Posts Tagged ‘access to information’

Spring 2022 Graduate Research Assistantship 25-50% – Information Quality Lab – University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

November 12th, 2021

Start date – January 16, 2022

Description, Responsibilities, & Qualifications:
Mixed methods research assistant to Information Sciences faculty. The incumbent will join the Information Quality Lab under the direction of Dr. Jodi Schneider to work on a newly-funded, three year IMLS grant, Strengthening Public Libraries’ Information Literacy Service Through an Understanding of Knowledge Brokers’ Assessment of Technical and Scientific Information. This project will conduct mixed methods case studies—COVID-19 year 1; climate change (year 2); and AI and labor (year 3)—to understand how knowledge brokers such as journalists, Wikipedia editors, activists/advocates, public librarians assess and use scientific and technical information. Ultimately, the project will develop a conceptual model about sensemaking and use of information. Starting in 2023, the team will co-develop services for knowledge brokers and the public, in collaboration with public library test partners. Results from the project will have implications for public access, information literacy, and understanding of science on policy-relevant topics.

Duties may include:

  • Synthesizing a collection of existing literature related to knowledge brokers.
  • Collecting a sample of about 250 public-facing documents and multimedia, including news (e.g., online print outlets), Wikipedia pages, membership-based online forums, documentaries, and data visualizations, that report, quote, or analyze scientific products (research papers, preprints, datasets, etc.).
  • Using topic modeling, argumentation analysis, and other document analysis techniques to analyze documents and multimedia.
  • Preparing for and conducting interviews with knowledge brokers (journalists, Wikipedia editors, activists/advocates, public librarians).
    • Developing an interview protocol to solicit information from journalists, Wikipedia editors, activists/advocates, public librarians, etc. to understand how they assess the quality of scientific and technical information.
    • Identifying COVID-19 knowledge brokers to interview, by using the document/multimedia collection, organizational directories, etc.
  • Qualitative analysis of interview transcripts (including correcting automatically generated interview transcripts).

Required Qualifications:

  • Excellent communication skills in written and spoken English
  • Excellent analytical/critical thinking skills and effective time management skills
  • Interest in topics such as misinformation, information diffusion, science/technology policy, etc.
  • Interest or experience in one or more methods such as: mixed methods, document analysis, altmetrics, semi-structured interviewing, critical incident technique, or qualitative data analysis

Preferred Qualifications:

  • Available for multiple semesters, including summer
  • Experience conducting and/or transcribing interviews
  • Experience with qualitative analysis software such as ATLAS.TI, NVivo, Taguette, RQDA, etc.
  • Experience as a journalist, Wikipedia editor, activist, advocate, public librarian, information conduit, or knowledge broker
  • Enrollment in the Master’s in Library and Information Science program or in a PhD program
  • Previous completion of one or more CITI Program ethics trainings modules
  • Experience in academic and/or scientific writing

Application Procedure: Interested candidates should send a cover letter and resume in a single pdf file named Lastname_IMLS_RA.pdf (e.g., Schneider_IMLS_RA.pdf) to ischool-infoquality@illinois.edu

Review of applications will begin immediately. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. All applications received by November 15, 2021 will receive full consideration.

Posted on the Assistantship Clearinghouse.

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Graduate Hourly position – Information Quality Lab – University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

November 12th, 2021

Start date – ASAP

Description, Responsibilities, & Qualifications:
Mixed methods research assistant to Information Sciences faculty. The incumbent will join the Information Quality Lab under the direction of Dr. Jodi Schneider to work on a newly-funded, three year IMLS grant, Strengthening Public Libraries’ Information Literacy Service Through an Understanding of Knowledge Brokers’ Assessment of Technical and Scientific Information. This project will conduct mixed methods case studies (first topic: COVID-19) to understand how knowledge brokers such as journalists, Wikipedia editors, activists/advocates, public librarians assess and use scientific and technical information. Ultimately, the project will develop a conceptual model about sensemaking and use of information. Starting in 2023, the team will co-develop services for knowledge brokers and the public, in collaboration with public library test partners. Results from the project will have implications for public access, information literacy, and understanding of science on policy-relevant topics.

