Emilia C. Bell

LIS professional | Researcher

Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Blog
  • Experience
    • Professional experience
    • Publications
    • Speaking
    • Research
  • Academic CV
Menu
Emilia is wearing a teal blue roger focus, an assistive hearing device. They are staring out the window with dark hair pulled back so that the side and back of their head is visible.

Impact through connection: A reflection

Posted on July 7, 2024July 7, 2024 by Emilia C. Bell

It’s Disability Pride Month, and I’m celebrating community and connection.

Last Friday, I unboxed some assistive listening technology. I’d had to wait for it, and so was worried I had only imagined the positive impact from the first time I trialled it. But it was still there, and I once again benefited from something I hadn’t realised could help because I’d relied so heavily on adapting.

I also did a final workplace presentation before moving. It was a reflection titled “Impact through connection,” and I had a lot of fun with it.

Beyond reflecting on projects (sometimes at my own expense), I discussed positionality, reflection, reflexivity, and some future directions. From my experience, evidence comes with aspirations and hope for how things might change. And that’s rewarding – it’s a privilege to have people share and trust you with their insights or experiences and to build new partnerships and connections from that.​

Yet, as I wrote earlier this year, the risk in evidence-based practice is that “we focus on assessing change but miss celebrating the connection that created it.”

​And that felt odd to write – why wouldn’t we want to focus on evaluating what change looks like? But, when we look at the different values surrounding our efforts to create value and impact, new ways of understanding and evaluating what makes a change meaningful to a community arise.

While the presentation focused on evidence-based practice, the themes wove across many aspects of my work. Values of connection and community are important to me, and I believe they carry across in much of what I do.

While having access to assistive tech feels like a very individual thing, for me it’s happened through connection and access to community. The great part is that it supports further access and contribution.

The assistive technology I use isn’t a perfect solution, and the social and professional spaces I exist in aren’t perfect either. So, I’m thankful that I have access to both. They are complementary, allowing me to call for and respond to change differently and negotiate the balance between each.

That balance between them reminds me of a paper by Nikki Andersen, where she reflects:

“Throughout my career, I have learned the power of self-acceptance and self-advocacy, whilst also realising there is a delicate dance between adaptability and advocacy. … Somehow, I have found a balance between well-being and productivity; adaptability and advocacy; resilience, and the courage to call for change” (Anderson, 2024).

For me, whether adapting, advocating, or (more often than not) doing both at once – it’s connection and community driving impact. Community has been a catalyst to call for change. I suspect I would otherwise have continued stubbornly sticking with complete adaptability.

I closed my presentation with ongoing thoughts on future directions for evidence-based practice across library sectors, which I will carry forward and have already written about in Creative inquiry in EBP: “It’s not just …” and Finding purpose & potential in library impact assessment.

My own experiences of higher education as an undergraduate student were challenging. So, my positionality has led to questions about who evidence is serving or benefiting, and how we can ensure it is an accurate depiction of what needs to change.

So, I do continue to think that – especially in libraries – connection and partnership is an important part of understanding not just how we collect evidence but why.

​I started from an extremely critical – but also hopeful – perspective on what evidence-based practice could be when done well in any sector. And I would hope I continue to create value through that.

Emilia is wearing a teal blue roger focus, an assistive hearing device. They are staring out the window with dark hair pulled back so that the side and back of their head is visible.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
Category: Equity diversity inclusion Evidence Based Practice

Post navigation

← The problem with solutions
What does it mean to be values-based? →

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe

  • Mail
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Mastodon
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • August 2023
  • Checklists, reflexivity, and situated knowledges
  • Who carries the weight? Critical literacy on the language and impact of evidence
  • Shelf & screen: Three things I’m reading/watching
  • Six things: PhD-ing

All site content and design is licensed CC BY-NC 4.0, except where otherwise stated.

Disclaimer: Views expressed on this website represent the perspective and professional interests of Emilia (or their guests) and do not necessarily reflect the views of any organisations Emilia is associated with.

  • Mail
  • LinkedIn
  • Twitter
  • Mastodon

ABN: 38 769 325 425

© 2025 Emilia C. Bell | Powered by Minimalist Blog WordPress Theme