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Main Authors: Gibbs, David, Boettcher, Jennifer, Hollingsworth, Jill, Slania, Heather
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ979246
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author Gibbs, David
Boettcher, Jennifer
Hollingsworth, Jill
Slania, Heather
author_facet Gibbs, David
Boettcher, Jennifer
Hollingsworth, Jill
Slania, Heather
Gibbs, David
Boettcher, Jennifer
Hollingsworth, Jill
Slania, Heather
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Assessing the Research Needs of Graduate Students at Georgetown University Gibbs, David Boettcher, Jennifer Hollingsworth, Jill Slania, Heather Graduate Students Student Needs Student Research Student Attitudes Student Surveys Online Surveys Focus Groups Use Studies Academic Libraries Library Facilities Library Services Humanities Social Sciences Describes a two-part study of the research needs of graduate students at Georgetown University. The first part, conducted in May 2010, consisted of an online survey about students' research practices and opinions about the library. The second part, conducted in May 2011, consisted of focus groups with particular subsets of graduate students. The goals of the study were to: 1) gain insight into students' research habits; 2) determine how they use and perceive the library; 3) determine any differences in responses between students in different disciplines; and 4) uncover distinctions between "scholarly" students (those intent on careers in academia) and "professional" students (those intent on careers outside of academia). Survey responses and focus group transcripts reflected three common broad themes: 1) Infrastructure (library building, furniture, designated space for graduate students); 2) Awareness & Scholarly Support (awareness of specialized library resources and services, tailored orientation and instruction); and 3) Access Services (availability of resources on and off campus, interlibrary and consortial lending, borrowing policies). Humanities students were much more familiar with library services and resources than social science students. Among social science students, we found few differences between the "scholarly" and "professional" groups. (Contains 5 figures.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ979246
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Assessing the Research Needs of Graduate Students at Georgetown University
Gibbs, David
Boettcher, Jennifer
Hollingsworth, Jill
Slania, Heather
Graduate Students
Student Needs
Student Research
Student Attitudes
Student Surveys
Online Surveys
Focus Groups
Use Studies
Academic Libraries
Library Facilities
Library Services
Humanities
Social Sciences
Assessing the Research Needs of Graduate Students at Georgetown University Gibbs, David Boettcher, Jennifer Hollingsworth, Jill Slania, Heather Graduate Students Student Needs Student Research Student Attitudes Student Surveys Online Surveys Focus Groups Use Studies Academic Libraries Library Facilities Library Services Humanities Social Sciences Describes a two-part study of the research needs of graduate students at Georgetown University. The first part, conducted in May 2010, consisted of an online survey about students' research practices and opinions about the library. The second part, conducted in May 2011, consisted of focus groups with particular subsets of graduate students. The goals of the study were to: 1) gain insight into students' research habits; 2) determine how they use and perceive the library; 3) determine any differences in responses between students in different disciplines; and 4) uncover distinctions between "scholarly" students (those intent on careers in academia) and "professional" students (those intent on careers outside of academia). Survey responses and focus group transcripts reflected three common broad themes: 1) Infrastructure (library building, furniture, designated space for graduate students); 2) Awareness & Scholarly Support (awareness of specialized library resources and services, tailored orientation and instruction); and 3) Access Services (availability of resources on and off campus, interlibrary and consortial lending, borrowing policies). Humanities students were much more familiar with library services and resources than social science students. Among social science students, we found few differences between the "scholarly" and "professional" groups. (Contains 5 figures.)
title Assessing the Research Needs of Graduate Students at Georgetown University
topic Graduate Students
Student Needs
Student Research
Student Attitudes
Student Surveys
Online Surveys
Focus Groups
Use Studies
Academic Libraries
Library Facilities
Library Services
Humanities
Social Sciences
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ979246