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Dive into the research topics where Selinda Berg is active.

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Featured researches published by Selinda Berg.


Library Hi Tech | 2015

Ease of use and usefulness as measures of student experience in a multi-platform e-textbook pilot

David James Johnston; Selinda Berg; Mita Williams

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to contribute to the understanding of how students accept and use e-textbooks in higher education by assessing their experiences with e-textbooks from Flat World Knowledge (FWK) and Nelson Education during a two year campus pilot. Design/methodology/approach – Students enrolled in one of 11 classes involved in the library’s e-textbook pilot were recruited to complete an online survey including questions related to the perceived usefulness and perceived ease of use of electronic textbooks, as well as their general habits with the textbook. This study uses the Technology Acceptance Model as a framework for analysis. Findings – Students experienced a drop in enthusiasm for e-textbooks from the beginning to the end of the pilot. While research suggests that students prefer for print over electronic in some contexts, students rarely acted on that preference by seeking out available alternative print options. Student experience with the open/affordable textbook (FWK) was v...


Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science-revue Canadienne Des Sciences De L Information Et De Bibliotheconomie | 2014

“You Can’t Learn It in School”: Field Experiences and Their Contributions to Education and Professional Identity

Kristin Hoffmann; Selinda Berg

Field experiences are uniquely positioned at the intersection of education and the workplace, making them key sites for the development of professional identity, which results from socialization processes that occur in both education and work environments. To explore how field experiences complement, diverge from, and intersect with classroom experiences, this research analysed interviews with and reports of Canadian library and information science students who did coop placements in academic libraries. The findings confirm that field experiences are important for linking classroom learning to practice and that they help illuminate the realities of librarianship and clarify the implications of classroom learning for practice. Les expériences de terrain occupent une position unique à l’intersection du système éducatif et du monde du travail. Cela fait d’elles des lieux-clés du développement de l’identité professionnelle, qui résulte elle-même des processus de socialisation qui se produisent aussi bien dans l’éducation que dans les milieux de travail. Pour explorer la façon dont les expériences de terrain complètent, s’écartent, et s’entrecroisent avec les expériences en classe, cette recherche a analysé des entrevues et des rapports d’étudiants en bibliothéconomie et sciences de l’information au Canada qui ont fait des stages coopératifs dans des bibliothèques universitaires. Les résultats confirment que les expériences de terrain sont importantes pour faire le pont entre l’apprentissage en classe et la pratique, et qu’elles contribuent à éclairer les réalités de la bibliothéconomie et à clarifier les implications pour la pratique de l’apprentissage en classe.


Evidence Based Library and Information Practice | 2017

Understanding Factors that Encourage Research Productivity for Academic Librarians

Kristin Hoffmann; Selinda Berg; Denise Koufogiannakis

Abstract Objective – This project identifies the factors that contribute to the success of librarians as active researchers. Research success is generally aligned with productivity and output, and the authors are therefore interested in understanding the factors that encourage research productivity. This fills a gap in the literature on librarians as researchers, which has tended to focus on barriers rather than enablers. Methods – For this quantitative study, we distributed an online survey to 1,653 potential participants across Canada and received 453 usable responses for a 27% response rate. The survey asked participants to report their research outputs and to answer questions that addressed three categories of factors: Individual Attributes, Peers and Community, and Institutional Structures and Supports. We then statistically analyzed participant responses in order to identify relationships between the research output variables (weighted output score and number of peer-reviewed articles) and the three categories, the factors within those categories, and the constituent components. Results – Participants’ research output consisted largely of presentations, non-peer-reviewed articles, peer-reviewed articles, and posters. All three categories of factors were significantly related to research output, both for a calculated weighted output score and for number of peer-reviewed articles. All of the factors identified within those categories were also significant when tested against weighted output score, but Intrinsic Motivations was not a significant factor when tested against number of peer-reviewed articles. Several components of factors were also not significant for number of peer-reviewed articles. Age was the only significant component of Demographics. Three components of Education and Experience were significant: whether participants had received research training after completing their MLIS, whether they were working on an advanced degree, and the institution where they had obtained their MLIS. Conclusions – Research productivity is significantly impacted by all three categories: Individual Attributes, Peers and Community, and Institutional Structures and Supports. Fostering an environment that focuses on all of these areas will be most likely to promote research output for librarians. At the same time, this study’s findings point to particular aspects that warrant further investigation, such as the nature and effect of institutional support and librarians’ motivations for doing research.


Evidence Based Library and Information Practice | 2016

The Reciprocal Benefits of Library Researcher-in-Residence Programs

Virginia Wilson; Selinda Berg

2016 Wilson and Berg. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative CommonsAttribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike License 4.0 International (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-ncsa/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial purposes, and, if transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the same or similar license to this one.


The Journal of Academic Librarianship | 2010

Not on the Same Page: Undergraduates' Information Retrieval in Electronic and Print Books

Selinda Berg; Kristin Hoffmann; Diane Dawson


Library Trends | 2011

Reconnecting Information Literacy Policy with the Core Values of Librarianship

Heidi Lm Jacobs; Selinda Berg


College & Research Libraries | 2013

Academic Librarians and Research: A Study of Canadian Library Administrator Perspectives

Selinda Berg; Heidi Lm Jacobs; Dayna Cornwall


The Journal of Academic Librarianship | 2013

By Librarians, For Librarians: Building a Strengths-Based Institute to Develop Librarians' Research Culture in Canadian Academic Libraries

Heidi Lm Jacobs; Selinda Berg


The Journal of Academic Librarianship | 2009

Integrating Research into LIS Field Experiences in Academic Libraries

Selinda Berg; Kristin Hoffmann; Diane Dawson


Partnership: The Canadian Journal of Library and Information Practice and Research | 2011

Something to Talk About: Re-thinking Conversations on Research Culture in Canadian Academic Libraries

Heidi Lm Jacobs; Selinda Berg; Dayna Cornwall

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Kristin Hoffmann

University of Western Ontario

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Diane Dawson

University of Saskatchewan

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Ken N. Meadows

University of Western Ontario

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Nazi Torabi

University of Western Ontario

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Roma Harris

University of Western Ontario

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