Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wiberley, Stephen E., Jr., Jones, William G.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ493325
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867181630904336384
author Wiberley, Stephen E., Jr.
Jones, William G.
author_facet Wiberley, Stephen E., Jr.
Jones, William G.
Wiberley, Stephen E., Jr.
Jones, William G.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Humanists Revisited: A Longitudinal Look at the Adoption of Information Technology. Wiberley, Stephen E., Jr. Jones, William G. Bibliographic Databases Electronic Mail Humanities Individual Differences Information Technology Library Materials Longitudinal Studies Online Catalogs Online Searching Primary Sources Research Methodology Scholarly Writing Sciences Social Sciences Use Studies Users (Information) Word Processing Reports on a longitudinal study of the adoption of technology by 11 humanists. The study corroborates the tendency of humanists to adopt technology more slowly and provides insight into why. The distinctiveness of the primary evidence used by humanists--i.e., the documents and artifacts created by others--is emphasized. (32 references) (KRN)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ493325
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1994
record_format eric
spellingShingle Humanists Revisited: A Longitudinal Look at the Adoption of Information Technology.
Wiberley, Stephen E., Jr.
Jones, William G.
Bibliographic Databases
Electronic Mail
Humanities
Individual Differences
Information Technology
Library Materials
Longitudinal Studies
Online Catalogs
Online Searching
Primary Sources
Research Methodology
Scholarly Writing
Sciences
Social Sciences
Use Studies
Users (Information)
Word Processing
Humanists Revisited: A Longitudinal Look at the Adoption of Information Technology. Wiberley, Stephen E., Jr. Jones, William G. Bibliographic Databases Electronic Mail Humanities Individual Differences Information Technology Library Materials Longitudinal Studies Online Catalogs Online Searching Primary Sources Research Methodology Scholarly Writing Sciences Social Sciences Use Studies Users (Information) Word Processing Reports on a longitudinal study of the adoption of technology by 11 humanists. The study corroborates the tendency of humanists to adopt technology more slowly and provides insight into why. The distinctiveness of the primary evidence used by humanists--i.e., the documents and artifacts created by others--is emphasized. (32 references) (KRN)
title Humanists Revisited: A Longitudinal Look at the Adoption of Information Technology.
topic Bibliographic Databases
Electronic Mail
Humanities
Individual Differences
Information Technology
Library Materials
Longitudinal Studies
Online Catalogs
Online Searching
Primary Sources
Research Methodology
Scholarly Writing
Sciences
Social Sciences
Use Studies
Users (Information)
Word Processing
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ493325