Virtual Services in the Health Sciences Library: A Handbook

Author:   Amanda R. Scull
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9781538155431


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   20 April 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Virtual Services in the Health Sciences Library: A Handbook


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Full Product Details

Author:   Amanda R. Scull
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Dimensions:   Width: 18.30cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 25.50cm
Weight:   0.340kg
ISBN:  

9781538155431


ISBN 10:   1538155435
Pages:   160
Publication Date:   20 April 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

This comprehensive handbook will resonate with all health sciences libraries, large and small, urban and rural, after their pandemic pivot to exclusive use of virtual resources and services. The Handbook offers invaluable information on virtual services, including community engagement; empowering and supporting staff; adapting instruction and accessing educational materials for students; and models for research consultations online and virtual systematic review workshops. Highly recommended.--Claire B. Joseph, MS, MA, AHIP, Director, Singh Medical Library, Mount Sinai South Nassau, Oceanside, NY


A positive outcome of the challenges of Covid, this volume is jam-packed with practical advice and examples for adding and assessing virtual services. Attuned to both the needs of administrators and practitioners, each thoughtful chapter, by a bevy of excellent writers and thinkers, share tips, frameworks, questions, and also provides additional online content. This is a must-read overview as it touches on virtual services from so many adjacent fields: marketing, human resources, assessment, scholarly communication and openness, sustainability. The definition of virtual services is broad - from twitter to telephone - so there are innovative examples in this volume for every kind of librarian, rural or urban, large hospital to small academic setting. You'll want to keep a copy of this book close at hand; I found myself thinking of colleagues to whom I would refer every chapter.--Holly Grossetta Nardini, Associate Director, Harvey Cushing/John Hay Whitney Medical Library, Yale University, Medical Library Association's 2018 Academic Medical Librarian of the Year This comprehensive handbook will resonate with all health sciences libraries, large and small, urban and rural, after their pandemic pivot to exclusive use of virtual resources and services. The Handbook offers invaluable information on virtual services, including community engagement; empowering and supporting staff; adapting instruction and accessing educational materials for students; and models for research consultations online and virtual systematic review workshops. Highly recommended.--Claire B. Joseph, MS, MA, AHIP, Director, Singh Medical Library, Mount Sinai South Nassau, Oceanside, NY


A positive outcome of the challenges of Covid, this volume is jam-packed with practical advice and examples for adding and assessing virtual services. Attuned to both the needs of administrators and practitioners, each thoughtful chapter, by a bevy of excellent writers and thinkers, share tips, frameworks, questions, and also provides additional online content. This is a must-read overview as it touches on virtual services from so many adjacent fields: marketing, human resources, assessment, scholarly communication and openness, sustainability. The definition of virtual services is broad - from twitter to telephone - so there are innovative examples in this volume for every kind of librarian, rural or urban, large hospital to small academic setting. You'll want to keep a copy of this book close at hand; I found myself thinking of colleagues to whom I would refer every chapter. Can people work from home? Should they work from home? Rutgers University librarians Weber and De Fino present evidence that people can and should, arguing that remote and hybrid work schedules are better for employees, libraries, and the environment....Though many recent studies have documented the improved productivity of employees who have chosen to work remotely, libraries were thrown into this largely unexplored realm, most with little or no time to plan as a result of the pandemic. Even were it not for pandemics, unforeseen electrical outages, floods, weather emergencies, earthquakes, terrorism, active shooters, and other unfortunate events require that libraries create emergency plans, taking into account the possibility of short- and long-term closures. Applicable to both public and technical services, this work is required reading for librarians and administrators of all types of libraries. Given its practical strategies and engaging text, this reviewer finds Virtual Services in the Health Sciences Library: A Handbook to be an inspiring and a highly recommended reference for health sciences libraries. This comprehensive handbook will resonate with all health sciences libraries, large and small, urban and rural, after their pandemic pivot to exclusive use of virtual resources and services. The Handbook offers invaluable information on virtual services, including community engagement; empowering and supporting staff; adapting instruction and accessing educational materials for students; and models for research consultations online and virtual systematic review workshops. Highly recommended.


