Jill Boruff

Jill Boruff, MLIS, AHIP, is a health sciences librarian at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, where she supports the teaching, learning, and research of faculty and students in rehabilitation and mental health. She has supported research teams as the information specialist on over 20 published knowledge syntheses and teaches expert searching to graduate students in several academic and professional programs. In 2021, she initiated the use of institutional data repositories for knowledge synthesis search deposits. Since June 2022, she has served as the co-editor in chief of the Journal of the Medical Library Association.


Session

06-04
13:30
90min
Search Strategies as Data: Navigating the Realities of Control, Deposit, Attribution, and Advocacy in Knowledge Synthesis
Sabine Calleja, Heather Cunningham, Daniela Ziegler, Karly Gunson, Julia Martyniuk, Jill Boruff, Pincivy Alix

Topic: This workshop builds on ongoing discussions around understanding knowledge synthesis (KS) search strategies as data and promoting their deposit in research data repositories. It will foster dialogue and critical thinking through real-world scenarios that health sciences librarians frequently encounter when searching for, developing, citing, and advocating for librarian-authored search strategies in KS projects. Through group discussions, scenario-based activities, and collective brainstorming, attendees will deepen their understanding of: The value of librarian-authored search strategies as intellectual outputs; the importance of depositing librarian KS work in research data repositories; common barriers to deposit and authorship recognition; practical strategies for advocacy and institutional change.
Target Audience: Health sciences librarians in any setting who develop search strategies for KS projects, have questions related to authorship, recognition, or data deposit and/or are curious about how to advocate for the visibility and impact of their KS-related work. Objectives: By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to articulate the benefits and challenges of conceptualizing search strategies as research data; identify common barriers to depositing search strategies and receiving appropriate credit; analyze real-world scenarios to develop practical responses and advocacy strategies; collaborate with peers to brainstorm solutions and share institutional practices. Activity Description: In small groups participants will engage in mini design-thinking activities to discuss real-world scenarios, identify key issues, and propose possible solutions.

Knowledge Synthesis
Pilot