September 29, 2008

Print versus online -- preferences of SOA students and faculty

This fall I distributed a short survey asking students and faculty whether they preferred print or online journals and books. Here's what I found out!

For books: 81 preferred print; 17 preferred electronic; and 18 indicated that the format didn't matter.

For journals: 52 preferred print; 45 preferred electronic; and 19 indicated that the format didn't matter.

The breakdown on who responded to the survey is this:
faculty 10
students -- landscape 13
students -- interiors 18
students -- architecture 75

Here's a comment from one of the respondents, emphasizing the importance of print materials for browsing: "The serendipity principle is still an important role for the library. People discover things through the physicality of wandering and looking around that they wouldn't consider otherwise." and another comment: "Honestly there are too many distractions online -- print is better." and one more: "Prefer electronic if easy to access."

October 26, 2007

Digital ethnographies

I'd be interested in hearing what you think about two online videos: one by the students in an antrhopology course at Kansas State University on their lives as students titled "A Vision of Students Today" http://mediatedcultures.net/ksudigg/?p=119 and the other by their instructor titled "Information R/evolution" looking at how we find and create information http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-4CV05HyAbM.

January 22, 2007

Popular ASL magazines

Judging by the amount of use they get, the following are the most popular magazines in the Architecture Studies Library:

Landscape Architecture
Architectural Record
Architectural Digest
Interior Design
Architectural Lighting
Architectural Review
Dwell
Architecture and Urbanism
Landscape Architect & Specifier News
Custom Home

January 12, 2007

Google Maps mashups

For a fun thing to do over the three-day holiday, explore the many ways you can use Google Maps mashups (50 ways in fact!) at
http://googlemapsmania.blogspot.com/2006/12/50-things-to-do-with-google-maps.html

To whet your appetite here are a few you will find on the page:

Locate a nearby Starbucks

Find the red light cameras on your daily commute

Determine elevation in relation to sea level of a particular site

Map the impact of rising sea levels, meter by meter [yikes, I should have put this one first. Given the possibility of global warming, it's horrifying. Be sure to check this before buying coastal property.]

December 5, 2006

Newsfeed on ASL homepage

The Architecture Studies Library now has a newsfeed from PLANetizen on the ASL homepage (http://www.library.unlv.edu/arch/). Its location in the upper right quadrant will hopefully make it a quick check whenever you access the site.

PLANetizen is a planning and urban development site. Explore at http://www.planetizen.com/

One interesting November entry was a list of PLANetizen's top ten planning books (http://www.planetizen.com/books/2007). The ASL and/or Lied Library have most of the titles listed; orders have been placed for any title not in the UNLV Libraries.

December 1, 2006

Plagiarism and Paraphrasing

Research shows that many students do not know how to paraphrase. They rearrange the words, instead of synthesizing and summarizing the concepts. Inadequate paraphrasing is the main cause of plagiarism.

Many students are not aware that even if they paraphase they must give credit to the originator of the ideas. To put it another way, even if you do not quote someone, you must still cite them if you use their thoughts.

One article reporting such research is by Pamela A. Jackson. "Plagiarism Instruction Online: Assessing Undergraduate Students' Abillity to Avoid Plagiarism." College and Research Libraries 67, no. 5 (September 2006): 418-428.

The article's author was involved with creating an online tutorial on plagiarism and paraphrasing. You can access this tutorial at http://tutorials.sjlibrary.org/tutorial/plagiarism/selector.htm and brush up on your skills!

November 21, 2006

RefWorks

Just a reminder that you can "manage" your bibliographies through a tool the Libraries purchased called RefWorks.

You search in the library catalog or in a database, you find a citation to an item you may wish to add to your bibliography, you transfer the citation to RefWorks. Once in RefWorks you can specify the citation style (does your teacher want MLA? no problem!). You can also organize your citations into folders for multiple papers, and create the bibliography in RefWorks.

For more on how to access and use RefWorks go to the Architecture Studies Library "Finding Resources" Module10 on Bibliographic Citations http://www.library.unlv.edu/arch/instr/mod010_refworks.html

October 10, 2006

Information skills

Do you feel confident that you can find whatever information you need? This is something of a trick question, since research has shown that many who are quite confident are not, in fact, able to identify quality information in the area of their search. [See citations to the research below.] There are several reasons for this. One of the reasons is that by relying exclusively on web site information -- which some students do -- there are many sources of quality information that are not being accessed.

I and several colleagues have spent the last year drafting a set of information competencies for students in design disciplines [including architecture, landscape, architecture history, interior design, art history, studio art, fashion, and planning]. They are divided into basic, intermediate, and advanced skills. By looking at these very specific skills you may arrive at a different assessment of how info savvy you are! I would be most interested in your take on these skills, and how useful you would consider them to be to you as a student now, and as a professional later. You can send your comments to me at jeanne.brown@unlv.edu, post through the form bolow, or feel free to drop in and see me in my office.

Information skills are at http://www.scsv.nevada.edu/~asl/index.html.

Some of these skills are addressed in the ASL online Finding Resources modules. http://www.library.unlv.edu/arch/instr/ There are 14 modules so far, and more to be added. They cover a variety of topics, including finding scholarly articles, and copyright restrictions for posting images on the web.

Citations to research suggesting that confidence in one's research skills do not always translate into superior seaching skills:

1. Gross, Melissa. "The Impact of Low-Level Skills on Information-Seeking Behavior: Implications of Competency Theory for Research and Practice." Reference & User Quarterly 45, no.2 (Winter 2005): 155-163.

Dunning, David. "Not Knowing Thyself." The Chronicle of Higher Education 52, no. 35 (May 5, 2006).

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