A positive outcome of the challenges of Covid, this volume is jam-packed with practical advice and examples for adding and assessing virtual services. Attuned to both the needs of administrators and practitioners, each thoughtful chapter, by a bevy of excellent writers and thinkers, share tips, frameworks, questions, and also provides additional online content. This is a must-read overview as it touches on virtual services from so many adjacent fields: marketing, human resources, assessment, scholarly communication and openness, sustainability. The definition of virtual services is broad - from twitter to telephone - so there are innovative examples in this volume for every kind of librarian, rural or urban, large hospital to small academic setting. You'll want to keep a copy of this book close at hand; I found myself thinking of colleagues to whom I would refer every chapter. Can people work from home? Should they work from home? Rutgers University librarians Weber and De Fino present evidence that people can and should, arguing that remote and hybrid work schedules are better for employees, libraries, and the environment....Though many recent studies have documented the improved productivity of employees who have chosen to work remotely, libraries were thrown into this largely unexplored realm, most with little or no time to plan as a result of the pandemic. Even were it not for pandemics, unforeseen electrical outages, floods, weather emergencies, earthquakes, terrorism, active shooters, and other unfortunate events require that libraries create emergency plans, taking into account the possibility of short- and long-term closures. Applicable to both public and technical services, this work is required reading for librarians and administrators of all types of libraries. Given its practical strategies and engaging text, this reviewer finds Virtual Services in the Health Sciences Library: A Handbook to be an inspiring and a highly recommended reference for health sciences libraries. Highly recommended, Virtual Services in the Health Sciences Library: A Handbookis an excellent resource for health science librarians who desire to enhance and optimally maintain their library's virtual service offerings. There are many thought-provoking ideas and suggestions for creating new services and adapting existing services to maximize virtual engagement with library patrons. This comprehensive handbook will resonate with all health sciences libraries, large and small, urban and rural, after their pandemic pivot to exclusive use of virtual resources and services. The Handbook offers invaluable information on virtual services, including community engagement; empowering and supporting staff; adapting instruction and accessing educational materials for students; and models for research consultations online and virtual systematic review workshops. Highly recommended. Chosen as a Doody's Core Title for 2023.


A positive outcome of the challenges of Covid, this volume is jam-packed with practical advice and examples for adding and assessing virtual services. Attuned to both the needs of administrators and practitioners, each thoughtful chapter, by a bevy of excellent writers and thinkers, share tips, frameworks, questions, and also provides additional online content. This is a must-read overview as it touches on virtual services from so many adjacent fields: marketing, human resources, assessment, scholarly communication and openness, sustainability. The definition of virtual services is broad - from twitter to telephone - so there are innovative examples in this volume for every kind of librarian, rural or urban, large hospital to small academic setting. You'll want to keep a copy of this book close at hand; I found myself thinking of colleagues to whom I would refer every chapter. Amanda R. Scull, editor and contributor to the slim but impactful Virtual Services in the Health Sciences Library: A Handbook, has compiled ten chapters that offer insights into how staff at various health sciences libraries not only quickly adapted and pivoted their services during the emergency stages of the pandemic but how they have continued to build upon and utilize virtual services to engage users, build community, and strengthen their assessment processes and instruction as they have transitioned into the new normal. Can people work from home? Should they work from home? Rutgers University librarians Weber and De Fino present evidence that people can and should, arguing that remote and hybrid work schedules are better for employees, libraries, and the environment....Though many recent studies have documented the improved productivity of employees who have chosen to work remotely, libraries were thrown into this largely unexplored realm, most with little or no time to plan as a result of the pandemic. Even were it not for pandemics, unforeseen electrical outages, floods, weather emergencies, earthquakes, terrorism, active shooters, and other unfortunate events require that libraries create emergency plans, taking into account the possibility of short- and long-term closures. Applicable to both public and technical services, this work is required reading for librarians and administrators of all types of libraries. Given its practical strategies and engaging text, this reviewer finds Virtual Services in the Health Sciences Library: A Handbook to be an inspiring and a highly recommended reference for health sciences libraries. Highly recommended, Virtual Services in the Health Sciences Library: A Handbookis an excellent resource for health science librarians who desire to enhance and optimally maintain their library's virtual service offerings. There are many thought-provoking ideas and suggestions for creating new services and adapting existing services to maximize virtual engagement with library patrons. This book offers technical services professionals practical ideas on how to plan for, transition to, sustain, and (if necessary) roll back remote operations. While written from the perspective of an academic library, much of the authors' guidance in ensuring the physical and emotional wellbeing of employees is applicable to all types of technical services and library operations. Readers will also find some useful justifications to help push for more remote work options in technical services. This comprehensive handbook will resonate with all health sciences libraries, large and small, urban and rural, after their pandemic pivot to exclusive use of virtual resources and services. The Handbook offers invaluable information on virtual services, including community engagement; empowering and supporting staff; adapting instruction and accessing educational materials for students; and models for research consultations online and virtual systematic review workshops. Highly recommended. Chosen as a Doody's Core Title for 2023.


Author Information

Amanda R. Scull holds an MLIS from Syracuse University and is the head of Education and Information Services at the Dartmouth College Biomedical Libraries, where she has been deeply involved in the transition of both teaching and patron services to the virtual environment during the COVID-19 closure. Prior to Dartmouth, she worked as collection development librarian and information studies faculty librarian at Keene State College.

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