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Social Work Librarian @ Play
Tuesday, December 28, 2004
  APA goes gray... This year[at ALA Midwinter in Boston], APA will present a database approach to managing the gray literature. The talk will run from 10-10:30 at the Nantucket Theatre in the Convention Center [on Monday, January 17].
[I just got this email announcement from PsychInfo because I am on the ACRL - EBSS listserv] ...The product's name is PSYCHExtra; began this year with 43, 000 items; 30, 000 will be added each week. http://www.apa.org/monitor/dec04/databases.html
So, does this make WWWRSW more or less
valuable?

 
  "But real world therapists don't do Research..." This article addresses in a complete way the multitude of reasons Social Work students give for avoiding learning the whys and hows of Research. It comes via Georgia State University Library from The New Social Worker. (I found it while doing my own research on RSS for librarians.)

http://www.library.gsu.edu/news/index.asp?view=details&ID=4544&typeID=61


 
Friday, May 07, 2004
   
  Last day for me this semester in SSW Resource Room I will be taking a break from the blog to deal with my other non-Social Work Library Projects. One involves setting up the beginnings of a library in a small, religous, elementary school. No block grants are involved. This means they are invisble in terms of our professional literature which means we have had to learn mostly on the job and that there is certainly a journal article in this project somehwere.

I hope also to get a chance to work on my other academic interest - investigating why Evangelical Christians are so keen on IVF; why their religous leaders are mum about the ethical issues involved and what Korean Christians could teach us about adoption and DNA worship.

About this Blog
I am looking into ways to improve it by adding links and such. I also want to be more graphics oriented to stretch myself. I am very much a text person, but I know most of my patrons are not...I expect to be back in about 3 weeks, still plowing through Gary Holden's WWWRSW

Until then, have a great month and thanks for reading 
  Log for Friday May 7, 2004 Printers: no problem
Computers: SSWLIB1 gave a funky error msg when student tried to print from inside webct e-reserves..."Printer needs to be attached"...checked to see if it was attached to CSPrint and yes it was...this may be part of the problems caused by the suspected spyware on this machine...student got what she needed at a kinder, gentler computer...
Reference: more along the line of "can I have a paper clip?"...many packed in here doing last minute papers....finished drafts of training manual for general suff and one for the printers... 
  Log for Tuesday May 4, 2004 Printers: no problems
Computers: no problems
Reference: nada; it's a morgue in here... 
Tuesday, April 27, 2004
   
  Log for Tuesday April 27, 2004 Printer: no problems
Computers: evil SSWLIB1 froze again- during a SAVE - walked the student through recovery and over to a new machine
Reference: Prof wants a specific search on best practices dealing with a program whose board she is on - gave a heads up to the team....finished the first pass on training manual on dealing with printing resources - I think I'l subtitle it : How to avoid a riot at the Printer...No time to work on my new fav project - understanding Gary Holden's WWWRSW 
Friday, April 23, 2004
  Log for Friday April 23, 2004 Printer: no problems
Computers: SOAR registraion is in process; hearing the usual sqeaks about it; gave up my workstation at 10 to the registration cause...students were very grateful; the email citations feature on Proquest appears to not be working, but I have been too busy to fully test - will do so next week and then tell MF if it's bad; SSWLIB1 &2 are freezing up intermittently- will alert help desk by email; still haven't figured out how to save predictably to a CD...
Reference: student needing help getting full text from Psychology Journals. She had not been successful in doing her search and was delighted in getting one on one help; she recorded the process as if she had never seen the DB before... Investigated how to use RefWorks in a group manner as requested by a prof who actually had read one of the Tech Tidbits...which of course made my day; sent this info. to my boss for her to walk through it and then pass onto the prof.; working on training manual for the reource room - concentrating now on how to fix printing problems.
 
Tuesday, April 20, 2004
  RefWorks - it has so much promise... But at my college, it just seems like a pain, unless you really diislike formatting footnotes and bibliographies. And it makes sense for doctoral dissertations. But that's about it. There is no uniform interface for RefWorks with respect to all of our databases. And the cool cite-n-write feature is not useable on campus...only on your home computer. And the Search Online Database feature allows only limited access to one database - the Simmons OPAC and then what you can search for on the OPAC is not clear. I have mixed success with the searches. What is the point of this feature? If I ran the zoo, i would build an interface around the RefWorks logon that gives the Simmons view of it - the features that work for Simmons...this tool is just so unfriendly and reminscent of everything I dislike about libraries... 
  Log for Tuesday April 18, 2004 Printer: no mechanical problems; student did have problem printing out the right form of her powerpoint slides - she was very happy to find out the magic that happens when the Print window is displayed for PPT with its own particular options.

