View
189
Download
4
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Comparison of domestic & international students | What does their research process tell us about their information literacy skills?School of Information StudiesMcGill UniversityYusuke Ishimura & Joan C. Bartlett
CONTEXT OF THE STUDY
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 2
Information literacy1
“To be information literate, a person must be
able to recognizewhen information is needed
and have the ability to locate, evaluate, and
use effectively the needed information.”
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 3
International student population2
1995 2009
Canada 30,885 87,798
USA 453,787 690,923
2.8x
1.5x
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 4
Top 5 countries of origin3
Canada (2004) USA (2009)
1 China China
2 USA India
3 France S. Korea
4 S. Korea Canada
5 Japan Taiwan
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 5
Reasons for accepting international students4
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 6
Research on International Students5
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 7
Differences between two groups
International Domestic
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 8
Academic libraries and international students6
Diverse experience
Diverse needs
Diverse expectations
Library services
Students Librarians
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 9
METHODS
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 10
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 11
Participants in the study
• Undergraduate students taking 300‐400 level courses
• Japanese students– Born in Japan
– Japanese as first language
– Primarily educated in Japan
• Canadian students– Raised in Canada– English as first language– Primarily educated in Canada
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 12
Research questions
What are Japanese students’ information behaviours during their research tasks as compared to Canadian students?
– What factors (e.g., personal, social, and linguistic) are involved in information behaviour during the research task?
– What are their actual behaviours in relation to information literacy standards?
– What differences and similarities in behaviour exist between the two groups of students?
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 13
Conceptual framework8
Information literacy standards(Quality oriented)
Information needs
Information use
Information behaviour model (Process oriented)
Corresponds with
Outcomes Outcomes Outcomes
Potentialeffects
Users’ context‐Cultural‐Educational‐Linguistic‐Personal‐Psychological‐Social
Information seeking
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 14
Data collection
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 15
Data collection schedule
Assignment schedule
Portfolio(Ongoing)
Interviews
Flowchart
Analysis
1st interview‐ Guidance for the study‐ Past experience
2nd interview‐ Contemporary experience‐ Reflection on meaning
EndStart
Start Assignment submission
Making flowchart
Full analysis starts
Portfolio analysis
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 16
ID Gender Selected paper discipline Length of time in North America
JPN
J1 Female Psychology 5 years
J2 Male Economics 6 months (Exchange)
J3 Female Political Science 5 years
J4 Female Marketing 6 months (Exchange)
J5 Female Religious Studies 6 months (Exchange)
J6 Female Political Science 11 months (Exchange)
J7 Female Political Science 7 years (Exchange)
J8 Female Botany 1 year
CAN
C1 Female English literature ‐
C2 Male History ‐
C3 Female History ‐
C4 Male History ‐
C5 Female Political Science ‐
C6 Female Linguistics ‐
C7 Female History ‐
C8 Male History ‐April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 17
FINDINGS
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 18
Process overview
Information needs
Information seeking
Information use
Feedback
Information needs
Information seeking
Information use
Feedback
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 19
Participant: J7
Participant: C7
ASSIGNMENT CHARACTERISTICS
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 24
Assigned topics
“We got an assignment sheet [list of topics]. What I did first
was read it. But most topics on the sheet had not been
covered in class yet. So when I asked my friends, their
reaction was ‘I don’t know these either!’ So, I quickly
looked at the questions and thought about how to answer
them. If I thought of something, I felt like I could write. So
I could eliminate some topics this way.” J6
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 25
Step‐by‐step (Guideline sample)
A. CHOOSE SOCIAL JUSTICE ORGANIZATION TO PROFILE (must be confirmed by Jan 27): Sign‐up sheet in class from January 20. If you want to study an organization not included on the
list discuss with professor prior to commencing research.
B. FIRST DRAFT (10%): DUE MARCH 1 a. Information uploaded on Moodle should include:
first draft of the profile (DO NOT INCLUDE YOUR NAME ON THE PROFILE FILE) Full list of references including active webpage links to all source
b. Info submitted in class: FIRST DRAFT FORM (available from Moodle page) with: Copies of any literature not available on‐line (brochures, articles from books, etc)
C. PEER REVIEW (10%): (Assigned in class March 3) DUE MARCH 17 a. Information uploaded to Moodle should include:
All editing recommendations for the profile saved using the TRACK CHANGES option b. Info submitted in class:
PEER REVIEW FORM (received on March 3) Confirmation that all references to active webpages are working Confirmation that the SJO contact name and contact information is correct Return all copies of literature received with initial profile
D. FINAL DRAFT (8%): DUE MARCH 29 Upload to Moodle REVISED profile as per comments by peer review editor and professor.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 26
[Y] For your future work, do you want to use the same research process? . . . .
