THE CONCEPT OF SERVICE ORIENTATION: AN EXPLORATORY STUDY ON THE CONCEPT IN RELATIONSHIP TO THE LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SERVICES FIELD

dc.contributor.authorFIT2GIBB0NS, SHIRLEY A.
dc.date.accessioned2020-12-01T10:31:41Z
dc.date.available2020-12-01T10:31:41Z
dc.date.issued1976-10
dc.descriptionA thesis submitted to The Graduate School of Rutgers University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Written under the direction of Professor Ernest DeProspo of the Graduate School of Library Serviceen_US
dc.description.abstractThe Concept of Service Orientation: An Exploratory Study on the Concept in Relationship to the Library and Information Services Field by SHIRLEY A. FITZGIBBONS, Ph.D. Thesis director: Professor Ernest DeProspo The investigation had two major objectives: (1) to explore the concept of service orientation, and (2) to develop a methodology for measuring the concept. Service orientation has been considered an important professional ideology for the field, but has never been defined sufficiently nor measured adequately. Three definitions of service orientation taken from the literature of the sociology of professions and the library field were presented as ideal types to be tested: the Traditional-Professional Type, the Semiprofessional Type, and the Open-Systems Type. A set of items was developed from these ideal type definitions which formed the basis for a Q-sorts instrument. Perceptions on service orientation were measured for three subsets of the library and information field: 99 library school students, 100 practitioners, and 90 library leaders (leaders of the American Library Association) for a total sample of 203 participants. The degree of consensus between the three subsets and within each subset was determined through the use of Q-methodology involving a Q-sorts ranking instrument, correlations between persons' rankings, and factor analysis of the correlations. The importance of service orientation as a work value was assessed through an adapted form of the Rosenberg Work Values Instrument. Possible related demographic and attitudinal variables were explored through a short questionnaire. The results indicated that service is an important work value common to the three subsets. Leaders and practitioners especially valued the altruistic meaning of service (contributing to society) while all three groups valued the more general meaning (opportunity to be helpful to others). The findings determined that not one but several patterns of service do exist in the field as illustrated by the three factor types created: Open-Systems, People-Oriented, and a mixed type (both Traditional-Professional and Open-Systems Types). Most importantly, the general consensus on service orientation was found to be greater than anticipated. The three separate analyses of the sample groups indicated a one factor solution, with a total of fifty-four consensus items, the total number of items. A three factor solution resulted from the combined groups analysis with a total of thirty-seven consensus items including an awareness of the importance: of interpersonal and communication skills; of the process of bringing information, books, and people together; of helping people; of the accuracy of information given to patrons; of the liaison role of libraries; and of planning services based on the total community. Sufficient consensus items have been found to form the "common core" of a definition of service. The consensus items came from two of the posited ideal types: the ideal Semiprofessional Type and the ideal Open-Systems Type. A test of the theoretical, ideal types was undertaken by submitting an inverted Q-sorts data matrix to a factor analysis. The ideal types were shown to be multidimensional when tested with empirical data. The results of the current study indicate a positive perception of service on the part of the sample group; they further support the critics of the professional model of service as being inappropriate for the library field. The ideal type, the Open-Systems Type, most closely matches the perceptions of the field; this could have important implications for library education and continuing education. The open-systems, service-oriented person needs new knowledge and expertise outside of current course offerings. The past stereotypes of librarians need to be reanalyzed in light of this new philosophical view of service. The methodology used in the study, the Q-methodology, should be useful in future studies of service.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/123456789/12313
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectCONCEPT,en_US
dc.subjectSERVICE ORIENTATION,en_US
dc.subjectEXPLORATORY STUDY,en_US
dc.subjectCONCEPT IN RELATIONSHIP,en_US
dc.subjectLIBRARY AND INFORMATION SERVICES FIELDen_US
dc.titleTHE CONCEPT OF SERVICE ORIENTATION: AN EXPLORATORY STUDY ON THE CONCEPT IN RELATIONSHIP TO THE LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SERVICES FIELDen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
Files
Original bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
THE CONCEPT OF SERVICE ORIENTATION.pdf
Size:
17.49 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:
License bundle
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
No Thumbnail Available
Name:
license.txt
Size:
1.62 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Description:
Collections