Evidence Summary
Academic Library
Use is Positively Related to a Variety of Educational Outcomes
A Review of:
Soria,
K. M., Fransen, J., & Nackerud,
S. (2017). Beyond books: The extended academic benefits of library use for
first-year college students. College
& Research Libraries, 78(1), 8-22. https://doi.org/10.5860/crl.78.1.8
Reviewed by:
Rachel
E. Scott
ILS
Librarian
University
Libraries
The
University of Memphis
Memphis,
Tennessee, United States of America
Email:
rescott3@memphis.edu
Received: 10 May 2019 Accepted: 14 July 2019
2019 Scott.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative
Commons‐Attribution‐Noncommercial‐Share Alike License 4.0
International (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/),
which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium,
provided the original work is properly attributed, not used for commercial
purposes, and, if transformed, the resulting work is redistributed under the
same or similar license to this one.
DOI: 10.18438/eblip29583
Abstract
Objectives – To consider the relationship between
academic library use and four specific outcomes: academic engagement,
engagement in scholarly activities, academic skills development, and grade
point average.
Design – Hierarchical regression analysis.
Setting – A large, public research university
in the Midwest US.
Subjects – 1,068 non-transfer,
first-year students who voluntarily completed the Student Experience in the
Research University (SERU) survey.
Methods – The SERU survey results were
analyzed alongside student data derived from institutional records and 10
library usage variables generated from library systems. Velicer’s
minimum average partial (MAP) method was employed to develop a factor analysis.
Hierarchical regression analyses measured the relationships between independent
variables (demographic characteristics, collegiate experiences, and libraries
use) and dependent variables (students’ academic engagement, academic skills,
engagement in scholarship, and fall semester grade point average).
Main Results – Students’ use of academic libraries
was reported to have a positive relationship with all four dependent variables,
above and beyond those explained by pre-college and collegiate experiences:
academic engagement (R2∆= .130, p < 0.001), academic skills
development (R2∆= .025, p < 0.001), fall semester grade point
average (R2∆= .018, p < 0.001), and engagement in scholarship (R2∆=
.070, p < 0.001). Use of books and web-based
library resources had the most positive relationships with academic outcomes;
workshop attendance and use of reference services had limited positive
relationships with academic outcomes; and use of library computer workstations
had no significant effects on academic outcomes.
Conclusion – Undergraduate student use of
the academic library is positively associated with diverse academic outcomes.
Although the explanatory power of library use was relatively low, ranging from
1.8 to 13.0 percent of final variance in the dependent variables, library use
is nonetheless reported to contribute significantly to academic outcomes.
Commentary
This
study builds on existing studies that measure the impact of library use on the
academic success of undergraduate students, including similar studies on the
topic by these researchers, two of which focus on the relationship between
library use, student grade point average, and retention (Soria, Fransen, & Nackerud 2013
& 2014). This study however, is unique in its analysis of the relationships
between a variety of library usage metrics and academic success metrics beyond
grade point average and retention, specifically academic engagement, engagement
in scholarly activities, and academic skills development. This study dovetails
current work on library involvement in student privacy and learning analytics,
such as the Institute of Museum and Library Services-funded “DataDoubles” project.
The
authors cite relevant literature to convey the increasing need for
accountability within higher education and libraries. Astin’s
(1993) Input-Environment-Output model from What
Matters in College is employed as a conceptual framework and is used to
control for inputs, such as student demographic characteristics and college
experiences, which may contribute to academic success.
The
evaluation methods are appropriate to the objectives and required statistical expertise that may serve as an obstacle to librarians who do
not know how to conduct or interpret a hierarchical regression analysis. It is
worth noting that the study is co-written by librarians and an employee of the
Office of Institutional Research; this collaboration would likely prove
essential to academic librarians seeking to recreate elements of the study.
Student data is frequently unavailable to academic librarians, particularly at
the aggregate level. The authors note limitations with their sample, the most
problematic of which is that those students who completed the survey are likely
more engaged than their peers. Additionally, the reliability of the blocks of
self-report information are presented, but the reader does not learn how the
reliability was tested.
The
authors meet their objective of measuring the relationship between academic
library use and academic engagement, engagement in scholarly activities, and
academic skills development; this study quantifies several ways in which the
library plays an active role in the academic success of undergraduate students.
By identifying a variety of standard library services that may be assessed and
by detailing how to collaborate with campus partners to measure this impact,
this article makes a significant contribution to the literature. Future studies
might make explicit how the privacy of student data is considered and protected
in this process.
References
Astin, A.
(1993). What matters in college?: Four critical years revisited. San Francisco,
CA: Josey-Bass.
Soria,
K. M., Fransen, J., & Nackerud,
S. (2013). Library use and undergraduate student outcomes: New evidence for
students' retention and academic success. portal:
Libraries and the Academy, 13(2), 147-164. https://doi.org/10.1353/pla.2013.0010
Soria,
K. M., Fransen, J., & Nackerud,
S. (2014). Stacks, serials, search engines, and students' success: First-year
undergraduate students' library use, academic achievement, and retention. The Journal of Academic Librarianship,
40(1), 84-91. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2013.12.002
Soria,
K. M., Fransen, J., & Nackerud,
S. (2017). Beyond books: The extended academic benefits of library use for
first-year college students. College
& Research Libraries, 78(1), 8-22. https://doi.org/10.5860/crl.78.1.8