[J5] It was easy to complete this assignment because the professor gave us clear guidance like what to search, what to use. But I don’t know how to find resources if I don’t have clear guidance.
[Y] Do you mean searching for information? Or from the beginning, like deciding a topic?
[J5] I am a bit worried even when selecting topics. It will be hard without knowing what to write. What kind of sources we need to use. I am worried that what I am doing is the right.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 27
Free topics
cont.April 20, 2011
Participant: C5
Ishimura & Bartlett 28
PERSONAL STRATEGIES
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 29
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 30
Past experience
• Previous learning experience (e.g., high school, past classes)– How to conduct research– How to search for information– How to cite information– How to write research papers
• Previous library instruction– In‐person– Online
• Good guidance from faculty on how to construct a paper
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 31
[Y] I see. When did you build this kind of research strategy?
[C5] I guess in high school, one of my teachers did a section on how to do a research paper. What he recommended was doing research, getting a piece of information, and then writing them up. Writing the paper that way. That’s how I started from. You know I guess the rest is just I want to brainstorm.
[Y] I see. Of course, difficulties are different from high school, but are still you following the same type of process?
[C5] Yeah. I mean with every paper, I get better at finding the information in databases.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 32
[Y] Have you had training how to write research papers?
[J5] Yes because all classes are taught in English. Generally speaking, I took classes about academic writing.
[Y] How about doing research?
[J5] I didn’t do that in Japan. But I attended a library workshop and learned how to use Google, databases, etc.
[Y] How did you know about it?
[J5] Soon after coming to Canada, there were different kinds of orientations. Then I heard about the library workshop.
[Y] Was it useful?
[J5] Yes, my research in Japan did not focus on how to find resources. In particular, it is useful here rather than there.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 33
Personal strategies
• Trial & error– Developed own research style– Don’t know what to do – Too much focus on research process
• Found something new by chance– Subject search on OPAC– Subject guide – Boolean operators and truncation
• Source preference– Avoided using OPAC– Databases– Google (including Google Scholar)
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 34
[Y] Do you want to change your research process for your future assignments?
[J3] Yes, I would like to change.
[Y] In what way?
[J3] I guess I don’t search well in libraries. And I think I should read class readings little by little. I am always behind. If I read them regularly, I don’t have to read everything before the due date and can spend more time in the library. I think time management is really hard. Probably my research approach is wrong. But I don’t know what’s wrong.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 35
[Y] It’s interesting that you’re searching subject headings. So where did you learn this kind of stuff?
[C2] It’s on the classic catalogue and I saw “subject begin with.” I clicked on it. It makes a lot of sense.
[Y] I see. You just notice, like the option is there. And then OK, like what this function is. And just try it?
[C2] Yeah. Also like from there, I try that a few times, like Poland history. Like OK. So there’s the Poland history page. Then later, I see a book and noticed a LC subject like “Poland socialism” and something else, I cannot remember what found this one. And then it would be like, oh click on that and it took me to the subject I was looking for. This was great and this is nice.
[Y] I am just wondering do you know what a LC subject is?
[C2] I have no idea.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 36
OTHERS
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 37
Time management skills
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 38
More sources[Y] What made you use about 40 resources? The assignment guidelines
didn't specify a minimum number of sources. So it's amazing that you used so many sources.
[C6] Well, I actually always use MORE sources than I end up listing in the bibliography/reference section. I know that I tend to use more sources than “expected”, but that’s probably because I like to “cover all my bases” and I guess, go beyond the professor’s expectations for better grades.
And besides, it makes me feel better to know that I haven’t “missed”something that might be important. I want to feel like I have covered everything. I prefer going from a large pool of sources and thennarrowing it down. But for a 15 page paper, I think that 5 pages of references is about average for me. Even if I didn’t cite all of the sources within my paper (since I was supposed to focus on those “five” – and I did “six”), I still used them all.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 39
Why more sources?
“So the one way is to include only what you have to, and the other one is to include everything to show the research you did as a part of the grading thing. I am focusing on the paper. I feel like the paper should speak for itself. The bibliography is a formality at that point. So, yeah, both are, I think, normal at some point. I am really trying to imitate the article I read…. So this one only used 5 [sources]...” C2
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 40
HELP FROM OTHERS
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 41
April 20, 2011
Participant: J2
Ishimura & Bartlett 42
[J2] I think analysing data and finding sources was tricky. It was almost the last minute when I realized that I have to find outsides sources. I thought “Seriously?” because my friend told me that “I used 30 sources.”
