Evidence Summary
Mixed Method Study Examines Undergraduate Student Researchers’ Knowledge
and Perceptions About Scholarly Communication Practices
A Review of:
Riehle, C. F., &
Hensley, M. K. (2017). What do undergraduate students know about scholarly
communication?: A mixed methods study. Portal:
Libraries and the Academy, 17(1),
145–178. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/pla.2017.0009
Reviewed by:
Melissa Goertzen
Collection Development Analysis & Support
Librarian
Columbia University Libraries
New York, New York, United States of America
Email: mjg2227@columbia.edu
Received: 1
June 2017 Accepted: 25 July 2017
2017 Goertzen.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
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same or similar license to this one.
Abstract
Objective – To
examine undergraduate student researchers’ perception and understanding of
scholarly communication practices and issues.
Design – Mixed
method study involving a survey and semi-structured interviews.
Setting – Two major undergraduate universities in the Midwest
region of the United States of America.
Subjects – Undergraduate students who participated in or had
completed undergraduate research experiences with faculty mentors.
Method – The
method was first approved by Institutional Review Board offices at both
campuses involved in the study. Then, students received invitations to
participate in a survey via email (Campus 1 = 221 students; Campus 2 = 345
students). Identical online surveys ran separately on each campus; both
remained open for a period of three weeks. All respondents received a reminder
email one week before the survey closed.
Participants answered 12 questions related to
demographics and scholarly communication practices. The survey examined
knowledge and experience across five areas: the peer review process, author and
publisher rights, publication and access models, impact of research, and data
management. All students who completed the survey were entered in a drawing for
a $50 Amazon card. The response rates were 34.8% (Campus 1) and 18.6% (Campus
2).
Surveys on both campuses were administered using
different software: campus 1 utilized Qualtrics
survey software while campus 2 used an institution-specific survey software.
Data sets were normed and merged later in the study to enable comparison and
identify broad themes.
Survey respondents were also invited to participate in
a 15 to 20 minute follow-up interview and were compensated with a $20 Amazon
gift card. The interviews consisted of four open-ended questions that further
examined students’ knowledge of scholarly communication practices. The
researchers coded interview transcripts and identified themes. Qualitative
software was used to analyze the surveys and assess coder agreement. Finally,
connections and anomalies between survey and interview results were explored.
Main Results – Quantitative
and qualitative data collected
during the study indicate that students were most confident in their
understanding of the peer-review process and data management but felt less
confident in their knowledge of author and publisher rights, publication and
access models, and determining the impact of scholarly research publication. In
addition, they value instruction related to scholarly communication topics like
the peer-review process, publication models, and data management. However, few
students feel confident in their current level of knowledge or ability
surrounding the previously mentioned topics. Study findings suggest that this
knowledge gap is based on a lack of training or discussion of scholarly
communication topics in relation to students’ research activities.
Results also suggest that undergraduate students have
difficulty articulating their rights as authors and their scholarly
communication practices. In many cases, skill sets like data management are
learned through trial and error while students
progress through the research process. In some cases, faculty mentors have
misperceptions and assumptions about undergraduate students’ knowledge and
abilities regarding scholarly communication practices. This can create
challenges for undergraduate students as they attempt to make informed decisions
about research activities based on a limited foundation of experience or
information.
Finally, results indicate that undergraduate student
researchers do not currently view the library as a place to learn about
scholarly communication practices. The authors suggest that by forming
strategic relationships with undergraduate research program directors, faculty,
and graduate student mentors, librarians are in a prime position to incorporate
scholarly communication practices into information literacy sessions or provide
point-of-need coaching.
Conclusion – The researchers conclude that academic libraries
are in a unique position to support overarching research, teaching, and
learning goals within the academic community. By developing programs that support
information literacy and scholarly communication, libraries demonstrate value
and align goals with teaching and learning priorities within the higher
education community as a whole. Through this work, librarians support students
as knowledge creators and advocate for training that emphasizes data literacy,
copyright and authors’ rights, and the impact of research within specific
disciplines.
Commentary
Within the academic community, undergraduate student
researchers are gaining credit as knowledge creators. In response, information
professionals are transforming information literacy programs to include
scholarly communication practices. The study at hand supports what was
previously known—that students have a greater role in the creation of knowledge
(ACRL, 2013) and that traditional information literacy training provides
guidance on scholarly communication practices (Hensley, 2015) – and includes a
unique perspective that brings value to the information profession. That
perspective is an exploration of students’ perception and understanding of
scholarly communication.
The researchers suggest that librarians support
“undergraduate students as they move beyond their role as knowledge consumers,
encouraging them to become skillful knowledge creators” (p. 146). To achieve
this goal, they designed a mixed methods study that documents students’
application of scholarly communication practices. Detailed descriptions of the
research design, recruitment methods, and data analysis techniques provide a
detailed roadmap that can be adopted by other librarians who wish to conduct
similar investigations.
The paper was enhanced by the organization and
presentation of results. It was interesting to read about the methodology and
results of the survey and interview sessions separately, followed by a
discussion of observed trends across the complete body of quantitative and
qualitative data collected during the study. The conclusions offered viable
strategies to merge information literacy sessions with scholarly communication
training. For instance, the researchers stress the importance of strategic
relationships between the library and undergraduate program directors to
facilitate mentorship and training opportunities.
Since the participant group largely conducted research
in scientific fields, it would be interesting to discover if observed trends
apply to students working in the humanities or social sciences. With that being
said, the researchers note this limitation and suggest it as an area for future
study. Additionally, the researchers mentioned that participants had only
experienced small portions of the research process and did not have a chance to
see the “big picture” of research projects. Running the study again when
participants are involved in the full research process would be useful.
Because the value of the study rests on the
methodology and ability to document local gaps in knowledge or training, it was
unfortunate that the research tools (i.e., survey and interview questions) were
not included as an appendix to the study. These tools may have served as a
starting point for similar studies within the information management
profession.
The paper successfully demonstrates how a mixed
methods study can be used to understand students’ perception and knowledge of
scholarly communication practices. Repeating the study in several years could
help to determine how the establishment of strategic relationships between the
library and the campus community influences students’ skill sets and comfort
level with scholarly communication practices.
References
Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL). (2013).
Intersections of scholarly communication and information literacy. Working
Group on Intersections of Scholarly Communication and Information Literacy.
Retrieved from http://acrl.ala.org/intersections/
Hensley, M. K. (2015). A survey of instructional support for undergraduate research programs. Libraries and the Academy, 15(4), 719–62.