Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 172
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-8108-8815-9 • Paperback • February 2014 • $73.00 • (£56.00)
978-0-8108-8816-6 • eBook • February 2014 • $69.00 • (£53.00)
Dave Harmeyer is a professor and Associate Dean of University Libraries at Azusa Pacific University. He has written many articles for The Reference Librarian.
Foreword by John V. Richardson Jr.
Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Chapter 1 Prologue: Is the Reference Interview Dead?
Chapter 2 A Literature Review of the Reference Interview
Part One Three Bibliographic Sources Consulted
Part Two A Literature Review of the Reference Interview Under Three Types
Chapter 3 Scenario 1 Virtual Reference: Less is More
Chapter 4 Scenario 2 A Phone Interview: Save the Time of the Reader
Chapter 5 Scenario 3 At the Reference Desk: Harry Potter and the Secrets of Hogwarts
Chapter 6 Scenario 4 Virtual in Vegas
Chapter 7 Scenario 5 An Unlikely Answer: Under a Window of Stained Glass
Chapter 8 Scenario 6 Earthquake Reference
Chapter 9 Scenario 7 Helping Publish Not Perish
Chapter 10 Scenario 8 My So-called Second Life
Chapter 11 Scenario 9 Reviving the Reference Interview: From Desk to Chat to Phone
Chapter 12 Scenario 10 A Reference Interview in 2025
Chapter 13 Scenario 11 Hybrid Reference: Blending the Reference Interview and Information Literacy
Chapter 14 Scenario 12 A Surprise at Rosey’s Beauty Salon: Towards Ethos, Values, and Codes of Ethics
Chapter 15 Scenario 13 The Reference Interview Thrives
Chapter 16 A Conceptual Model for Online Chat Reference Answer Accuracy
Bibliography
Index
[This book] successfully demonstrates that despite the internet and Google, the reference interview is not dead and reference librarians still provide vital services. This book provides 13 scenarios of reference interactions, ranging from more traditional reference services at the reference desk to virtual reference in synchronous chat environments and the online world of Second Life. These scenarios, set in both academic and public libraries, consist of anecdotal stories for how and why the reference interview is still relevant. These scenarios also offer some advice on best practices for reference interviews, such as keeping your text short and on point during online chat interactions and trying to incorporate information literacy instruction into any reference situation. Each scenario ends with reflective questions in the following areas: knowledge, comprehension, application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation, which makes this book a helpful resource for library school students or those who are new to reference services. . . .This book also includes a two-part literature review on the topic of reference interviews. The first part utilizes three bibliographic sources (WorldCat, Citation Indexes, and Google Scholar), while the second part covers three distinct types of reference interview (literature reviews, anecdotal observations, and inferential statistical studies). In addition, a study analyzing the accuracy of answers given during chat interactions is also included. . . .This book is more of a practical, how-to resource on providing reference services using traditional (in-person and over the phone) and nontraditional (e-mail, chat, Second Life) methods, explained through the utilization of anecdotal scenarios. . . .This book could be a helpful learning tool to those who are new at reference or those who are looking to learn more about how other librarians are keeping the reference interview alive.
— American Reference Books Annual
This book is a practical guide to reference interviews using different methods, such as telephone, chat, virtual and the traditional face-to-face method. Author Dave Harmeyer is committed to improving the reference interview and creating a best practices guide. . . .This book is written in an informal style, yet the author has examined a range of available literature in addition to anecdotal sources. It is well researched and a labour of love, as Harmeyer has devoted many years to the study and development of university reference services. This book is suitable for both new and the experienced reference librarians, in addition to acting as a useful text for library management students.
— Australian Library Journal
From the foreword:
I love the idea of anything that will improve the quality of service rendered in our libraries, whether we are talking about checklists, flowcharts, or other systems analysis techniques. Here are 13 wonderful chapters full of anecdotes, intuition, and evidence-based practices to help us out. Dave Harmeyer’s The Reference Interview Today will made important contribution to our field, specifically in our shared interest of improving reference librarianship.
— John V. Richardson Jr., Professor Emeritus of Information Studies, University of California, Los Angeles
Harmeyer has been gracing our journal The Reference Librarian with his reference interview scenarios for some time now, and it is good to see his effort codified and expanded into this book. I wish I had had something like it as a guide before commencing my career as a reference librarian. People pay lip service to the idea of the reference interview, but pay precious little attention to the actual thing itself. Dave shows people how it is done, in detail, and the accompanying exercises will make prospective and current reference librarians think and rethink what they do and how they could do it better.
— William Miller, Dean of University Libraries, Florida Atlantic University and co-editor of The Reference Librarian