This position may become a tuition waiver generating assistantship for the Spring 2022 semester for eligible Master’s and Doctoral students.

Initial duties will include:

  • Developing an interview protocol to solicit information from journalists, Wikipedia editors, activists/advocates, public librarians, etc. to understand how they assess the quality of scientific and technical information
  • Synthesizing a collection of existing literature related to knowledge brokers
  • Collecting a sample of about 250 public-facing documents and multimedia, including news (e.g., online print outlets), Wikipedia pages, membership-based online forums, documentaries, and data visualizations, that report, quote, or analyze scientific products (research papers, preprints, datasets, etc.)
  • Identifying COVID-19 knowledge brokers to interview, by using the document/multimedia collection, organizational directories, etc.

Future work will include:

  • Conducting interviews with knowledge brokers (journalists, Wikipedia editors, activists/advocates, public librarians)
  • Correcting automatically generated interview transcripts
  • Qualitative analysis of interview transcripts
  • Using topic modeling, argumentation analysis, and other document analysis techniques to analyze documents and multimedia
  • Case studies on climate change (year 2) and AI and labor (year 3)

Required Qualifications:

  • Excellent communication skills in written and spoken English
  • Excellent analytical/critical thinking skills and effective time management skills
  • Interest in topics such as: misinformation, information diffusion, science/technology policy
  • Interest or experience in one or more methods such as: mixed methods, document analysis, altmetrics, semi-structured interviewing, critical incident technique, or qualitative data analysis

Preferred Qualifications:

  • Available for multiple semesters, including summer
  • Experience conducting and/or transcribing interviews
  • Experience with qualitative analysis software such as ATLAS.TI, NVivo, Taguette, RQDA, etc.
  • Experience as a journalist, Wikipedia editor, activist, advocate, public librarian, information conduit, or knowledge broker
  • Enrollment in the Master’s in Library and Information Science program or in a PhD program
  • Previous completion of one or more CITI Program ethics trainings modules
  • Experience in academic and/or scientific writing

Compensation: minimum $18/hour for Master’s students or $20/hour for PhD students (negotiable commensurate with experience)

Application Procedure: Interested candidates should send a cover letter and resume in a single PDF file named Lastname_IMLS_hourly.pdf (e.g., Schneider_IMLS_hourly.pdf) to ischool-infoquality@illinois.edu.

Review of applications will begin immediately. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. All applications received by November 15, 2021 will receive full consideration.

Posted on the University of Illinois Financial Aid Virtual Job Board and Handshake.

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Somebody’s Got to Pay (for Investigative Reporting)

March 7th, 2009

Timothy Burke is my new hero. The death* of newspapers, he says, is a problem mainly because somebody’s got to pay for investigative reporting:

We don’t need newspapers to have film criticism or editorial commentary or consumer analysis of automobiles or comic strips or want ads or public records. It might be that existing online provision of those kinds of information could use serious improvement or has issues of its own. It might be that older audiences don’t know where to find some of that information, or have trouble consuming it in its online form. But there’s nothing that makes published newspapers or radio programming inherently superior at providing any of those functions, and arguably many things that make them quite inferior to the potential usefulness of online media. So throw the columnists and the reviewers and the lifestyle reporters off the newspaper liferaft.

So it comes down to independent, sustained investigation of public affairs. The argument that online media cannot provide this function comes down to money

Burke gives more details and examples, and calls for new funding models, including philanthropic and/or foundation money. He concludes that the “The end of the newspaper model of the last century doesn’t have to be the end of independent investigative reporting.”

Go read the whole thing.
*It seems like death and rebirth, to me, especially with some major newspapers reinventing themselves online. But that’s another matter.

Burke first came to my attention last year, from a talk he gave to the LC Working Group on the Future of Bibliographic Control at March’s meeting on the Users and Uses of Bibliographic Data. Burke represented and reflected upon the user perspective, as an academic who searches catalogs outside his area of expertise.

Via John Dupuis’s friendfeed.

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Posted in future of publishing, intellectual freedom | Comments (1)