20080123

What is Research? (a 3-minute tutorial)


“What is Research?” , a 3-minute tutorial by William Badke, presents a model for viewing research as a problem-solving task.

Here are a couple of quotes from the tutorial:

“A great deal of what passes for student research these days is just a process of gathering data, synthesizing it, and reporting what you have found….

The goal of research is not to compile and report on information but to use information as a tool to solve a problem or deal with an issue.”


This three-minute tutorial may help viewers better understand research.

(The tutorial is housed at a trustworthy site at the University of Calgary and can be opened without fear of viruses.)

"What is Research?"

Early Childhood Education Research Guide Available


...and a little love goes a long, long way in an early childhood setting.
--Photo from Children At Risk Foundation – CARF (www.carfweb.net)

The Early Childhood Education Research Guide includes selected Peninsula College Library reference books, a section on controlled vocabularies (LCSH and ERIC), and links to library catalogs and indexes.

Employers Value Research Skills Promoted by Information Competency Instruction


Information Literacy has often been characterized as "learning how to learn". The goal is to promote independent learners capable of self-direction who can navigate through the seas of information to fish out (find and evaluate) relevant information from the global knowledge ocean in order to solve a problem or deal with an issue.

For example, most scholarly sources are copyrighted. They are not available in full-text on the "free Web" using a search engine. Most scholarly materials are only available in and through libraries, in the print and electronic resources libraries contain. Students need to know how to find scholarly sources, sources which have been evaluated for quality, such as journal articles and monographs.

A new survey of 301 employers, How Should Colleges Assess And Improve Student Learning? (dated Jan. 9, 2008, released Jan. 22, 2008) was conducted by Peter D. Hart Research Associates on behalf of the Association of American Colleges and Universities. The survey found that, of 10 skills desired by employers, only 23% of new graduates were "very well prepared" with respect to "Self-direction" and only 18% were "very well prepared" with respect to "Global knowledge". (p. 3)

Complex projects requiring information competency, such as writing research papers or maintaining electronic portfolios, are forms of authentic assessment valued by a majority of the employers. Only 5% of the employers ranked multiple choice tests as an effective means of assessment.

The only assessment that receives low scores from the majority of employers is the idea of requiring college students to complete multiple-choice tests of general content knowledge.

These findings affirm the importance of including authentic assessment in college education, through projects which require information competency. Research, which information competency skills facilitate, is a complex process of planning, finding quality sources, reading, thinking, and writing. Writing research papers is one form of authentic assessment of student learning. Research papers are a way to both promote and assess the student information competency skills which employers value.

The survey of employers was conducted between November 8 and Dec. 12, 2007 and has a margin of error of +/- 5.7 percentage points.

20080117

Report on "Google Generation" Confirms Computer Literacy Is Not Information Literacy


The report, Information Behaviour of the Researcher of the Future, dated 11 January 2008, was commissioned by the British Library.

The findings confirm what OCLC found in June 2002 in its OCLC White Paper on the Information Habits of College Students about the "Google Generation" (those born after 1993). Students think of libraries as places for books and are not familiar with, nor competent in the use of, library digital resources.

Students start their search on the Web, but the amount of time spent viewing e-books and e-journal articles (four and eight minutes, respectively) indicates they are not evaluating or even reading what they find. As the report states: "It almost seems that they go online to avoid reading in the traditional sense." (p. 10)

Each finding in the study is accompanied by a confidence level rating. For example, in the section on myths related to the Google Generation we find this myth:

They prefer quick information in the form of easily digested chunks, rather than full-text.

Our verdict: This is a myth. CIBER deep log studies show that, from undergraduates to professors, people exhibit a strong tendency towards shallow, horizontal, "flicking" behaviour in digital libraries. Power browsing and viewing appear to be the norm for all. The popularity of abstacts among older researchers rather gives the game away. Society is dumbing down.

Confidence level: high. (p. 19)


N.B. The Library does still have books (both in print and electronic formats). However, they cannot be read in four, or even eight, minutes.

20080116

It is 2008. Do you know where our library is?

On January 15, 2008 the library staff was given a tour of the new library under construction. The tour began in the area between the library and building A, where there will eventually be a sidewalk. Along the sidewalk there will be rain gardens to collect site water runoff. Both surface runoff and roof/downspout water will be slowed by the rain gardens to slow the rate at which water enters the city's system.

Inside the library we were able to see under the access floor. Air delivery from the mechanical room below the library will come heated from the geothermal system and be delivered through the access floor. There will be inherent cooling from the geothermal system, as well as heating, dependent on need -- much the way a heat pump system works in residential buildings.

The access floor will allow facilitate a kind of plug-n-play since the cabling under the access floor can be rerouted depending on need above floor level.

Spaces within the library are now discernible, although some spaces were only demarcated by a 2x4 on the access floor. It is easier now to visualize where the photocopy area, circulation desk, offices, library classroom, periodical reading area, etc. will be located.

The views from inside continue to be spectacular! The day was clear and we could see across the Strait of Juan de Fuca to Canada.

The projected completion date is July 2008.