[Y] I guess you thought “What are you talking about?”
[J2] Yeah, I thought it was strange that I didn’t have any (laugh). I felt something was wrong.
[Y] It was fortunate that you found out, wasn’t it?
[J2] I think so. It was risky not to know.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 43
[J4] When I was in Japan, I didn’t use the internet for my research so often. It seems that management students [in Canada] use the internet so much. After watching them, I started using Google. In Japan, I went to the library and asked librarians questions.
[Y] So your classmates often search for information on the internet?
[J4] I think so. Management students really love the internet. Like searching for something and put it into wikis. These kind of things often happen. I learned from them.
[Y] Everyone uses Google when they have assignments?
[J4] Yes, I think so.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 44
Participant: C4
cont.
Students tended not to seek help from librarians . . .
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 47
[Y] Generally speaking, at any point during your research, you can ask librarians for help.
[C4] We just don't, like we asked each other when we’re writing this. Can we go and ask a librarian to like help me find something? Are they willing to sit down with me, like to search? I don’t know. I have never, … I just don’t know whether they are too busy or not.
So professors make this our job to find that out. We just like, we actually ask each other, like I don’t know. But then I talked to [a friend] and heard [a librarian] helped him to find primary sources. And like that’s so cool.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 48
WHAT ARE THE DIFFERENCES?
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 49
Differences between the two groups
• Searching for information in Japanese to supplement English skills
• Slower process due to language barriers
• Some Japanese students showed relatively weaker research skills than Canadian students– Where to search– How to search– Understanding of academic expectations
(e.g., using outside sources and critical analysis)
• Domestic students’ behaviour has large impact on how Japanese students behave
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 50
New tools
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 51
[Y] Have you learned how to do research in the past?
[J8] It’s kind of a shame, but I have never read journal articles before. When I was in ESL classes, I learned how to write essays, how to use libraries, how to search for information. However, the content of the classes was very general. So they were not focusing on science and biology.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 52
[Y] How’s your impression of your research process? Is it easy, complicated?
[C1] No, I hated it! I am not a English major and am not used to writing an English paper so as a starting point, I didn’t know what to do. I had a couple of meetings with my TA and talked with her, I am an Education student and I don’t know this English stuff, I don’t know how to write an English paper.
So I spend time with her and then, research, I am used to going online and use journals for everything. Writing an Education paper is usually studies, it’s more hands‐on than somebody just writing about stuff. So I have to use actual books which I am not good at it…. How do I, they are not accessible... I don’t know. I didn’t like it.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 53
IMPLICATIONS
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 54
Implications for information literacy
• Need to help students develop a holistic picture of research process (e.g., time management demonstrated by students)
• Many students develop skills by themselves; need more active support from faculty and librarians
• Interaction between Japanese and Canadian students could positively affect information literacy skills development
• Interaction is NOT necessarily effective for information literacy skills development
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 55
Future needs
Students expressed areas that they would like to change in future research tasks. For example, they would like to:
•Improve research skills(e.g., topic selection, search techniques, making research plans)
•Improve time management skills
•Ask librarians for help on assignments
•Spend more time on writing rather than doing research
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 56
Notes
1. “Presidential committee on information literacy: Final report”, American Library Association, accessed April 1, 2011, http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/publications/whitepapers/presidential.cfm.
2. “Opendoors online,” Institute of International Education, accessed April 1, 2011, http://opendoors.iienetwork.org; “A Changing Portrait of International Students in Canadian Universities,” Statistics Canada, accessed April 1, 2011, http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/81‐004‐x/2010006/article/11405‐eng.htm.
3. Ibid.
4. Jenny J. Lee and Charles Rice, “Welcome to America? International student perceptions of discrimination,” Higher Education 53, no. 3 (2007): 381‐409; John Taylor, “Toward a strategy for internationalisation: Lessons and practice from four universities,” Journal of Studies in International Education 8, no. 2 (2004): 149‐171.
5. Ann Curry and Deborah Copeman, “Reference service to international students: A field stimulation research study,”Journal of Academic Librarianship 31, no. 5 (2005): 409‐420; Yusuke Ishimura, Vivian Howard, and Haidar Moukdad, “Information literacy in academic libraries: Assessment of Japanese students’ needs for successful assignment completion in two Halifax universities,” Canadian Journal of Information and Library Science 31, no. 1 (2008): 1‐26.
6. “Library services for international students,” Society of College, National and University Libraries, accessed April 1, 2011, www.sconul.ac.uk/groups/access/papers/international_students.pdf.
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 57
Questions?Contact: Yusuke Ishimura: [email protected]
April 20, 2011 Ishimura & Bartlett 58