Mixed Methods Not Mixed Messages: Improving LibGuides with Student Usability Data

Authors

  • Nora Almeida New York City College of Technology, City University of New York
  • Junior Tidal New York City College of Technology, City University of New York

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18438/B8CD4T

Keywords:

user experience, instructional design, mixed methods, LibGuides

Abstract

Abstract

Objective – This article describes a mixed methods usability study of research guides created using the LibGuides 2.0 platform conducted in 2016 at an urban, public university library. The goal of the study was to translate user design and learning modality preferences into executable design principles, and ultimately to improve the design and usage of LibGuides at the New York City College of Technology Library.

Methods – User-centred design demands that stakeholders participate in each stage of an application’s development and that assumptions about user design preferences are validated through testing. Methods used for this usability study include: a task analysis on paper prototypes with a think aloud protocol (TAP), an advanced scribbling technique modeled on the work of Linek and Tochtermann (2015), and semi-structured interviews. The authors introduce specifics of each protocol in addition to data collection and analysis methods.

Results – The authors present quantitative and qualitative student feedback on navigation layouts, terminology, and design elements and discuss concrete institutional and technical measures they will take to implement best practices. Additionally, the authors discuss students’ impressions of multimedia, text-based, and interactive instructional content in relation to specific research scenarios defined during the usability test.

Conclusion – The authors translate study findings into best practices that can be incorporated into custom user-centric LibGuide templates and assets. The authors also discuss relevant correlations between students’ learning modality preferences and design feedback, and identify several areas that warrant further research. The authors believe this study will spark a larger discussion about relationships between instructional design, learning modalities, and research guide use contexts.

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Author Biographies

Nora Almeida, New York City College of Technology, City University of New York

Instruction Librarian, Assistant Professor

Junior Tidal, New York City College of Technology, City University of New York

Web Services Librarian, Associate Professor

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Published

2017-12-30

How to Cite

Almeida, N., & Tidal, J. (2017). Mixed Methods Not Mixed Messages: Improving LibGuides with Student Usability Data. Evidence Based Library and Information Practice, 12(4), 62–77. https://doi.org/10.18438/B8CD4T

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Section

Features

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