Information Behavior Of HBCU Students: A Case Study

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Information Behavior of Information Behavior of HBCU College Students: HBCU College Students: An Exploratory Case Study An Exploratory Case Study Alex Gorelik, Anton Bezuglov Benedict College

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A summary of our exploration of the digital literacy skills of the students at a large HBCU, delivered at the South Carolina Media Educators Association in Oct. 2012.

Transcript of Information Behavior Of HBCU Students: A Case Study

Page 1: Information Behavior Of HBCU Students: A Case Study

Information Behavior of HBCU Information Behavior of HBCU College Students:College Students:

An Exploratory Case StudyAn Exploratory Case Study Alex Gorelik, Anton Bezuglov

Benedict College

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• Essential• Personal• Inadequate

Information LiteracyInformation Literacy

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Wilson’s (1994) Model of information behaviorWilson’s (1994) Model of information behavior

Information user

“Need”Satisfaction or non-satisfaction

Information use Information seeking behavior

Information exchange

Demands on information systems

Demands on other info sources

Other people

Success Failure

Information transfer

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• Explore the elements of the Wilson’s model, focusing ono “Needs”o Information seeking behaviorsoDemands on info systems / other

sources

• Build an exploratory case study of information behavior (at a large HBCU)

Study objectives:Study objectives:

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• Scope: Benedict college students from HASS and STEM (n=43)• Information search task

o Search engine requests intercepted by a server, compiled specifically for the study

• Exit Interview• Recorded observations

Method:Method:

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• Proxy server intercepts all traffic from the machine to the Web• If (1) traffic goes to Google Search

Engine and (2) it contains a keyword, the results of HTTP Get are modified;• The first search result is changed:

For instance Solipsism -> Solarism

ToolsTools

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ToolsTools

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oReasons for preferring a specific resource:o Speed of access (20%)o Reliability / Credibility (17%)o Authoritativeness (17%)o Convenience (15%)oStem different from HASS, Seniors

different from Sophomors / Juniors

FindingsFindings

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FindingsFindings

  Major of respondent

Mass Comm /

English

Comp Sci /

Engineer.

Total

Count Col. N % Count Col. N % Count Col. N %

Derived ranks

of sources

Dictionary 11 44.0% 10 55.6% 21 48.8%

EBSCO web

interface4 16.0% 1 5.6% 5 11.6%

Electronic

Dictionary11 44.0% 9 50.0% 20 46.5%

Google search 15 60.0% 16 88.9% 31 72.1%

Total 25 100.0% 18 100.0% 43 100.0%

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FindingsFindings

 

Classification - Collapsed

Senior Junior/Soph. Total

Count Col. N % Count Col. N % Count Col. N %

Derived ranks of

sources

Dictionary 10 55.6% 11 44.0% 21 48.8%

EBSCO web

interface3 16.7% 2 8.0% 5 11.6%

Electronic

Dictionary10 55.6% 10 40.0% 20 46.5%

Google search 12 66.7% 19 76.0% 31 72.1%

Total 18 100.0% 25 100.0% 43 100.0%

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oBehavior dominated by considerations of o speed of access o clarity o accuracy o convenience / familiarity

Information behaviorInformation behavior

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oDemands on sources: o speedo straightforward presentation of

information

Information behaviorInformation behavior

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o“Success” = ability to quickly match the answer to the question

Information behaviorInformation behavior

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oAbout half of those presented with a “modified” answer failed to detect thato The necessity to critically evaluate and

corroborate is trumped by the considerations of speed, clarity and convenience of access

Information behaviorInformation behavior

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oStudents recognize the need to corroborate the informationo …even if not all of them may decide to

do so

Information behaviorInformation behavior

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oThis study is a “proof of concept”, what’s next?o looking at the gap between the self-

reported level of information literacy and the actual performance on test tasks

o comparing the resulting among HBCUs and mainstream academic institutions

Information behaviorInformation behavior

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Questions, please?Questions, please?

Q?