Joyce Valenza’s Neverending Search

Effective school library websites: about the study

May 19, 2007 · 5 Comments

liza1.jpg

I finally submitted my dissertation to the university after addressing my committee’s suggestions. The paper and the stuff that had to go with it were so bulky that Liza (above) had to help me stuff it all in the official envelope.

Looking at my past posts, as well as the past couple of sentences, I realize I’ve been writing far more about the process of writing a dissertation than the study itself.

My goals were to identify and examine models of exemplary practice in school library websites and to develop two taxonomies to describe them–one of features, one of characteristics. A wonderful Delphi panel helped me to identify ten exemplary sites and helped me build the taxonomies. I followed with a content analysis of the ten sites. The taxonomies and their accompanying codebooks should serve practitioners as they plan and build effective sites, whether in traditional html or blog or wiki or other emerging formats. I will be working on an article to summarize results, but since folks are asking, I thought I’d share just a bit here:

Research Questions
The thousands of school library website efforts represent conspicuous diversity in approach. With sites ranging from single-page brochures to dynamic, multi-page learning environments, examining the broad scope of these professional efforts would be much like comparing apples and oranges. The disparity of these efforts, compounded by students’ heavy reliance on the Web, and a body of professional literature that documents the need for online professional intervention with learners, suggests the need for research and points to the following critical research questions:

  1. What models of exemplary practice exist in school library websites?
  2. What common features are presented in sites representing exemplary practice?
  3. What common organizational structures and design characteristics are employed in exemplary school library sites?
  4. From the models observed in sites identified as exemplary practice, can a functional descriptive taxonomy of features be developed?
  5. How are school library sites evolving? How do the features and services offered by exemplary sites in 2006 differ from the state-of-the-art of the randomly selected sites last studied by Clyde in 2002?
  6. To what extent do exemplary school library websites present features devoted to: information access and delivery, learning and teaching, and program administration, as expressed in the context of the current national standards document Information Power (AASL & AECT, 1998)?

I hope to eventually cover all these questions a bit here in the blog, but for now let’s look at Question 2.  (BTW, Question 3, on characteristics takes a look at 2.0 strategies! We’ll look at that one next time.)

Among the conclusions (on common features):

What are the universal features in the ten sites I studied?

The features, present in all 10 sites in the sample are– OPACs, databases, search tools, reference, documentation, and contact information.

Nine of the sample sites include links to other OPACs, links to news sources, online book discussions, library hours and staff information.

Eight of the sites offer instructions for remote access; links to dictionaries, biographical and geographical reference tools; links to local and international news; pathfinders; and mission statements.
Here are four tables that describe features present on six or more of the ten sites in the sample:

table5.jpg

table6.jpg

table7.jpg

table8.jpg

I discovered major discrepancies between the features the Delphi panel expected to be present in exemplary sites and what actually existed in practice.

These discrepancies are especially evident in the absence of content in the category of Learning and Teaching.  The limited content observed in this area of the features taxonomy is inconsistent with the instructional focus represented by Information Power (AASL & AECT, 1998).

According to Information Power,

Schools have evolved to focus on learning, and effective school library programs have also changed their focus from collections to learning that engages students in pursuing knowledge within and beyond a formal curriculum (AASL & AECT, 1998, p. 59).

The limited instructional content is also inconsistent with the predictions of major school library researchers.  Kuhlthau (1997, 1999) saw library websites as constructivist environments, as new zones of intervention for guiding learners and customizing instruction.  Clyde (1997) believed that the primary purpose of the library homepage would be instructional.  While a few of the sites in the sample appear to have strong instructional focus, most did not.  If teacher-librarians are truly to function as teacher-librarians in the 21st century, we  need to investigate effective strategies for translating our instruction for digital landscapes. Teacher-librarians would  benefit by examining effective practice in Web-based instruction outside the library world.

Program Administration was another area of service not fully addressed by these exemplary sites. The availability of online survey tools and interactive forms, led me and several panelists to predict that exemplary sites would be using such strategies to enhance the librarian’s ability to communicate, solicit feedback, schedule, promote, and manage.  Few libraries share their reports and public relations materials. Few use available interactive calendar tools to share their library schedules. Few use available technology to survey users or to mine data.

It is quite possible that busy school librarians who choose to maintain websites for their learners will focus most of their efforts in creating Web spaces that address those learners directly.  When prioritizing content for a library website, program administration features might not warrant the same attention as information access, learning and teaching or books and reading.  Yet, features identified in this area by the Delphi panel and the principles identified in Chapter 6 “Program Administration” of Information Power (AASL & AECT, 1998, p. 100) serve to communicate the purpose and impact of the library program. These features may be strong tools for advocacy. Potential in the area of Program Administration is addressed by some of the sites in the sample but less than fully realized.

Next time, characteristics!

Categories: About learning · About libraries · Doctoral stuff · Information fluency · School culture · Teaching Strategies

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5 responses so far ↓

  •   technotuesday // May 19th 2007 at 9:45 pm

    Will you provide links to the sites (at least the ones deemed exemplary) from your study??

    Maybe you can do a pictorial movie (Photostory3) of “what not to do”… (of course getting permission to use those pix might not be permitted when some find out why their picture is being used…maybe there could be a way to photoshop the pix to protect identities??

    I’d find it interesting anyway. Some years back I taught a group of LMS’s about media web page design. We used your webquest about media center pages to brainstorm designs, and to gain an opportunity to really critique pages. I want to say at the time of that webquest, these pages were deemed as “best practice.” I have to admit though that often there was group consensus that some of the pages were not necessarily that great. (Of course I pointedly reminded them that some of our own pages were not nearly best practice–at least those that existed at all.) It was an interesting night of analyzing and critiquing other’s work, and it really gave my group a good place to start in planning their sites. I have a link to the class material, as well as their l created pages, but I’d rather provide that link offline in a private email maybe, for privacy purposes, if you’d like to see.

  •   cybrarian // May 20th 2007 at 7:00 am

    Wonderful to see some feed back about your study. I’m looking forward to further posts. I do think the comments about the program administrator role are well taken both form the point of view that many of us see our work primarily directed at the students and teachers and the lack of time or expertise to set up some of the tools you mention. I, for one, would love to have more immediate feed back on what kids get out of the lessons/projects/my teaching, etc. The challenge is finding relatively easy ways to set up such surveys. I do think the results of the study, if widely disseminated, may help to set some standards for school library web pages. I believe we are all trying to do much the same kind of things. We have specific talents which we use and areas where we need help. Collaboration, not only with those at our sites but also with other practitioners, would certainly help to make the job easier and more effective.

  •   Anonymous // May 21st 2007 at 5:37 pm

    Congrats on submission! As we roll out the beta of our new web portal software, I can’t wait to see how we stack up against your conclusions.

  •   John P. Brock // May 25th 2007 at 4:58 pm

    Congratulations!
    Is it soon to be Dr. Valenza then?

    We are so honored and pround that you will be able to visit with us in Norwich, New York, next June.

    Thanks.

  •   Vasantha Raju // Mar 5th 2008 at 8:30 am

    Dear sir,

    My heartful congratulations to you.
    I have been working in the same area that is “analysing library web content”. I found your study very interesting and could help me to carry my research.
    Can you give some instruction how you have designed your methodology. I am designing a coding sheet to analyse the content - design and content features. I request you to share your thoughts in this regard.

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