1 / 20

The Academic Library Experiences & Information Seeking Behavior of Undergraduates

The Academic Library Experiences & Information Seeking Behavior of Undergraduates. Ethelene Whitmire Assistant Professor University of California – Los Angeles Department of Information Studies Tuesday, February 14, 2006 LAUC-LA. RESEARCH QUESTIONS.

libby
Télécharger la présentation

The Academic Library Experiences & Information Seeking Behavior of Undergraduates

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Academic Library Experiences & Information Seeking Behavior of Undergraduates Ethelene Whitmire Assistant Professor University of California – Los Angeles Department of Information Studies Tuesday, February 14, 2006 LAUC-LA

  2. RESEARCH QUESTIONS • Which factors are related to undergraduates’ library use? • Is there a relationship between the library use and undergraduates’ educational outcomes (ex. Critical thinking)? • Do undergraduates’ academic library use patterns change during college? • How do undergraduates seek information?

  3. DATA SOURCES • National Study of Student Learning • College Student Experiences Questionnaire • University of Wisconsin Undergraduate Student Satisfaction Survey • National Center for Education Statistics – Academic Library Survey • Interviews of undergraduates at Yale and the University of WI - Madison

  4. SETTINGS • Multi-institutional studies = Research, Doctoral, Comprehensive, Liberal Arts Institutions & Community Colleges • Single-institution = Midwestern Research 1 University, a New England Ivy League University

  5. SAMPLES • Predominantly White • Predominantly female • “Traditional” college age • Range of class years (cross-sectional & longitudinal) • First-year and senior undergraduates • African American undergraduates

  6. RESEARCH METHODS • Factor analyses • T tests • Regression analyses • Correlations • Transaction log analyses • Interviews

  7. Undergraduates’ Academic Library Impact Model Educational Outcomes College Experiences Background Characteristics Academic Library Performance Measures  Academic Library Experiences

  8. Undergraduates’ Information Seeking Behavior Model Epistemological Development Information Seeking Behavior

  9. Background Characteristics • Race • Gender • Age • Critical thinking ability upon entering college • High school library use • Parents’ education • Family income

  10. College Experiences • Class year • Grade point average • Major/academic discipline • Interactions with peers • Interactions with faculty • Writing experiences/term papers • Classroom learning • Employment

  11. Academic Library Experiences • Used library as a place to study • Used indexes to journal articles • Used the card catalogue • Developed a bibliography • Asked the librarian for help • Used computers for library searches • Read in the reserve/reference room • Read a basic references or documents • Found material by browsing the stacks • Checked citations in things read • Checked out books

  12. Academic Library Performance Indicators • Resources • Number of library staff • Number of journals, books • Services • Number of presentations • Public service hours/typical week

  13. EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES • Critical thinking • self-reported • objective measures • Information literacy • Academic library experiences/use

  14. FINDINGS • Race, academic discipline, H.S. library use • Student-faculty interactions, active course learning, writing experiences • Small relationship between academic library use and critical thinking • Academic library use increases each year

  15. FINDINGS (continued) • Overall undergraduates’ academic library use is low • Students with higher levels of epistemological development could recognize authoritative sources and handle conflicting information sources • Levels of epistemological development affected stages of information seeking in the Kuhlthau model

  16. Bibliography • Gardner, S., & Eng, S. (2005). What students want: Generation y and the changing function of the academic library. portal: Libraries and the academy, 5(3), 405-420. • Kuh, G. D., & Gonyea, R. M. (2003). The role of the academic library in promoting student engagement in learning. College & Research Libraries, 64(4), 256-282. • Smalley, T. N. (2004). College success: High school librarians make the difference. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 30(3), 193-198. • Weiler, A. (2005). Information-seeking behavior in generation y students: Motivation, critical thinking, and learning theory. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 31(1), 46-53.

  17. Bibliography (continued) • Whitmire, E. (2006). African American undergraduates and the academic library. Journal of Negro Education. • Whitmire, E. (2004). The campus racial climate and undergraduates' perceptions of the academic library. portal: Libraries and the Academy, 4(3), 363-378. • Whitmire, E. (2004). The relationship between undergraduates' epistemological reflection, reflective judgment and their information seeking behavior. Information Processing & Management, 40(1), 97-111. • Whitmire, E. (2003). Cultural diversity and undergraduates' academic library experiences. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 29(3), 148-161.

  18. Bibliography (continued) • Whitmire, E. (2003). Epistemological beliefs and the information-seeking behavior of undergraduates. Library & Information Science Research, 25(2), 127-142. • Whitmire, E. (2002). Academic library performance measures and undergraduates' library use and educational outcomes. Library & Information Science Research, 24(2), 107-128. • Whitmire, E. (2002). Disciplinary differences and undergraduates' information seeking behavior. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 53(8), 631-638. • Whitmire, E. (2001). The relationship between undergraduates' background characteristics and college experiences and their academic library use. College & Research Libraries, 62(6), 528-540.

  19. Bibliography (continued) • Whitmire, E. (2001). Factors influencing undergraduates' self-reported satisfaction with their information literacy skills. portal: Libraries and the Academy, 1(4), 409-420. • Whitmire, E. (2001). A longitudinal study of undergraduates' academic library experiences. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 27(5), 379-385. • Whitmire, E. (1999). Racial differences in the academic library experiences of undergraduates. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 25(1), 33-37. • Whitmire, E. (1998). Development of critical thinking skills: An analysis of academic library experiences and other measures. College & Research Libraries, 59(3), 266-273.

  20. Contact Information: • University of California - Los AngelesDepartment of Information StudiesBOX 951520, 214 GSE&IS BldgLos Angeles, CA 90095-1520 310.825.7959whitmire@ucla.eduhttp://polaris.gseis.ucla.edu/ewhitmir/

More Related