How today’s college students use Wikipedia for course-related research
| Title: | How today’s college students use Wikipedia for course-related research (ID: CSD5873) | | Author(s): | Alison J. Head (University of Washington) and Michael B. Eisenberg (University of Washington) | | Topics: | Information Discovery and Retrieval, Information Literacy, Internet Use, Students, Wikipedia | | Source: | First Monday | | Origin: | Community (03/16/2010) | | Type: | Articles, Briefs, Papers, and Reports | | Abstract: | Findings are reported from student focus groups and a large–scale survey about how and why students (enrolled at six different U.S. colleges) use Wikipedia during the course–related research process. A majority of respondents frequently used Wikipedia for background information, but less often than they used other common resources, such as course readings and Google. Architecture, engineering, and science majors were more likely to use Wikipedia for course–related research than respondents in other majors. The findings suggest Wikipedia is used in combination with other information resources. Wikipedia meets the needs of college students because it offers a mixture of coverage, currency, convenience, and comprehensibility in a world where credibility is less of a given or an expectation from today’s students.
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