Evidence Summary
Undergraduates May Prefer to Learn about the Library Informally
A Review of:
Murphy, J. A. (2014). Library learning: Undergraduate students’
informal, self-directed, and information sharing strategies. Partnership: The Canadian Journal of Library
and Information Practice and Research, 9(1), 1-20.
https://journal.lib.uoguelph.ca/index.php/perj/index
Reviewed by:
Robin E. Miller
Assistant Professor and Research & Instruction
Librarian
McIntyre Library
University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire
Email: millerob@uwec.edu
Received: 12 Dec. 2014 Accepted:
27 Jan. 2015
2015 Miller.
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Abstract
Objective
– To determine undergraduate student
approaches to learning about research and to seeking assistance with resources
and services offered by the library.
Design
– Three face-to-face focus groups received the same 12
questions to discuss over 90 minutes.
Setting
– Academic library in Saskatchewan, Canada.
Subjects
– A total of 14 undergraduate students majoring in a social science or
humanities subject area. Of these, four subjects were in their second year of
undergraduate study, four in their third year, and six in their fourth year.
Subjects participated in focus groups with other students in their year of
study. The researcher recruited subjects through printed advertisements
distributed in areas frequented by social science and humanities students. 12
female students and 2 male students participated. 13 participants had attended
a library instruction session in the past. Subjects were offered pizza, but
were not otherwise incentivized to participate.
Methods
– The researcher and an assistant conducted three focus groups with
undergraduate students, eliciting qualitative comments later transcribed and
coded manually for analysis. Requirements for participation included being
engaged in an undergraduate major in the social sciences or humanities, and
previous experience using the library. Subjects answered open-ended questions
about their studies, research activities, use of the library for a variety of
tasks, and help seeking preferences.
Main
Results – Regardless of year of study, focus group
participants reported informal approaches to learning about and conducting
research. All participants were confident about using the library’s online
resources, and preferred learning about library resources through self-directed
practice and trial and error. Participants revealed that learning about the
library informally was preferable to library instruction. Most participants
indicated they had sought help from the library at one time or another.
Participants prized sharing information with classmates, especially through
collaboration and social networks, and they valued the expertise of professors,
peers, friends, and family when doing research. Three factors may influence
their choice to consult and exchange information with other trusted advisers
outside of the library: convenience, familiarity, and knowledge.
Conclusion
– Findings from this study align with previous
findings about student approaches to seeking research assistance. The author
reveals that assistance from the library, including library instruction, is
less important to focus group participants than the research strategies they
have developed informally, including trial and error and information sharing
within one’s personal network. The author observes that the informal learning
strategies implemented by undergraduates in this study mirror the strategies of
adult learners, especially in the workplace. The author suggests that
intentional, course integrated library instruction in the early years of
undergraduate education would strengthen students’ preferred self-directed
learning about research.
Commentary
The author elicits a rich discussion of undergraduate
library use, painting a picture of undergraduate students engaged in
self-directed learning about library resources.
The author administered a focus group questionnaire to
three groups of undergraduate students. While the author hoped for more, a
total of 14 subjects participated in the study. The researcher and an assistant
recorded and transcribed the comments, themes, and observations from the focus
group sessions, though methods of coding and analysis were not described. A
test of inter-coder reliability would strengthen the evidence.
Three themes emerged from the focus groups: students conduct
library research through self-directed research and trial and error; they share
and exchange information with peers; and “convenience, familiarity and
knowledge” (p. 7) may influence whether they seek help from the library or
another trusted advisor such as a professor, peer, or family member. The author
suggests that the themes discussed represent the majority of focus group
participants, and direct quotes from individual subjects further illustrate the
themes reported. Subjective terms like “some” or “many” are not quantified. In
contrast to the themes listed above, subjects expressed less agreement about
actual use of the library. Consultations with a librarian, service desks, and
help guides were some of the ways subjects had sought help in the library, but
the majority of subjects did not favour any one method.
Social science and humanities students who had
previously used the library were specifically recruited to participate in this
study. Some, but not all, subjects had extensive experience with this
particular library. Including students who reported using the library at least
once may have ensured that data were collected from subjects capable of
deciding whether to work independently or to seek help from the library.
However, further study with a group of students who reported never using the
library would offer more complete insights about undergraduate help-seeking
strategies.
The size of this study, and exclusion of both
non-library users and students from other disciplines, prevents generalization
of the author’s findings. The literature review highlights findings about
student preference for working independently, consulting with peers, and using
resources that are familiar and convenient. However, the literature review
omits large-scale studies about student research practices, such as the
Ethnographic Research in Illinois Academic Libraries (ERIAL) Project (Duke
& Asher, 2012), and research from Project Information Literacy, including
Head’s (2008) study involving humanities and social science majors.
Thirteen of the subjects had participated in a library
instruction session in the past, although the author does not note whether the
social sciences and humanities are major users of library instruction at the
institution in question. In the discussion, the author argues for
course-integrated library instruction in the early years of undergraduate
education. One focus group participant indicated she appreciated
library-faculty collaboration (pp. 13-14); however, the author cites no other evidence
to support the conclusion, and the main results indicate that subjects did not
favour formal library instruction over self-directed methods.
The author also concludes that practitioners could
offer self-directed programs like “student peer mentorship, internship, and
first year experience programs” (p. 14), though focus group subjects were not
questioned about whether they would avail themselves of these opportunities.
Nonetheless, librarians may be inspired by the author’s research to consider
experimenting with information literacy skill-building activities outside the
formal classroom.
References
Duke,
L. M. & Asher, A. D. (Eds.). (2012). College
libraries and student culture: What we now know. Chicago: American Library
Association.
Head,
A. J. (2008). Information literacy from the trenches: How do humanities and
social science majors conduct academic research? College & Research Libraries, 69(5), 427-446. http://dx.doi.org/10.5860/crl.69.5.427