2016
DOI: 10.1353/pla.2016.0013
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The Value of Chat Reference Services: A Pilot Study

Abstract: This article explores student, instructor, and librarian perceptions of chat reference in the context of an introductory composition course. Participants in a mixed-method study responded to an anonymized chat transcript. While student respondents valued speed and efficiency, they were willing to receive instruction and open to questions that demonstrated interest or moved the research forward. Librarian and instructor comments focused on how these chats supported or could better support student learning, as w… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…There is a body of literature about sampling virtual reference transactions in general (e.g., Cullen & Gray, 1995;Murgai, 2011), and one approach to chat analysis projects is to take a sample of chat transcripts in a given period (e.g., Jacoby, Ward, Avery & Marcyk, 2016;Valentine & Moss, 2016). Other researchers have opted to analyze transcripts from an entire academic quarter (e.g., Belanger, et al, 2016) or year (e.g., Mungin, 2017).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There is a body of literature about sampling virtual reference transactions in general (e.g., Cullen & Gray, 1995;Murgai, 2011), and one approach to chat analysis projects is to take a sample of chat transcripts in a given period (e.g., Jacoby, Ward, Avery & Marcyk, 2016;Valentine & Moss, 2016). Other researchers have opted to analyze transcripts from an entire academic quarter (e.g., Belanger, et al, 2016) or year (e.g., Mungin, 2017).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Of the 29 studies we gathered, 18 (62%) were solely quantitative in design and one (3%) solely qualitative. We labeled ten (34%) studies as combining both quantitative and qualitative designs, but this was usually because we defined "mixed methods" broadly to allow open-ended questions to be called qualitative; only two studies (7%) (Jacoby, Ward, Avery, & Marcyk, 2016;Verma & Parang, 2015) were truly mixed using the more conservative approach as defined by Fidel (2008) in which qualitative and quantitative methods were used to answer the same research question. Askew (2015) and Yap and Cajes (2016) employed quantitative methods to ask students about their satisfaction with roaming reference service and qualitative methods to ask librarians about their experience with providing the service; these studies are therefore labeled "quantitative" for the purposes of this review.…”
Section: Q1: How Did Lis Researchers Gather Data On Patron Satisfactimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Respondents were asked to consider aspects of librarian behaviour such as approachability and responsiveness, helpfulness, respect for confidentiality, and offering referrals; and aspects of librarian performance such as ability, accuracy, knowledge, and inspiring confidence. Five instruments (Blake et al, 2016;Butler & Byrd, 2016;Huang, Pu, Chen, & Chiu, 2015;Jacoby et al, 2016;Luo & Buer, 2015) asked students to gauge their likeliness to use, re-use, or recommend the service. Masrek and Gaskin reported presenting respondents with 10 items about Service quality, usefulness, and satisfaction (p. 42) but unfortunately did not provide the full text of the items within their article, making it impossible to determine how they conceptualized these elements of satisfaction.…”
Section: Q1: How Did Lis Researchers Gather Data On Patron Satisfactimentioning
confidence: 99%
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