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Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates’ Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE Research Project

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Page 1: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Self -Views of Information

Seeking Skills: Undergraduates’ Understanding of What It

Means to be Information Literate

Melissa Gross & Don Latham

OCLC/ALISE Research Project

Page 2: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Overview

1. Background2. Study design3. Research questions4. Participants5. Data collection6. Results7. Implications8. Future research

Page 3: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Background• Information literacy (IL) skills are crucial in today’s society

– Information Power, ACRL’s IL Competency Standards

• Competency theory (Kruger & Dunning, 1999) suggests that non-proficient individuals are less likely than proficient students to be able to self-assess their skill set accurately. – Previous research suggests that competency theory applies in the

domain of IL (Gross & Latham, 2007).

• Bruce (1997) studied how educators in higher ed understand IL– Very little research has been done into how undergraduates

understand IL and their own IL skills

Page 4: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Study Design

• Participants were recruited from the freshman class at FSU.

• Semi-structured interviews were conducted with participants.

• Information literacy measured using the Information Literacy Test (ILT) developed at James Madison University (n.d.).

Page 5: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Research Questions

I. Perceptions of information literacy• What are freshmen’s understandings of what IL is?

• Do freshmen’s conceptions of IL vary for self-generated and imposed information seeking?

• What knowledge base do freshmen see as necessary to become information literate?

• What skills do freshmen see as necessary to be a competent information seeker?

• How do freshmen define successful information seeking?

Page 6: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Research Questions (cont.)

II. Perceptions of attaining information literacy

• How have freshmen learned what they know about IL?

• Are freshmen ideas about learning IL different for self-generated and imposed information seeking?

• How do freshmen think that the knowledge base necessary for IL is best achieved?

• How do freshmen think that the skills necessary for IL are best achieved?

Page 7: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Research Questions (cont.)

III. Self-views of information literacy• How do freshmen describe themselves in terms of their IL

competency?

• Do freshmen’s self-views of their own information seeking vary for self-generated and imposed information needs?

• How do freshmen assess their own knowledge base as regards IL?

• How do freshmen assess their own skill levels as regards IL?

• How do freshmen’s self-assessments of IL compare to their scores on a standardized test of information literacy?

Page 8: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Participants

• Second-semester freshmen at Florida State University

• Recruited via an email solicitation

• Targeted freshmen in the top 10% and bottom 10% as identified by admissions criteria: – High school GPA &– ACT / adjusted SAT score

Page 9: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Demographics

• Total of 20 participants

• Gender– 15 (75%) females– 5 (25%) males

• Age– Almost all were 18 or 19 years of age

Page 10: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Demographics (cont.)

• Segment– Top 10%: 17 (85%) – Bottom 10%: 3 (15%)

• Majors– STEM 8– Business/Economics 5– Music 3– Humanities 3– Education 2– Undecided 1* Note: 2 people were double majoring

Page 11: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Incentives

• Students were given a $30 gift card to the university bookstore for participating in the interview.

• They were given a $20 gift card for taking the ILT.

• Students were told that those who scored in the top 15% on the ILT would be eligible for a drawing to receive one of two $50 gift cards.

Page 12: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Data Collection: ILT

• Computer-based test

• Provides individual scores

• Measures information literacy, based on the ACRL Competency Standards (ICT measures both information & computer literacy.)

• Has been validated and tested for reliability

Page 13: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

ILT Response Time Analysis• Performed by researchers at JMU• Looks at the time spent on each question posed

by the ILT by the individual respondent• Compares time spent to benchmarks determined

for each question concerning the minimum time it takes a person to answer it, if it is fully read and responded to

• Our results indicate that students spent a reasonable amount of time on each question

Page 14: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Interviews• Semi-structured interviews• Each was 45 to 60 minutes.• Both researchers were present during the

interview--one asked the questions; the other took notes.

• The interviews were recorded and later transcribed by a graduate assistant.

• Both researchers coded the interviews and then compared their coding.

• Analysis used constant comparative method.

Page 15: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Results

ILT scores

Interview data

Page 16: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Interpreting ILT Scores(Wise, Cameron, Yang & Davis, n.d.)

• 65 questions on the test

• 60 questions count; 5 are questions in development

• > 53 = Advanced

• 39-53 = Proficient

• < 39 = Non-proficient

Page 17: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Results: ILT Scores

Overall, these students have “proficient” information literacy skills• One student scored as advanced, with a

score of 54.• One student scored as non-proficient, with a

score of 38.• 18/20 students scored as proficient, with

scores between 39 and 53.

