Evidence Summary
Millennial Generation Students Search the Web Erratically, with Minimal
Evaluation of Information Quality
A Review of:
Taylor, A. (2012). A study of the information search behaviour of the millennial generation. Information Research, 17(1), paper 508.
Retrieved from http://informationr.net/ir/17-1/paper508.html
Reviewed by:
Dominique Daniel
Information Literacy and Reference Librarian
Oakland University
Rochester, Michigan, United States of America
Email: daniel@oakland.edu
Received: 26 Nov. 2012 Accepted: 10 Feb. 2013
2013 Daniel.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons‐Attribution‐Noncommercial‐Share Alike License 2.5 Canada (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by‐nc‐sa/2.5/ca/),
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same or similar license to this one.
Abstract
Objective – To identify how millennial generation students
proceed through the information search process and select resources on the web;
to determine whether students evaluate the quality of web resources and how
they use general information websites.
Design – Longitudinal study.
Setting – University in the United States.
Subjects – 80 undergraduate students of the millennial
generation enrolled in a business course.
Methods – The students were required to complete a research
report with a bibliography in five weeks. They also had to turn in interim
assignments during that period (including an abstract, an outline, and rough
draft). Their search behaviour was monitored using a
modified Yahoo search engine that allowed subjects to search, and then to fill
out surveys integrated directly below their search results. The students were
asked to indicate the relevance of the resources they found on the open web, to
identify the criteria they used to evaluate relevance, and to specify the stage
they were at in the search process. They could choose from five stages defined
by the author, based on Wilson (1999): initiation, exploration,
differentiation, extracting, and verifying. Data were collected using anonymous
user IDs and included URLs for sources selected along with subject answers
until completion of all assignments. The students provided 758 distinct web
page evaluations.
Main Results – Students did not progress in orderly fashion
through the search process, but rather proceeded erratically. A substantial
number reported being in fewer than four of the five search stages. Only a
small percentage ever declared being in the final stage of verifying previously
gathered information, and during preparation of the final report a majority
still declared being in the extracting stage. In fact, participants selected
documents (extracting stage) throughout the process. In addition, students were
not much concerned with the quality, validity, or authority of their sources,
reporting that the main criteria they used to evaluate a web resource were its
understandability, the amount of information in the source, its accuracy, and
its recency. During the last stage of the assignment
the main criteria were understandability and the amount of information.
Finally, students used general information websites like Wikipedia throughout
the process, but especially while preparing the final report.
Conclusion – The search behaviour of
millennial students does not conform to existing search models. The models are
appropriate but the execution of these models by students is problematic.
Students gathered documents, including general websites like Wikipedia, through
all stages of the assignment, including the preparation of the final report.
They are likely to procrastinate and do some backfilling. Furthermore they show
little concern for the validity of sources: very few verified their sources and
quality of the information gathered was not a priority for them. Those findings
point to a problem of perception rather than a lack of information search
skills: millennial students know how to search and filter, but they do not
believe that there is an objective standard to evaluate information and they
have a non-critical view of information. More research about the causes of such
perception should help us identify effective strategies to help students
improve their searches.
Commentary
This study builds on
existing information search process models which were developed before the
internet became a popular information source. There is relatively little
research assessing how such models may have changed since (Knight & Spink,
2008). The study also adds to growing research about the information seeking
habits of the millennial generation, which has shown that millennials
have superficial search habits, a fragmented view of information, and a
conception of information as product rather than process. A third research area
this study explores is that of relevance criteria used by searchers to select
sources that meet their information need. The study brings these aspects
together into an investigation of students’ information search behaviour over time and concludes that in all three areas
the behaviour and perceptions of millennials
differ from those of previous generations. While not groundbreaking, it
provides some insight into ways millennials
themselves experience and conceptualize searching.
The study’s greatest
contribution springs from its methodology: it used a self-reporting online tool
to monitor students completing a real assignment in their own space and at
their own pace, away from the researchers’ presence. Yet subjects were not in a
completely natural setting: they used a modified search engine that included
data collection instruments. The author used Yahoo, which may not be students’
usual search engine. Although subjects were not required to use it, the vast
majority stayed with the default because it was easier to enter the data.
Furthermore the data collection method is susceptible to all the limitations of
self-reporting. Reporting was a complex process that involved numerous criteria
to choose from as well as specialized terminology, two issues that may have
negatively affected student reporting. The author does not mention if the
validity of the instrument was tested by external observation. It is
regrettable that the instrument is not included in the report in its entirety, as
it has no precedents (CRiSTAL Checklist, n. d.).
Other research has
confirmed the study’s results about students’ tendency to procrastinate and
engage in backfilling (Head & Eisenberg, 2009). Particularly striking is
the students’ definition of the search process primarily in terms of extraction
of information, which points to a confused and limited conception of searching.
However, the study’s conclusion that pre-internet search models are appropriate
in the digital age is not warranted. Although the author uses these models for
his research instrument, he does not demonstrate how they are relevant for the
study. More research is needed on the impact of unmediated web searching on
search behaviors, including other models like berrypicking
(Bates, 1989; Knight & Spink, 2008).
For the author, the
key factor accounting for the students’ search behaviour
is millennials’ relativistic perception of
information, but he gives no evidence for this and does not explore the reasons
for the students’ apparent neglect of evaluation. Research comparing perceived
and actual search behaviours could yield more useful
results. For example, Project Information Literacy found that students did not
think of resource evaluation as a distinct step in the search process but in
effect did evaluate sources (Head & Eisenberg, 2010, p.18). It has also
found that students’ search behaviours are not just
determined by a subjective conception of information but by uncertainty and
stress about the entire research process, which leads students to rely on
predictable and convenient but limited routines (Head & Eisenberg, 2009,
2010). Consequently, this study did not lead to innovative conclusions but like
other similar studies could have practical implications for librarians who seek
to help students construct more effective searches, and to help faculty design
more successful assignments.
References
Bates, M. J. (1989). The
design of browsing and berrypicking techniques for
the online search interface. Online
Information Review, 13(5) 407-424. doi:
10.1108/eb024320
CRiSTAL Checklist on Appraising a User Study. In Netting the Evidence Wiki. Retrieved 11
Feb. 2013 from http://nettingtheevidence.pbwiki.com/f/use.doc
Head, A. J., & Eisenberg, M. B. (2009).
Lessons learned: How college students seek information in the digital age. Project Information Literacy Progress
Report. Retrieved 11 Feb. 2013 from http://projectinfolit.org/pdfs/PIL_Fall2009_finalv_YR1_12_2009v2.pdf
Head, A. J., & Eisenberg, M. B. (2010).
Truth be told: How college students evaluate and use
information in the digital age. Project
Information Literacy Progress Report. Retrieved 11 Feb. 2013 from http://projectinfolit.org/pdfs/PIL_Fall2010_Survey_FullReport1.pdf
Knight, S. A., & Spink,
A. H. (2008). Toward
a web search information behavior model. In A. Spink & M. Zimmer
(Eds.), Web search: Multidisciplinary
perspectives. (pp. 209-234). Berlin: Springer.
Wilson, T.D. (1999). Models in information behaviour research. Journal of Documentation, 55(3) 249-270. doi: 10.1108/EUM0000000007145