Filling a gap: would evidence-based school librarianship work in the UK?

Authors

  • Cristina Sacco Ritchie

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/lirg116

Keywords:

school librarianship, evidence-based librarianship, evaluation

Abstract

School librarians in the UK have a lower status than librarians in other sectors, and research on school librarianship in the UK is sparse. Annual self-evaluation is one way the profession has tried to make itself more visible. Evidence-based school librarianship (EBSL) could assist school librarians in the UK improve their services, boost their profile, and build their portfolios as part of existing self-evaluation programmes. EBSL is an off-shoot of evidence-based librarianship, which aims to bridge the gap between research and practice, and encourages practitioners to conduct research in the workplace. Most of the current EBSL work is being done in the US, where school librarians are also typically trained teachers, however, EBSL is suitable for adaptation and use in the UK. Appropriate research methods must be chosen in order to make EBSL work in the UK, action research being one such method.

Author Biography

Cristina Sacco Ritchie

PhD Researcher, Department of Computing and Information Science

Downloads

Published

2009-09-13

Issue

Section

Invited Contributions