creating a new theoretical model for reference encounters in synchronous face-to-face and virtual...

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CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D. Senior Research Scientist, OCLC ALISE Denver, CO January 20-23, 2009

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Page 1: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments

Marie L. Radford, Ph.D.Associate Professor,Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey

Lynn Silipigni Connaway, Ph.D.Senior Research Scientist, OCLC

ALISE

Denver, CO

January 20-23, 2009

Page 2: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

CREATing successful reference encounters

• “In time, perhaps an overarching model of all reference, regardless of medium of delivery, will be developed.” (Pomerantz, 2005)

• Present new model grounded in Communication & Sociology Theory

Page 3: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Relational Theory & Approach to Interpersonal Communication

• Every message has dual dimensions – both content and relational

(Watzlawick, Beavin, & Jackson, 1967)

Page 4: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Dual Dimensions

• Content• The “WHAT” of

the message

• Information exchange

• Relational“HOW” message

is to be takenRelationship of

participants

Page 5: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Interaction Ritual: Essays on Face-to-Face Behavior (1967)

Erving Goffman1922-1982

Essay:

“On Face-Work: An analysis of Ritual Elements in Social Interaction”

Page 6: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Model Grounded in Research

• Identify what is critically important to users & librarians in successful reference interactions

• FtF Environment • Reference Encounter (Radford, 1999)

• Virtual Reference, Live Chat Environment• Seeking Synchronicity (Radford & Connaway, 2005)

Page 7: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

The Reference Encounter - FtF

• Major Findings

• “Interpersonal relationships & communication are of great importance in librarian & user perceptions of reference interactions.” (Radford, 1999)

• Librarians value content more, users value relational aspects

Page 8: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Findings from Interpersonal Communication Analysis

• Relational & Content Facilitators• Interpersonal aspects of the chat conversation

that have a positive impact on the librarian-client interaction and that enhance communication.

• Relational & Content Barriers• Interpersonal aspects of the chat conversation

that have a negative impact on the librarian-client interaction and that impede communication.

Page 9: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

The Reference Encounter - FtF

• Positive interpersonal aspects (facilitators):• Good attitude• Relationship quality• Approachability

• Negative interpersonal aspects (barriers):• Poor attitude• Poor relationship quality• Lack of approachability

Page 10: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Seeking Synchronicity: Evaluating Virtual Reference Services from User, Non-User, and Librarian Perspectives

• $1,103,572 project funded by: IMLS, Rutgers University & OCLC, Online Computer Library Center, Inc.

• Project duration: 2.5 Years (10/05-3/08)• Four phases:

• Focus group interviews• Analysis of 850 QuestionPoint live chat transcripts• Online survey• Telephone interviews

Page 11: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Findings: Relational AND Content Valued in VR

• Librarians AND users value both information delivered & relational aspects

• Greater portion of users value content in VRS than in FtF

• Librarians are especially sensitive to user’s attitude in perceptions of unsuccessful VRS encounters (as found in FtF)

Page 12: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Interpersonal Skills Important in VR

• Rapport building • Compensation for lack of nonverbal cues• Strategies for relationship development • Evidence of deference & respect • Face-saving tactics • Greeting & closing rituals • VR users

• Show more deference• Exhibit barriers (rudeness, impatience) that differ greatly

from librarian barriers (negative closure, limiting time, reprimands)

Page 13: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Relational Dimensions Crucial to Millennial Users• Value information delivery• Want direct answers• Impatient & results oriented• Resist instruction in VR encounters, more

receptive in FtF• More chat speak

& texting shortcuts

Page 14: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Relational & Content Dimensions (Positive)

Relational Dimension • Facilitators

• Positive Attitude• Positive Relationship

Quality• Approachability• Positive Impact of

Technology• Familiarity• Greeting Ritual• Closing Ritual

Content Dimension • Facilitators

• Providing Information Access

• Accurate Information• Specific Information• Demonstrating

Knowledge (General/Specialized)

• Appropriate Instruction• Convenient/Timely

Access

Page 15: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Relational & Content Dimensions (Negative)

Content Dimension• Barriers

• Lack of Information/Access

• Lack of Accuracy• Negative Impact of

Technology• Lack of Knowledge

(General/Specialized)• Lack of Appropriate

Instruction• Unrealistic Task

Relational Dimension• Barriers

• Negative Attitude• Negative Relational

Quality• Lack of Approachability• Negative Impact of

Technology• Lack of Greeting Ritual• Lack of Closing Ritual

Page 16: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Content/Relational Model Of Success In Synchronous Reference Encounters (FtF & Chat) 

Relational Dimension (Positive) Content Dimension (Positive)

Content Dimension (Negative) Relational Dimension (Negative)

3

1

2

4

Encounter P

artially Unsuccessful

Enc

ount

er P

arti

ally

Uns

ucce

ssfu

l

Encounter Unsuccessful

Encounter Successful

Positive AttitudePositive Relationship QualityApproachabilityPositive Impact of TechnologyFamiliarityGreeting RitualClosing Ritual

Providing Information AccessAccurate InformationSpecific InformationDemonstrating Knowledge

