1. Students Use More Books after Library Instruction: An Analysis of Undergraduate Paper Citations.
- Author
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Cooke, Rachel and Rosenthal, Danielle
- Subjects
- *
CITATION analysis , *RESEARCH papers (Students) , *LIBRARY orientation , *LIBRARIANS , *LIBRARY resources , *BOOKS , *COLLEGE freshmen , *UPPER level courses (Education) , *UNDERGRADUATES , *UNDERGRADUATE libraries - Abstract
In fall 2008, students from first-year Composition I and upper-level classes at Florida Gulf Coast University participated in a citation analysis study. The citation pages of their research papers revealed that the students used more books, more types of sources, and more overall sources when a librarian provided instruction. When these results were compared to those produced by students in upper-level classes (all of whom received instruction), it was discovered that, as the class level increased, the number of citations and the percentage of scholarly citations generally increased and there was a high preference for books from all disciplines, especially history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
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