The paper, based on the findings of the Library and Information Commission (LIC) report on Cross-sectoral Mobility in the LIS Profession, considers some of the barriers to career development within the Library and Information Services profession. It focuses specifically upon difficulties experienced by LIS professionals in moving to different sectors of the profession. It discusses issues such as professional segregation; employer prejudice; poor employment strategies; lack of confidence among LIS professionals; training; and lack of professional support. In addition to outlining some of the barriers to the career development of LIS professionals, the paper offers a number of recommendations for employers, professional bodies and LIS professionals that may help to alleviate many of these barriers.
Suggests that the task of ensuring a high level of staff motivation requires from library managers a range of managerial, sociological and psychological skills for which they have had very little training, if any at all. These include effective communication with staff, the encouragement of good workplace relationships, the involvement of staff in the decision making process, helping staff to come to terms with change, promoting job rotation, recognising and rewarding initiative and providing relevant training for staff.
With the development of clinical governance, the clinical network has assumed even greater importance within the Trust. Timely and easy access to clinical and educational information is crucial to the practice of evidence-based medicine which underpins high quality clinical care. The evaluation led to a number of recommendations which have since been used to develop the clinical network at Birmingham Heartlands and Solihull NHS Trust.
Considers a number of issues related to the development, at the University of Central England in Birmingham, of a distance learning course in research skills for public librarians. The course was initially developed as part of the Library and Information Commission funded project, Developing Research in Public Libraries. Discusses the need for a stronger culture of research in public libraries and the immediate and long‐term benefits, for public librarians, of a distance learning course in research skills. The evaluation of a pilot distance‐learning course indicated that librarians enrolled on the course perceived it as offering much needed training in a range of research skills. The main concerns relate to the lack of support from public library managers and the limited opportunities for librarians to share their knowledge with their colleagues. Reinforces the arguments for a distance learning course in research training that offers librarians the opportunity to develop and consolidate their research skills in their own time and at their own pace. However, the authors recognise that such a course can only accomplish its aims if public library authorities are prepared to support and encourage staff enrolled on the course.
Reflects on the findings of the ‘A place for children’ project, a major collaborative research project which investigated the extent and value of support for children and young people’s reading provided by UK public libraries. Notes the four areas highlighted by the study in which provision could be improved: use of information and communications technologies (ICT) to support reading development; use of national and/or regional literacy initiatives; support for children with special needs; and support for the literacy of children from multicultural backgrounds. Discusses the developments that have taken place in these areas in the three years since the original research was conducted and provides an overview of the current state of provision. Reports results of a questionnaire survey involving 127 heads of children’s services at the 209 public library authorities (60.8 per cent response rate), and presents results of a survey of children’s Web sites in the UK. Concludes that, although the provision of ICT facilities and children’s Web sites has developed since 1997, there are still many public libraries that offer little or no provision. There is a lot of variation in the use that is made of children’s Web sites by those authorities that have them. Greater numbers of authorities are participating in national and regional initiatives, examples including: Bookstart; National Year of Reading; Building a Nation of Readers; Launchpad; National Children’s Book Week; Reading is Fundamental, UK. Little change was detected in the area of support for children with special needs and only limited progress was revealed to have occurred in the provision of support for the literacy of children from multi-cultural backgrounds.
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