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How Students Virtually Approach the Library. NELIG Annual Program 2013 Kendall Hobbs Reference/Instruction Librarian Wesleyan University khobbs@wesleyan.edu. Discovery Tools. Single “Google-like” search box to search most/all library content We tested: WorldCat Summon EBSCO Primo.
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How Students Virtually Approach the Library NELIG Annual Program 2013 Kendall HobbsReference/Instruction Librarian Wesleyan Universitykhobbs@wesleyan.edu
Discovery Tools • Single “Google-like” search box to search most/all library content • We tested: • WorldCat • Summon • EBSCO • Primo
The Study • Students who recently completed a paper/project requiring sources beyond assigned materials • “Briefly show and explain how you found resources for that assignment” • “Use the four candidate discovery tools to search for your topic” • Recorded with BB Flashback Express (from Blueberry Software)
Summary of Findings • Tools started to look more similar than different • No strong consensus on favorites or ranking. • Similar patterns in doing research and using tools
General Search Strategies • Basic keyword searches, then modify with facets, other terms, etc. • Mostly articles, maybe some books • Abstracts • Fewer clicks are better • Rarely go past first page or two of results
Using Discovery Tools • Good general understanding of facets, but vague on details • Favorite facets: full text, scholarly/peer-reviewed • They go with default settings
How Do We Teach This? • Is “good enough” too easy? • From “how to search” to “how to evaluate search results” • Discovery tool vs. subject indexes/databases • Does it really make much of a difference? • Rethink information literacy standards?
Some Common Concerns • Is this “dumbing down” research? • Can we trust the process/results? • Future • Information scarcity • Information overload • ?