Frederick Wilfrid Lancaster Explained

Frederick Wilfrid ("Wilf")[1] Lancaster (September 4, 1933 – August 25, 2013)[2] was a British-American information scientist. He immigrated to the US in 1959 and worked as information specialist for the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Maryland, from 1965 to 1968. He was a professor at the University of Illinois, Urbana, from 1972 to 1992 and professor emeritus from 1992 to 2013. He continued as an honored scholar after retirement speaking on the evolution of librarianship in the 20th and 21st century.[3]

Lancaster made notable achievements with early online retrieval systems, including evaluation studies of MEDLARS. He published broadly in library and information science over a period of four decades and continuously emerged as a visionary leader in the field, where research, writing, and teaching earned him the highest honors in the profession. Lancaster excelled at many fronts: as scholar, educator, mentor, and writer.

Career

Lancaster graduated as an associate of the British Library Association from the University of Northumbria at Newcastle, England, in 1955 and was named a fellow of the Library Association of Great Britain in 1969. He began his professional career as a senior assistant at the Newcastle-upon-Tyne Public Libraries. He immigrated in 1959 to Akron, Ohio to become the senior librarian for science and technology at the Akron Public Library.[4]

Lancaster worked as the technical librarian for Babcock & Wilcox from 1960 until he returned to the U.K. in 1962 to become a senior research assistant at ASLIB in London.

In 1964, Lancaster returned to the U.S. where he was integrally involved in the design and management of MEDLARS, the National Library of Medicine's computerized bibliographic retrieval system for articles in academic journals in medicine and allied health professions.

Lancaster was appointed associate professor and director of the biomedical librarianship program at the University of Illinois-Urbana in 1970. In 1972 he was promoted to professor at the university where he did research and taught until 1992. He became professor emeritus in 1992.[5]

Research and scholarship

Lancaster, was the most cited author, during the 1970s and early 1990s, in the discipline of information science and had broad intellectual influence.[6] Over a period of four decades Lancaster was a visionary leader in the field of library and information science.[7]

His evaluation of the MEDLARS Demand Search Service in 1966 and 1967 was an important landmark in the evaluation of a computer-based retrieval system. It was the first application of recall and precision measures in a large, operational database setting.[8]

Information Retrieval Online (Lancaster & Fayen, 1973) was named ASIS Best Information Science Book in 1974. It was declared a "major milestone in the literature of online systems" that "functioned for years as a textbook, handbook, and encyclopedia on all aspects of online retrieval systems".[9]

Lancaster was a great analytical thinker and a great synthetic thinker and writer. His work on measurement and evaluation is a sound demonstration of both of these abilities. His books, The Measurement and Evaluation of Library Services and If You Want to Evaluate Your Library, have practical applications for those interested in engaging in evaluation studies.[10]

Contributions to information science

Lancaster participated in many international conferences and lecture series in Australia; Brazil; Canada; China; Colombia; Costa Rica; Denmark; Egypt; England; Finland; France; Germany; Guatemala; Hong Kong; India; Israel; Italy; Mexico; Namibia; the Netherlands; Norway; Poland; Portugal; Singapore; South Africa; Spain; Sri Lanka; Sweden; Syria; Taiwan; Tunisia; Turkey; and the West Indies.

In 1975 he edited the proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute on the evaluation and scientific management of libraries and information centers.[11]

He was a Fulbright professor at the Indian Statistical Institute (1991); in Denmark at the Royal School of Librarianship, (1985); and in Brazil at the Instituto Brasileiro de Informacao em Ciencia e Technologia, (1975).[12]

Teaching

In 1980 Lancaster was honored with the first Outstanding Teacher Award by the American Society for Information Science.[13] He "introduced new approaches to education for information science expressed in a range of courses that were designed to prepare his students for a new kind of professional world that was in the making and to developments in which he was especially attuned".[14]

Lancaster taught courses in information retrieval, bibliometrics, bibliographic organization, and the evaluation of library and information services.

