Library Research Skills: A Needs Assessment for Graduate Student Workshops.

Authors

  • Kristin Hoffmann
  • Vivian Feng
  • Fred Antwi-Nsiah
  • Meagan Stanley

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/istl2440

Abstract

Information literacy instruction programs for graduate students can be challenging to develop. One solution is to develop non-course-based, non-mandatory library instruction programs, in order to meet the information literacy needs of as many graduate students as possible. This was the approach taken by the Taylor Library at the University of Western Ontario, as we embarked on the development of a program for students in the areas of engineering, health sciences, medicine & dentistry, and science. As a first step, we conducted a needs assessment study via focus groups and an online survey. The study looked at graduate student perceptions of their library research needs, their preferences for learning about library research, and the appropriateness of a common instruction program for students in these disciplines. We found that graduate students wanted to learn about strategies for finding information, bibliographic management tools such as RefWorks, and tools for keeping current with scholarly literature. Students preferred online instruction, although in-person workshops were also found to be valuable. Students in all four faculties identified common information literacy needs, while expressing a desire for subject-specific instruction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Ackerson, L.G. 1996. Basing reference service on scientific communication: toward a more effective model for science graduate students. RQ 36(2): 248-260.

American Library Association. 2006. Information Literacy Standards for Science and Engineering/Technology. [Online]. Available: {http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/standards/infolitscitech.cfm} [July 4, 2007].

Baron, S. & Strout-Dapaz, A. 2001. Communicating with and empowering international students with a library skills set. Reference Services Review 29(4): 314-326.

Bellard, E. M. 2007. Information literacy needs of nontraditional graduate students in social work. Research Strategies 20(4): 494-505.

Bradigan, P. S., et al. 1987. Graduate student bibliographic instruction at a large university: A workshop approach. RQ 26(3): 335-340.

Brown, C.M. 1999. Information literacy of physical science graduate students in the information age. College & Research Libraries 60(5): 426-438.

Brown, C.M. & Krumholz, L.R. 2002. Integrating information literacy into the science curriculum. College and Research Libraries 63(2): 111-123.

Brown, C.M. 2005. Where do molecular biology graduate students find information? Science & Technology Libraries 25(3): 89-104.

Fosmire, M. 2001. Bibliographic instruction in physics libraries: a survey of current practice and tips for marketing BI. Science and Technology Libraries 19(2): 25-34.

George, C., et al. 2006. Scholarly use of information: Graduate students' information seeking behaviour. Information Research. [Online]. Available: http://informationr.net/ir/11-4/paper272.html [June 8th, 2007].

Hughes, H. 2005. Actions and reactions: exploring international students' use of online information resources. Australian Academic & Research Libraries 36(4): 169-179.

Korolev, S. 2001. Chemical information literacy: integration of international graduate students in the research. Science & Technology Libraries 19(2): 35-42.

Kuruppu, P.U. & Gruber, A. M. 2006. Understanding the information needs of academic scholars in agricultural and biological sciences. The Journal of Academic Librarianship 32(6): 609-623.

Liao, Y., et al. 2007. Information-seeking behavior of international graduate students vs. American graduate students: a user study at Virginia Tech 2005. College & Research Libraries 68(1): 5-25.

Martorana, J. & Meszaros, R.L. 1997. Searching science from the office: science and engineering workshops. Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship. [Online]. Available: http://www.istl.org/97-fall/article4.html [June 8th, 2007].

Paglia, A. & Donahue, A. 2003. Collaboration works: integrating information competencies into the psychology curricula. Reference Services Review 31(4): 320-328.

Smith, E. 2003. Developing an information skills curriculum for the sciences. Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship. [Online]. Available: http://www.istl.org/03-spring/article8.html [October 1st, 2007].

Stein, J., et al. 2006. In their own words: a preliminary report on the value of the Internet and the library in graduate student research. Performance Measurement and Metrics 7(2): 107-115.

Washington-Hoagland, C. & Clougherty, L. 2002. Identifying the resource and service needs of graduate and professional students: the university of Iowa user needs of graduate professional series. Libraries & the Academy 2(1): 125-143.

Williams, H.C. 2000. User education for graduate students: never a given, and not always received. In: Teaching the new library to today's users: Reaching international, minority, senior citizens, gay/lesbian, first generation, at-risk, graduate and returning student, and distance learners (ed. By T.E. Jacobson & H.C. Williams), pp. 145-172. New York: Neal-Schuman Publishers.

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2008-05-01

How to Cite

Hoffmann, K., Feng, V., Antwi-Nsiah, F., & Stanley, M. (2008). Library Research Skills: A Needs Assessment for Graduate Student Workshops. Issues in Science and Technology Librarianship, (53). https://doi.org/10.29173/istl2440
Share |