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Main Authors: Head, Alison J., Eisenberg, Michael B.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED535168
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author Head, Alison J.
Eisenberg, Michael B.
author_facet Head, Alison J.
Eisenberg, Michael B.
Head, Alison J.
Eisenberg, Michael B.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Balancing Act: How College Students Manage Technology While in the Library during Crunch Time. Project Information Literacy Research Report Head, Alison J. Eisenberg, Michael B. Undergraduate Students Interviews Use Studies Library Equipment Library Materials Library Services Interior Space Libraries Physical Environment Value Judgment Laptop Computers Time Management Technology Uses in Education Context Effect Course Content Tests School Schedules Research Papers (Students) Social Networks Computer Mediated Communication The paper presents findings from 560 interviews with undergraduates on 10 campuses distributed across the US, as part of Project Information Literacy (PIL). Overall, the findings suggest that students use a "less is more" approach to manage and control all of the IT devices and information systems available to them while they are in the library during the final weeks of the term. In the hour before we approached them for an interview, more respondents had checked for messages (e.g., Facebook, email, texts, IMs) more than any other task while they were in the library. A majority of respondents who had checked for messages during the previous hour had also prepared assignments and/or studied for courses. More respondents reported using library equipment, such as computers and printers, more than they had used any other library resource or service. Over half the sample considered their laptop their most essential IT device and most had a Web browser and, to a lesser extent, a word processing application running at the time of the interviews. Most students were using one or two Web sites at the time of the interviews, but there was little overlap among the Web sites they were using. A large majority of the respondents could be classified as "light" technology users, i.e., students who use one or two IT devices to support one or two primary activities (at the time of the interviews). A preliminary theory is introduced that describes how students' technology usage may be influenced by locale (i.e., the campus library) and circumstance (i.e., crunch time). Recommendations are made for how campus-wide stakeholders--faculty, librarians, higher education administrators, and commercial publishers--can work together to improve pedagogies for 21st century undergraduates. Appended are: (1) Methods; and (2) Interview Script. (Contains 23 figures and 51 footnotes.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED535168
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2011
record_format eric
spellingShingle Balancing Act: How College Students Manage Technology While in the Library during Crunch Time. Project Information Literacy Research Report
Head, Alison J.
Eisenberg, Michael B.
Undergraduate Students
Interviews
Use Studies
Library Equipment
Library Materials
Library Services
Interior Space
Libraries
Physical Environment
Value Judgment
Laptop Computers
Time Management
Technology Uses in Education
Context Effect
Course Content
Tests
School Schedules
Research Papers (Students)
Social Networks
Computer Mediated Communication
Balancing Act: How College Students Manage Technology While in the Library during Crunch Time. Project Information Literacy Research Report Head, Alison J. Eisenberg, Michael B. Undergraduate Students Interviews Use Studies Library Equipment Library Materials Library Services Interior Space Libraries Physical Environment Value Judgment Laptop Computers Time Management Technology Uses in Education Context Effect Course Content Tests School Schedules Research Papers (Students) Social Networks Computer Mediated Communication The paper presents findings from 560 interviews with undergraduates on 10 campuses distributed across the US, as part of Project Information Literacy (PIL). Overall, the findings suggest that students use a "less is more" approach to manage and control all of the IT devices and information systems available to them while they are in the library during the final weeks of the term. In the hour before we approached them for an interview, more respondents had checked for messages (e.g., Facebook, email, texts, IMs) more than any other task while they were in the library. A majority of respondents who had checked for messages during the previous hour had also prepared assignments and/or studied for courses. More respondents reported using library equipment, such as computers and printers, more than they had used any other library resource or service. Over half the sample considered their laptop their most essential IT device and most had a Web browser and, to a lesser extent, a word processing application running at the time of the interviews. Most students were using one or two Web sites at the time of the interviews, but there was little overlap among the Web sites they were using. A large majority of the respondents could be classified as "light" technology users, i.e., students who use one or two IT devices to support one or two primary activities (at the time of the interviews). A preliminary theory is introduced that describes how students' technology usage may be influenced by locale (i.e., the campus library) and circumstance (i.e., crunch time). Recommendations are made for how campus-wide stakeholders--faculty, librarians, higher education administrators, and commercial publishers--can work together to improve pedagogies for 21st century undergraduates. Appended are: (1) Methods; and (2) Interview Script. (Contains 23 figures and 51 footnotes.)
title Balancing Act: How College Students Manage Technology While in the Library during Crunch Time. Project Information Literacy Research Report
topic Undergraduate Students
Interviews
Use Studies
Library Equipment
Library Materials
Library Services
Interior Space
Libraries
Physical Environment
Value Judgment
Laptop Computers
Time Management
Technology Uses in Education
Context Effect
Course Content
Tests
School Schedules
Research Papers (Students)
Social Networks
Computer Mediated Communication
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED535168