Information Seeking Behaviour of Faculty Members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok

This article reports the results of a study of the information seeking behaviour of faculty members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok, Thailand. Data were collected by using a questionnaire from seven faculties in Rajabhat Universities. Results show that most of respondents (forty one percent) sta...

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Main Authors: Neela J. Deshpande, Kingkaew Patitungkho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Webology Center 2005-12-01
Series:Webology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.webology.org/2005/v2n4/a20.html
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spelling doaj-119ad8adf088403a82ad9d8b96e361572020-11-24T21:08:01ZengWebology CenterWebology1735-188X2005-12-012420Information Seeking Behaviour of Faculty Members of Rajabhat Universities in BangkokNeela J. DeshpandeKingkaew PatitungkhoThis article reports the results of a study of the information seeking behaviour of faculty members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok, Thailand. Data were collected by using a questionnaire from seven faculties in Rajabhat Universities. Results show that most of respondents (forty one percent) stated their method of seeking information by consulting a knowledgeable person in the field. Two hundred and thirteen respondents (82 percent) seek information for preparing lectures. Fifty-four percent of faculty members access more documents was references from a book. It is revealed that most of the faculty members (57 percent) used textbooks. Seventy four percent of respondents read information materials in Thai and twenty four percent read materials in English. The Internet had been almost universally adopted; they trace materials from the library via the Internet. Google.com was used for searching information by respondents. They use frequently e-mail for communication. It is found that 42 percent of respondents use the ERIC (Education Resources Information Centre) database. The majority of respondents faced the common problem while seeking information i.e. unavailability of information. http://www.webology.org/2005/v2n4/a20.htmlInformation seekingSearch enginesInformation searchingBangkokThailand
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Neela J. Deshpande
Kingkaew Patitungkho
spellingShingle Neela J. Deshpande
Kingkaew Patitungkho
Information Seeking Behaviour of Faculty Members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok
Webology
Information seeking
Search engines
Information searching
Bangkok
Thailand
author_facet Neela J. Deshpande
Kingkaew Patitungkho
author_sort Neela J. Deshpande
title Information Seeking Behaviour of Faculty Members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok
title_short Information Seeking Behaviour of Faculty Members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok
title_full Information Seeking Behaviour of Faculty Members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok
title_fullStr Information Seeking Behaviour of Faculty Members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok
title_full_unstemmed Information Seeking Behaviour of Faculty Members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok
title_sort information seeking behaviour of faculty members of rajabhat universities in bangkok
publisher Webology Center
series Webology
issn 1735-188X
publishDate 2005-12-01
description This article reports the results of a study of the information seeking behaviour of faculty members of Rajabhat Universities in Bangkok, Thailand. Data were collected by using a questionnaire from seven faculties in Rajabhat Universities. Results show that most of respondents (forty one percent) stated their method of seeking information by consulting a knowledgeable person in the field. Two hundred and thirteen respondents (82 percent) seek information for preparing lectures. Fifty-four percent of faculty members access more documents was references from a book. It is revealed that most of the faculty members (57 percent) used textbooks. Seventy four percent of respondents read information materials in Thai and twenty four percent read materials in English. The Internet had been almost universally adopted; they trace materials from the library via the Internet. Google.com was used for searching information by respondents. They use frequently e-mail for communication. It is found that 42 percent of respondents use the ERIC (Education Resources Information Centre) database. The majority of respondents faced the common problem while seeking information i.e. unavailability of information.
topic Information seeking
Search engines
Information searching
Bangkok
Thailand
url http://www.webology.org/2005/v2n4/a20.html
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AT kingkaewpatitungkho informationseekingbehaviouroffacultymembersofrajabhatuniversitiesinbangkok
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