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Meeting graduate student needs: an exploration of disciplinary differences

Hilary Bussell, Jennifer Schnabel, Amanda Rinehart

2020Public & Access Services Quarterly12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

To better engage our graduate students, we asked them to describe their research strategy and challenges, helpful research support services, and their preferred venue for learning research skills. We conducted a thematic analysis and found that participants' top reported research strategies included "Research Topic Development" and "Literature Review," while their challenges cited "Finding and Evaluating Information" and "Access Issues." The students mentioned "Library Databases" most frequently as helpful and websites were their most preferred learning venue. We found evidence that discipline-specific library instruction may be more relevant than large, in-person orientations and discovered a concerning trend of situational challenges.

Topics & Concepts

Situational ethicsThematic analysisDisciplineLibrary instructionAcademic libraryPsychologyInformation literacyMedical educationComputer sciencePedagogyQualitative researchLibrary scienceSociologyMedicineSocial psychologySocial scienceDoctoral Education Challenges and SolutionsLibrary Science and Information LiteracyHigher Education and Employability
Meeting graduate student needs: an exploration of disciplinary differences | Litcius