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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Maria J. Grant , Barbara Sen , Hannah SpringPublisher: Facet Publishing Imprint: Facet Publishing Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.20cm Weight: 0.176kg ISBN: 9781856047418ISBN 10: 1856047415 Pages: 256 Publication Date: 12 October 2013 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsForeword - Hazel Hall PART 1: GETTING STARTED 1. What are research, evaluation and audit? - Barbara Sen, Maria J. Grant and Hannah Spring 2. Building confidence - Hannah Spring and Clare McClusky 3. Asking the right question - Sarah Coulbeck and Emma Hadfield 4. Writing your research plan - Miggie Pickton 5. Ethics and best practice - Elizabeth Buchanan and Stuart Ferguson PART 2: DOING RESEARCH, EVALUATION AND AUDIT 6. Reviewing the literature - Michelle Maden 7. Qualitative approaches - Alison Pickard 8. Quantitative approaches - Christine Urquhart 9. Data analysis - Jenny Craven and Jillian R. Griffiths 10. Tools to facilitate your project - Maria J. GrantPART 3: IMPACT OF RESEARCH, EVALUATION AND AUDIT 11. Writing up your project findings - Graham Walton and Maria J. Grant 12. Disseminating your project findings - Jane Shelling 13. What next? Applying your findings to practice - Robert Gent and Andrew Cox Closing remarks - Maria J. Grant, Barbara Sen and Hannah SpringReviewsI strongly recommend this book, for at least one single reading, to my professional colleagues in the working settings. I do hope that they will find it helpful and use it in 'demonstrating their value' as has been suggested by editors in its sub-title. I would also suggest this book as a source book to students and practitioners who aim to write their own text in practice or research. It is step-by-step guide in doing research or working on research project. Final term students in library and information science should not miss reading it. They will definitely like it and will keep it with them while working on the research element of their education -- Information Research Overall I found this an excellent book for a new researcher like myself. It took me through each stage sequentially, and I could look at past and present projects I have worked on, break them down to see room for improvement. It also opened up future opportunities that I could explore. It is written with the practitioner in mind, using excellent case studies and giving the guidance and checklists required to keep the practitioner-researcher on track. This is a book I will constantly be dipping in and out of. -- Australian Library Journal Grant, Sen, and Spring guide library and information science practitioners in undertaking a research, evaluation, or audit activity, drawing on the 10 steps of the research toolkit of HEALER (a UK-based network for improving research in health information management). Contributed by library and information science specialists from the UK, Australia, and US, the 13 chapters cover concepts, ethics, and the planning stages; the fundamentals of research projects, including the literature review, qualitative and quantitative methods, data analysis, and research tools; and writing up the project, putting results into practice, and disseminating them to the wider community. Case studies are provided as examples. -- Research and Reference Book News To me this book is not so much a one-stop-shop for those undertaking research in LIS; instead its greatest value lies in how it gently steers the reader through the research terrain, highlighting both the pitfalls and best routes to take, and giving them the context and insight to navigate and reach their own destination. Indeed it is likely that once the reader gets involved in any kind of project, this will be just one of several research texts that they reach for. However, it might ultimately end up being the most essential, by being the one that started them on their journey in the first place. -- Libfocus A consistent approach is maintained among the multiple authors, with clear language, an encouraging tone and an ability to engage from first principles. Each chapter is supported by case studies and further reading, linking real-world experience to theory and offering further development paths. It is fundamentally a textbook in style, and would be a ready reference work for any information professional interested in expanding his/her research skills...the structure is clear and is easy to navigate, allowing the reader to dip in and out of the book according to interest and needs. -- Archives and Records Overall I found this an excellent book for a new researcher like myself. It took me through each stage sequentially, and I could look at past and present projects I have worked on, break them down to see room for improvement. It also opened up future opportunities that I could explore. It is written with the practitioner in mind, using excellent case studies and giving the guidance and checklists required to keep the practitioner-researcher on track. This is a book I will constantly be dipping in and out of. -- Australian Library Journal To me this book is not so much a one-stop-shop for those undertaking research in LIS; instead its greatest value lies in how it gently steers the reader through the research terrain, highlighting both the pitfalls and best routes to take, and giving them the context and insight to navigate and reach their own destination. Indeed it is likely that once the reader gets involved in any kind of project, this will be just one of several research texts that they reach for. However, it might ultimately end up being the most essential, by being the one that started them on their journey in the first place. * Libfocus * ...highly recommended for anyone about to begin or simply interested in the processes of research, evaluating or auditing. -- Australian Academic and Research Libraries A consistent approach is maintained among the multiple authors, with clear language, an encouraging tone and an ability to engage from first principles. Each chapter is supported by case studies and further reading, linking real-world experience to theory and offering further development paths. It is fundamentally a textbook in style, and would be a ready reference work for any information professional interested in expanding his/her research skills...the structure is clear and is easy to navigate, allowing the reader to dip in and out of the book according to interest and needs. -- Archives and Records To me this book is not so much a one-stop-shop for those undertaking research in LIS; instead its greatest value lies in how it gently steers the reader through the research terrain, highlighting both the pitfalls and best routes to take, and giving them the context and insight to navigate and reach their own destination. Indeed it is likely that once the reader gets involved in any kind of project, this will be just one of several research texts that they reach for. However, it might ultimately end up being the most essential, by being the one that started them on their journey in the first place. -- Libfocus Libfocus Grant, Sen, and Spring guide library and information science practitioners in undertaking a research, evaluation, or audit activity, drawing on the 10 steps of the research toolkit of HEALER (a UK-based network for improving research in health information management). Contributed by library and information science specialists from the UK, Australia, and US, the 13 chapters cover concepts, ethics, and the planning stages; the fundamentals of research projects, including the literature review, qualitative and quantitative methods, data analysis, and research tools; and writing up the project, putting results into practice, and disseminating them to the wider community. Case studies are provided as examples. -- Research and Reference Book News I strongly recommend this book, for at least one single reading, to my professional colleagues in the working settings. I do hope that they will find it helpful and use it in 'demonstrating their value' as has been suggested by editors in its sub-title. I would also suggest this book as a source book to students and practitioners who aim to write their own text in practice or research. It is step-by-step guide in doing research or working on research project. Final term students in library and information science should not miss reading it. They will definitely like it and will keep it with them while working on the research element of their education. -- Information Research Author InformationBarbara Sen is Lecturer, Information Studies Department, University of Sheffield; Maria J Grant is Research Fellow, Salford Centre for Nursing, University of Salford. 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