last Nonverbals mean more Dewdney & Ross, 1994

subtle nonverbal cues made huge differences

Page 18: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

What Helped

Looked up and smiled Moved out from behind the desk Really listened Seemed genuinely interested in me and my

question Seemed interested in my suggestions Didn’t overwhelm me

Page 19: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

What Did Not Help

Did not look up Made me feel as if I was wasting her time Didn’t seem to listen Cut me off during my explanation Made assumptions about what I wanted Didn’t tell me what he was doing so I didn’t

know if I should follow him or what

Page 20: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Research tells us…

We learn the most from friends not experts We learn more from people we like “Folks like us, use us” People cannot receive information if they are

not ready. 2-way dialogue/conversation is the best

predictor of user readiness

Page 21: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Research tells us…

Same question, same (right) answer Totally different evaluations

Experts make users feel more vulnerable “Readiness to receive”

Helping users in the way that they want to be helped

Page 22: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

It Takes Courage to Ask A Question!

Mindful of emotions, feelings, “whole human” Meaningful

Personal Respectful Interested

Page 23: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Being an Information Believer

Often marginalize information seeking through sources like: Personal contacts Stack browsing Web searching Unpublished sources

Page 24: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Being an Information Believer

Only objective information is valuable If a little is good, a lot is better Information is acquired only through formal

information systems Every need has an information solution.

Page 25: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Existing Reference Model

Initial Question

Question Negotiation

Real Question

Find/show route to information/answer

What Are We Missing?

Page 26: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

What Are We Missing?

Whole human approach Understanding their problem

What brought them to us What they want to do with the information What they think they are missing

Page 27: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Sense-Making Reference Model

Initial Question

Neutral questions – situation, use, gap

Learn about the user’s problem

Page 28: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

The User’s Problem – 3 pieces

SITUATION

GAP

USE

Page 29: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

When Real People Ask Questions

They already have an idea of a solution Not just libraries, it’s everywhere

Retail Banking On the street

We need to understand the problem.

Page 30: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

They Ask the Initial Question

that might help them solve their problem that might fill a gap that might get them closer

to a solution that they think the respondent is interested in

answering that they think the respondent is capable of

answering

Page 31: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

“I need information on flying.”

Classic and effective NEUTRAL questions help us understand the problem: What would you like to know about flying? GAP Why are you asking me this question about

flying? SITUATION What are you planning to do with this information

when you get it? USE

Page 32: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

“I need information on diabetes.”

What would you like to know about diabetes? GAP

Why are you asking me this question about diabetes? SITUATION

What are you planning to do with this information when you get it? USE

Page 33: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Bridging-to-Neutral Statements

“It would help me think of the best way to help you if you could tell me …..”

“Can you back me up a little bit and tell me…” “Can I ask you a few questions so that I can

help you better?”

Page 34: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Bridging-to-Neutral Statements

Cues the user to how you’re thinking Seeks permission to probe

For next questions on situation, gap, use Tells them you’re interested

Improves likeability Improves the dialogue Improves the “readiness to receive”

Page 35: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Sense-Making Reference Model(with bridge-to-neutral)

Initial Question

Neutral questions – situation, use, gap

Learn about the user’s problem

Bridge-to-neutral questions

Page 36: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Next Step: Problem-Solving

I understand your problem.

I know the information that can solve your problem.

I will now find them for you.

I understand your problem.

I have some ideas that may help you solve your problem.

I can share those ideas with you.

How do you feel about those?

Page 37: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Personalized Reference ModelInitial Question

Neutral questions – situation, use, gap

Learn about the user’s problem

Bridge-to-neutral questions

Present ideas that could help

Page 38: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Letting the User Control the Information Solution

“Information Solution” becomes “Ideas that might help”

Gives the user choices Accept your ideas Add their own Give you more information about their problem

Allows the user to tell you how they want to be helped by you today

Page 39: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Personalized Reference ModelInitial Question

Neutral questions – situation, use, gap

Learn about the user’s problem

Bridge-to-neutral questions

Present ideas that could help

Execute the information-seeking agreement

Page 40: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

What’s Right for ME not YOU

No knowledge is absolute People don’t care where information comes

from. There is no such thing as good or bad

information

Page 41: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

With this Model…

No more reference boredom Fewer glazed, bored, or disappointed users Get beyond pretense and self-protection Focus on how we can help

Page 42: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Easy Tips

Practicing Neutral Questions Eliminate noun-based questions early on Bad words

Specifically Exactly

3 neutral questions to try What are you trying to do? What will you use this for when you get it? What seems to be missing?

Page 43: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Easy Tips

When you understand the problem… “Here are my ideas…” “What do you think of ….?”

Page 44: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Real Reference Questions

Illustrating the Techniques

Page 45: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Personalized Reference ModelInitial Question

Neutral questions – situation, use, gap

Learn about the user’s problem

Bridge-to-neutral questions

Present ideas that could help

Execute the information-seeking agreement

Page 46: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Do you have videos of marriage ceremonies of

different religions?

Mid-20’s woman, college library reference desk

Page 47: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Personalized Reference ModelInitial Question

Neutral questions – situation, use, gap

Learn about the user’s problem

Bridge-to-neutral questions

Present ideas that could help

Execute the information-seeking agreement

Yes-I-can-help-you

Page 48: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.
Page 49: Talking to Strangers Personalizing the Reference Interview Rita Vine University of Toronto Libraries February 2 2008 Ontario Library Association.

Rita Vine

[email protected] Course – Did I Answer Your Question?

www.thepartnership.ca – online – 6 weeks Instructor-led programs – 1 day - contact Rita