He directed numerous doctoral dissertations, served on many doctoral committees and was especially supportive of international students. A list of dissertation committees on which he served is included in the 2008 Festschrift published in his honor.[15]

Library Trends

Lancaster edited the journal Library Trends from 1986 to 2006.[16]

Personal life

In a family tribute Cesaria Lancaster (Maria Cesaria Volpe), who married Frederick Wilfrid Lancaster in 1961, and his six children provided warm reflections of their life together.[17]

At the time of his death he had thirteen grandchildren.[18]

Awards

See also

Selected works

References

Notes and References

  1. Hayes. Robert M. A tribute to F. Wilfrid Lancaster. Library Trends . Spring 2008 . 56 . 4 . 731–739 . 10.1353/lib.0.0015 . 2142/9489 . 35314400 . Clearly, Wilf Lancaster is a superb teacher . 3 November 2011. free .
  2. Web site: Professor Emeritus F. W. Lancaster passes away . www.lis.illinois.edu . 2013-08-28 . 2013-09-17.
  3. 2009. Speaker at An International Conference for Yunnan Provincial Library's 100th Anniversary November 16–17, 2009, Kunming, China. "The Changing Face of a Profession: Librarianship as a Career from 1949-2009". by FW Lancaster, Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois. Conference title: "Multilevel, Multicultural & Multiethnic Information Society". in absentia.
  4. https://www.renner-wikoffchapel.com/obituary/Frederick-Lancaster Frederick Lancaster Obituary
  5. Web site: Professor Emeritus F. W. Lancaster passes away . www.lis.illinois.edu . 2013-08-28 . 2013-09-17.
  6. Qin Jian. 2008. "F. W. Lancaster: A Bibliometric Analysis". Library Trends 56 (4): 954–67.
  7. Haricombe, Lorraine J., and Keith Russell. 2008. "The Influence of F. W. Lancaster on Information Science and on Libraries: Notes on the Scope of This Festschrift". Library Trends 56 (4): 724–30.
  8. Rapp, Barbara A. 2008. "Excellence in Evaluation: Early Landmarks at the National Library of Medicine". Library Trends 56 (4): 859–87.
  9. Bourne, C. P., & Hahn, T. B. (2003). A History of Online Information Systems 1963–1978, p.2. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
  10. Kyrillidou, Martha, and Colleen Cook. 2008. "The Evolution of Measurement and Evaluation of Libraries: A Perspective from the Association of Research Libraries". Library Trends 56 (4): 888–909.
  11. NATO Advanced Study Institute on the Evaluation and Scientific Management of Libraries and Information Centres F. Wilfrid Lancaster and C. W Cleverdon. 1977. Evaluation and Scientific Management of Libraries and Information Centres: [Proceedings of the Nato Advanced Study Institute on the Evaluation and Scientific Management of Libraries and Information Centres Bristol U.k. August 17–29, 1975]. Leyden: Noordhoff.
  12. F. Wilfrid Lancaster". 2008. Library Trends 56 (4): 975–93. doi:10.1353/lib.0.0007.
  13. https://www.asist.org/programs-services/awards-honors/teacher-award/teacher-recipients/ Outstanding Information Science Teacher Award Recipients
  14. Rayward, W. Boyd, and John Unsworth. 2008. "Preface". Library Trends 56 (4): 721–23. doi:10.1353/lib.0.0006.
  15. Haricombe, Lorraine J., and Chandra Prabha. 2008. "F. W. Lancaster as Scholar, Teacher, and Mentor: Reflections of Students". Library Trends 56 (4): 747–62. doi:10.1353/lib.0.0003.
  16. Rayward, W. Boyd, and John Unsworth. 2008. "Preface". Library Trends 56 (4): 721–23. doi:10.1353/lib.0.0006.
  17. Lancaster, Cesaria, Children: Miriam Meyer, Owen Lancaster, Jude Lancaster, Aaron Lancaster, Lakshmi Hanumanthappa, and Raji Hanumanthappa. 2008. "F. W. Lancaster: A Family Tribute". Library Trends 56 (4): 740–46.
  18. https://www.renner-wikoffchapel.com/obituary/Frederick-Lancaster Frederick Lancaster Obituary