Page 18: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Results: ILT Scores (cont.)

Score # of

Participants

Level

54 1 (5%) Advanced

48 - 53 10 (50%) Proficient

42 - 47 8 (40%) Proficient

38 1 (5%) Non-proficient

Page 19: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Perceptions of information literacy

• Students were unfamiliar with the term “information literacy”

• Students see information seeking as comprised of thinking and learning skills, more than as computer or library skills– Understanding/stating the question– Ability to assess information quality– Ability to match sources to questions

• Success is finding what you need to know

Page 20: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Self-generated versus imposed information seeking

Imposed = constrained

• Limited number of acceptable resource types can be used

• Deadline/due date

• Need to develop an interest if it isn’t naturally there (if you can)

Self-generated = open

• A wealth of resource types available (but fewer sources tend to be used)

• You decide when you are done

• Motivated by “genuine interest” even if that interest is casual

Page 21: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Use of others in information seeking• All but one respondent said they sought help

from others

• All but three said others sought help from them

• Help took three forms– Informants (when you want the answer)– Agents (When you want someone to find the

answer for you)– Instructors (When you want to be taught

something)

Page 22: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Perceptions of attaining information literacy

• How they know what they know– Most see themselves as “self taught”– Many credit a parent (mostly mom)– Formal training, if it occurs tends to take place in

elementary school

• New skills are best learned– As they are needed– Face-to-face, one-on-one– Comfortable environment– Chance to practice

Page 23: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Self-views of information literacy

• Confident about their ability, but don’t feel that they know/do anything special

• Most recognize that ability varies among their cohort at school

• They see computer skills and information seeking as activities they have been engaged in over the course of their life and have adapted to “naturally”

Page 24: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Implications…

• Previous academic success is a fairly good predictor of performance on the ILT among this group of respondents.– However, 45% of our study group scored as

either low proficient (below 80%) or non-proficient (below 65%).

– Excellent students are not necessarily highly proficient in IL.

Page 25: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Implications (cont.)…

• Students are unlikely to receive (or at least to remember receiving) IL instruction beyond elementary school.– What can be done to insure that IL skill development is

incorporated throughout all school levels? And across the curriculum?

• Students like learning IL skills on their own and with their peers.– How can we design instruction that incorporates both individual,

self-paced, and collaborative learning?

Page 26: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Implications (cont.)…

• Students claim to know that the web contains not totally reliable resources (not good enough for “serious” school assignments). But they are likely to use the web for their own information seeking, even in important matters like choosing a college, planning a trip, or making a decision about a purchase.– How can we exploit the natural motivation that comes from self-

generated information seeking and connect that to the exploration of databases and other resources beyond the web?

Page 27: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Implications (cont.)…

• The term “information literacy” is unlikely to resonate with students. So how can we talk about IL? – Most do recognize the basic skills that we call IL. Is that a place

to start?

• Many assume that everyone their age has these skills.– Can this be leveraged toward building motivation into IL

instruction?

• Students recognize the importance of technical skills, but they don’t necessarily prefer technology-mediated instruction (such as web modules, podcasts, etc.).– What does this mean for distance ed and virtual help?

Page 28: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

Future Research

• Identifying the non-proficient

• Developing a model of the user view of information literacy

• Moving from understanding to intervening and establishing a minimum skill level for non-proficient students

Page 29: Self -Views of Information Seeking Skills: Undergraduates Understanding of What It Means to be Information Literate Melissa Gross & Don Latham OCLC/ALISE

References• Bruce, C. (1997). The seven faces of information literacy. Australia: Auslib

Press Pty Ltd.• Gross, M. (2005). The impact of low-level skills on information seeking

behavior: Implications of competency theory for research and practice. Reference and User Services Quarterly, 45, 54-62.

• Gross, M. & Latham, D. (2007). Attaining information literacy: An investigation of the relationship between skill level, self-estimates of skill, and library anxiety. Library and Information Science Research, 29, 332-353.

• James Madison University. (n.d.). The Information Literacy Test. Retrieved December 12, 2005 from http://www.jmu.edu/assessment/wm_library/ILT.pdf

• Kruger, J. & Dunning, D. (1999). Unskilled and unaware of it: How difficulties in recognizing one’s own incompetence lead to inflated self-assessments. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 77, 1121-1134.

• Wise, S.L., Cameron, L., Yang, S., & Davis, S. (n.d.). Information literacy test. Test development and administration manual. James Madison University.