In this article the authors introduce the Librarians' Research Partnership (LRP), founded in 2013, at McGill and Concordia University Libraries. The Partnership was inspired by the Canadian Association of Research Libraries' Librarians' Research Institute (CARL LRI) which was attended by three of the authors in 2012 and is described here from the point of view of the participants. The authors touch upon the research culture at McGill and Concordia Libraries and discuss barriers and supports for research as prominent themes in the literature on the research role of Canadian academic librarians. The formation of the LRP and the eight subsequent meetings are explained in detail, as well as the factors that made the LRP a successful initiative between the two universities: physical proximity, similarity of working environments, and common organizational culture. The article also includes a discussion of how the LRP's philosophy might diverge from that of the LRI.
This study was undertaken to better understand the range of learning practices that academic librarians use throughout their careers, and to explore the ways library schools give students the opportunities to engage in learning methods that they are likely to use in their careers as librarians. The study uses semi-structured interviews with academic librarians to explore their experiences of learning in library school, as new librarians, and later as they advanced through their careers. The study found that learning is an ongoing and essential aspect of librarianship, and that it is generally self-directed, informal, highly dependent on social interactions with peers, and embedded in practice. Participants in the study reported that most of what they needed to know was learned once they started working as librarians, and that their library school experience did little to prepare them for these ways of learning. The study also found that the conceptual model of communities of practice provides a useful perspective for 2 understanding the learning of librarians and for designing a library school experience that is more effective at preparing students for their future careers as librarians. Implications for library school curriculum and course design are discussed.
KeywordsProfessional education, continuing professional development, informal learning, non-formal learning, communities of practice, peer-to-peer networks, academic librarians 3
ployed by area health authorities receive a fee of £10-52. After July a general practitioner-any specialized training as yet unspecified-is likely to receive £85 for dealing with the same 15 women. Though I speak as one who loved my 18 years of general practice, this seems an unjust situation and extravagant as well. The acutely ill, the chronically ill, and the old complain of difficulty of access to their Points from Letters Gluten in Tablets Dr. JOHN E. JENKYN-THOMAS (Morden, Surrey) writes: I would like to make a plea on behalf of all coeliacs and their doctors that all tablets should be labelled gilutenfree or otherwise. It is an absurd state of affairs when it is possible to tell by the label if a tin of baked beans is safe for coeliacs, and for their doctors then unwittingly to prescribe tablets containing gluten....
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