Computer: SSWLIB1 giving intermittent problems again same "shell hook.." problem. Occured this time when student trying to save to floppy from a Word doc. On our new computer, I discovered from my collegue, JK, that the floppy drive can be attached to the front of the computer as well, where you can also put in the USB.

Reference: Professor requested me to print out 2 items while she was in class. I neglected to get the full bibliographic info from her and so was able to get her only one article.

Tech Tidbits: worked out a second article on RefWorks- this time focusing on the databases that have a big, fat RefWorks button on the results page. These of course would be the databases that CSA gives us; CSA also being the owner of RefWorks. 
  Correction to Miss Ratio for WWWRSW Last week I did a tiny search of WWWRSW, playing with ratios of search results. The correct Miss ratio should have been 1 miss to 8 hits = 12.5%. I am still working out the usefulness of this ratio... 
  Correction to WWWRSW miss ratio Last week I miscalculated the miss ratio for an initial, tiny search I did on WWWRSW. It should have been 1 miss for 8 hits = 12.5%. I am still working out the usefulness of this ratio... 
Friday, April 16, 2004
  OOPs - I made a mistake w/ repsect to WWWRSW In my post last Tues, I miscalculated the miss rate for a search in Holden's WWWRSW. It should have been 1/8 or 12.5%. I am still working on the utility of this ratio...stay tuned for further developments... 
  Log for Friday, April 14, 2004 Printer: having intermittent problems with 3 workstations; notified helpdesk
Computers: one workstation brings up a rougue site when the Internet Explorer Icon is clicked; in my explorations on the desktop, I clicked on another IE icon and got a very strange error msg; sent this to helpdesk; on all of the computers I have noticed no similar toolbars which is odd because the user is typically not allowed access to those settings. It is particularly annoying when you can't find an icon to Webmail or WebCT. The problem will likely be solved with the new computers expected in the near future; but it would be good to understand how these toolbars were able to be altered.
Reference: no requests; semester is dying down; spent most of my day figuring out system weirdness, both computer and administrative.
 
Tuesday, April 13, 2004
  Log for Tuesday April 13, 2004 Printer: I received an error msg I had never seen before; it may be related to our new computer ; sent email to C.
Computers: Technology brought up a new computer for assistant's desk. Only problem so far is no floppy drive. SSWLIB3 kept freezing in WebCT even with powering off and on; SSWLIB1 froze once but is okay now.
Reference Questions: A student I directed to the City's main library for a resource found that they really didn't have it - even though it was listed in the catalog. Quite Distressing. A student wanted help with a Word/Excel problem; I was able to help a bit but not completely. A fellow student was able to help her completely. At least she left happy. Anothe student failed to find two articles her professor says is on reserves; we looked in WebCt and through the library page, but no luck.
Backgound Tasks: learning about Gary Holden's WWWRSW site; it appears quite rich but it's not apparent what it's made of... 
  When do we use Gary Holden's WWWRSW site? The Social Work library of my school plus many others lists WWWRSW as the web-resource for Social Work students and professionals. I have ambled through this site but could never get a handle on it which meant I never recommend it to SW grad students. It didn't appear to be a problem because most of the time all they are required to use is peer-reviewed journals. But down the road, when the students graduate, they will not have access to all of our library databases. And with Evidence Based Practice (EBP) rearing its head, they will need access to good quality evidence that will hold up to an HMO review process.

So I have started to work at understanding WWWRSW- in the hope that it could prove an acceptable substitute for our library databases. I missed the sites's "about us" button on the bottom of the page which led to a bibliography about the site - I had done a lit search on my own and had come up with some of the articles on my own (but not all). The key finding is that this site is built around Grey Literature...so now I am looking at what exactly constitutes Grey lit for Social Work..

In the meantime, I did a search for "evidence based practice", choosing Exact Phrase and got 8 hits. I was expecting to see a link to University of Michigan's Social Work Library that has excellent links, but it was not listed. Four of the 8 did look relevant - particularly the last one - a site based in the UK dealing with children. So the relevancy ratio so far (for this extremely small sample )is 50% and the miss rate 1/10 or 10%. More later.

 
I'm a library student exploring how to harness the Internet's power. In this blog, I am addressing issues related to Evidence Based Practice for Social Workers; particularly the utility of Gary Holden's website WWWRSW. winifred.flint@gmail.com

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