(General/Specialized)Appropriate InstructionConvenient/Timely Access

Lack of Information/AccessLack of AccuracyNegative Impact of TechnologyLack of Knowledge

(General/Specialized)Lack of Appropriate InstructionUnrealistic Task

Negative AttitudeNegative Relational QualityLack of ApproachabilityNegative Impact of TechnologyLack of Greeting RitualLack of Closing Ritual

Page 17: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Content/Relational Model Of Success In Synchronous Reference Encounters (FtF & Chat) 

Relational Dimension (Positive) Content Dimension (Positive)

Content Dimension (Negative) Relational Dimension (Negative)

3

1

2

4

Encounter P

artially Unsuccessful

Enc

ount

er P

arti

ally

Uns

ucce

ssfu

l

Encounter Unsuccessful

Encounter Successful

Positive AttitudePositive Relationship QualityApproachabilityPositive Impact of TechnologyFamiliarityGreeting RitualClosing Ritual

Providing Information AccessAccurate InformationSpecific InformationDemonstrating Knowledge

(General/Specialized)Appropriate InstructionConvenient/Timely Access

Lack of Information/AccessLack of AccuracyNegative Impact of TechnologyLack of Knowledge

(General/Specialized)Lack of Appropriate InstructionUnrealistic Task

Negative AttitudeNegative Relational QualityLack of ApproachabilityNegative Impact of TechnologyLack of Greeting RitualLack of Closing Ritual

Page 18: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Quadrant 1 Positive Relational & Positive Content – Successful

Participants’ (librarian’s and user’s) information & interpersonal needs are met.

Page 19: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Quadrant 2 Positive Relational & Negative Content – Partially Unsuccessful

Participants’ interpersonal needs are met, but information needs are not met.

Page 20: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Quadrant 3 Positive Content & Negative Relational – Partially Unsuccessful

Participants’ information needs are met, but interpersonal needs are not met.

Page 21: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Quadrant 4 - Negative Content & Negative Relational – Unsuccessful

Participants’ information & interpersonal needs are not met.

Page 22: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Context & Situation Critical

Participant (librarian, user) Characteristics• age & gender• cultural background• educational level• user’s past experience with libraries/librarians• technological skills (including keyboarding) • subject knowledge• language & communication skills • institutional affiliation• librarian’s reference service philosophy

Page 23: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Situation

• Reference queries are related to different situations including

• professional • academic • personal • other

Page 24: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Mode of Communication

• Synchronous reference modes

• Face-to-face, traditional reference

• VR (live chat) encounters

Page 25: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Implications

• Information & relationship development critical to successful reference interactions

• Develop strategies for forming relationships with digital users

• Sustainability of VRS dependant upon developing positive relationships with users

• For LIS Education• Content & technical skills vitally important• Increase emphasis on interpersonal communication• Emphasize user’s point of view

Page 26: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Future Research

• More testing of Theoretical Model• Does it hold up in other modes?• Non-synchronous modes (email, text messaging)?

• Next will investigate Instant Messaging (IM) reference environment – growing steadily

• IM believed to be congruent with model, closely related to live chat

Page 27: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

ReferencesFlanagan, J. C. (1954). The critical incident technique. Psychological Bulletin,

5, 327-358.Goffman, E. (1967). Interaction ritual, essays on face-to-face behavior.

Garden City, New York: Doubleday. Pomerantz, J. (2005). A conceptual framework and open research questions

for chat-based reference, Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 56(12), 1288–1302.

Radford, M. L. (June, 2006). Encountering virtual users: A qualitative investigation of interpersonal communication in chat reference. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 57(8), 1046-1059.

Radford, M. L. (1999). The reference encounter: Interpersonal communication in the academic library. Chicago: ACRL, A Division of the

American Library Association.Radford, M. L. & Connaway, L. S. (2005-2008). “Seeking Synchronicity:

Evaluating Virtual Reference Services from User, Non-User, and Librarian Perspectives,” grant funded by the Institute for Museum and Library Services, Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, and OCLC, Inc. Available: http://www.oclc.org/research/projects/synchronicity/.

Watzlawick, P., Beavin, J. & Jackson, D.D. (1967). Pragmatics of human communication. NY: Norton.

Page 28: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

Special Thanks

• Rutgers University and OCLC Grant Project Team• Jocelyn DeAngelis Williams • Susanna Sabolsci-Boros• Patrick Confer• Timothy J. Dickey• David Dragos• Mary Anne Reilly• Julie Strange• Lisa Rose-Wiles• Andrea Simzak• Jannica Heinstrom• Janet Torsney• Vickie Kozo

Page 29: CREATing a New Theoretical Model for Reference Encounters in Synchronous Face-to-Face and Virtual Environments Marie L. Radford, Ph.D. Associate Professor,

End Notes

• This is one of the outcomes from the projectSeeking Synchronicity: Evaluating Virtual Reference Services from

User, Non-User, and Librarian Perspectives

• Funded by IMLS, Rutgers University, & OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc.

• Slides available at project web site: http://www.oclc.org/research/projects/synchronicity/