John V. Richardson, Jr.
Quick Facts
Biography
John Vinson Richardson, Jr. is an American professor of information studies at University of California, Los Angeles, with a significant record of research and publications on intelligent question answering systems, reference service, and history of librarianship. His current research focuses on assessment and evaluation issues related to virtual reference (i.e., chat) such as time in queue, service duration, content analysis or microanalysis of questions, as well as user satisfaction. Currently, Richardson also serves as an adjunct professor in the School of Information Studies at Charles Sturt University in NSW, Australia.
Education
Richardson attended Whetstone High School (Columbus, Ohio), received a B.A. in sociology from Ohio State University (1971), an MLS from Peabody College, Vanderbilt University (1972, Beta Phi Mu), and a doctorate from Indiana University (1978).
Career
Richardson joined the faculty of the University of California, Los Angeles in 1978 as an assistant professor in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science. He was promoted to associate professor with tenure in 1983 and to full professor in 1998. He also has served as associate dean of UCLA’s Graduate Division for five years. Richardson was promoted to professor emeritus in February 2013 and now serves as an adjunct professor at Charles Sturt University in New South Wales, Australia through the 2018 academic year.
Awards
Richardson has gained international recognition and garnered multiple awards. In recognition of his significant research contributions in the field of Library and Information Science, Richardson was appointed as the Visiting Distinguished Scholar to the prestigious Office of Research at OCLC, Inc., for the academic year 1996-1997. Richardson is the author of more than a dozen scholarly books and dozens of articles, and for eight years, he served as the editor in chief of the premier journal in librarianship, the Library Quarterly, published by the University of Chicago Press. He has been awarded numerous prizes including the Justin Winsor Prize from the American Library Association and the Best Information Science Book award from the American Society for Information Science and Technology.
Richardson’s work has worldwide recognition, and he has studied and lectured in Aberstywyth University, Wales (Beta Phi Mu Scholar); Australia; Eritrea; in the Russian Federation (ALISE Teaching Fellow in Moscow and St. Petersburg) including the Russian Far East (Vladivostok, Khabarovsk, and Sakhalin Island), Tanzania; Turkmenistan; Uganda; and Zambia. He is the recipient of two Fulbright scholarships from the Fulbright Program, and has lectured internationally as a guest of the United States Department of State.
Published works
Richardson's published books include:
- Richardson on Reference (forthcoming).
- Understanding Reference Transactions: Transforming an Art into Science (San Diego, CA: Academic Press, 2002) (Matthew L. Saxton, co-author).
- Knowledge-Based Systems in General Reference Work: Applications, Problems, and Progress (New York: Academic Press, 1995).
- The Gospel of Scholarship: Pierce Butler and A Critique of American Librarianship (Metuchen, NJ: Scarecrow Press, 1992).
- The Spirit of Inquiry: The Graduate Library School at Chicago, 1921-1951 (Chicago: American Library Association, 1982).