Survey of American College Students: Use of Academic Library Reference Services & Subject Specialists

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Survey of American College Students: Use of Academic Library Reference Services & Subject Specialists
Description: The study looks at whether and through what means American college students contact reference librarians and library subject specialists. Data in the report enables its readers to answer questions such as: How many and what kind of students find it difficult or embarrassing to ask a reference question to a librarian? How many and which students can identify their library subject specialist for their academic major or intended major? Which students use virtual reference services? How common is it for students to contact academic reference librarians through Facebook or other social media? Who contacts reference librarians by phone, who by email, or in-person? How do students evaluate their own knowledge of reference sources? Data in the report is presented in the aggregate and then broken out separately for fifteen different variables including but not limited to: college grades, gender, income level, year of college standing, SAT/ACT scores, regional origin, age, sexual orientation, race & ethnicity, college major and other personal variables, and by Carnegie class, enrollment size and public/private status of the survey participants institutions of higher education.
Authors: Primary Research Group Staff
Resource Type: eBook.
Subjects: College students--United States--Attitudes--Statistics, Academic libraries--Reference services--United States--Statistics, Reference services (Libraries)--United States--Statistics
Categories: LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Library & Information Science / General
Database: eBook Collection (EBSCOhost)
Description
Abstract:The study looks at whether and through what means American college students contact reference librarians and library subject specialists. Data in the report enables its readers to answer questions such as: How many and what kind of students find it difficult or embarrassing to ask a reference question to a librarian? How many and which students can identify their library subject specialist for their academic major or intended major? Which students use virtual reference services? How common is it for students to contact academic reference librarians through Facebook or other social media? Who contacts reference librarians by phone, who by email, or in-person? How do students evaluate their own knowledge of reference sources? Data in the report is presented in the aggregate and then broken out separately for fifteen different variables including but not limited to: college grades, gender, income level, year of college standing, SAT/ACT scores, regional origin, age, sexual orientation, race & ethnicity, college major and other personal variables, and by Carnegie class, enrollment size and public/private status of the survey participants institutions of higher education.
ISBN:9781574405071
9781574405170