Document Type
Conference Paper
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology
Volume
49
Issue
1
Publisher
Wiley - Blackwell
Publication Date
2012
First Page
1
Last Page
11
Abstract
First-year writing students are a very large, diverse, and ubiquitous information user group, as writing courses are typically required of all undergraduate students, regardless of major. While in their institution's writing program, students frequently must utilize research (information) in their writing assignments. While this formal, task-related information behavior is important for stakeholders in the fields of information science and the humanities to understand, little research has been done on this significant group of students. This study arrived at key exploratory findings by collecting data and context from first-year writing students through semi-structured interviews. The researchers found that students continue to be Google-dependent and fearful of using Wikipedia, though they use it anyway. Students appear to operate in comfort and convenience zones, and distinctly prefer secondary sources which they fail to read completely. People comprise a major part of students' information seeking behavior, but students tend only to consult friends and family members. This study offers practical implications of these behaviors which may be used to help students and inform further research.
Recommended Citation
Olsen, Megan Whitney and Diekema, A. R., "“I just Wikipedia it”: Information behavior of first-year writing students" (2012). English Faculty Publications. Paper 408.
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/english_facpub/408
Comments
Originally published by Wiley in Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology.
Publishers PDF available through link below:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/meet.14504901176/abstract