First Year Medical Students Use Library Resources Emphasized During Instruction Sessions

Objective – To determine if library instruction has an effect on resources cited in student reports. Design – Citation analysis. Setting – The study took place in the medical school of a large American university. Subjects - One hundred eighteen of 120 first-year medical student repor...

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Main Author: Laura Newton Miller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2014-03-01
Series:Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/eblip/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/21068
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spelling doaj-ccfd14d0755f455c9b9fc6a99fb541a92020-11-25T01:35:14ZengUniversity of AlbertaEvidence Based Library and Information Practice1715-720X2014-03-019110.18438/B8F316First Year Medical Students Use Library Resources Emphasized During Instruction SessionsLaura Newton Miller0Carleton University Library Ottawa, Ontario, CanadaObjective – To determine if library instruction has an effect on resources cited in student reports. Design – Citation analysis. Setting – The study took place in the medical school of a large American university. Subjects - One hundred eighteen of 120 first-year medical student reports were analyzed. Two reports did not include any works cited and were excluded from the study. Methods - Over the course of 3 years, 15 20-minute library instruction sessions were conducted. The sessions, based on five clinical cases presented each year were conducted approximately two weeks before each report due date. Eighty-five case-specific resources were demonstrated, with teaching plans being modified from year to year based on the frequency of citation of a particular resource cited the prior year. A LibGuide online course guide also directed students to specific resources shown in the class, with content updated every year based on citation trends from the previous year. Every citation referenced in a report was then categorized into a) those that were discussed during an instruction session, b) those found on a course guide, c) those accessible through the library, d) those available from course material (i.e., PowerPoint presentation, lecture notes), or e) those which did not fall under any of the other categories. A citation could be included in multiple categories. Main Results – The 118 reports included 2983 citations. Over the 3 year period, an average of 77.51% of all citations were from library resources, 49.55% of the citations from a resource demonstrated in the class, and 21.68% from resources found in the course guide. Although citations from sources discussed in class did not increase significantly from year to year, the percent of citations from resources on the course guide significantly increased from 19.40% to 25.63%. Conclusion – Medical students cite library resources emphasized during instruction sessions.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/eblip/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/21068instructionmedical students
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Newton Miller
spellingShingle Laura Newton Miller
First Year Medical Students Use Library Resources Emphasized During Instruction Sessions
Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
instruction
medical students
author_facet Laura Newton Miller
author_sort Laura Newton Miller
title First Year Medical Students Use Library Resources Emphasized During Instruction Sessions
title_short First Year Medical Students Use Library Resources Emphasized During Instruction Sessions
title_full First Year Medical Students Use Library Resources Emphasized During Instruction Sessions
title_fullStr First Year Medical Students Use Library Resources Emphasized During Instruction Sessions
title_full_unstemmed First Year Medical Students Use Library Resources Emphasized During Instruction Sessions
title_sort first year medical students use library resources emphasized during instruction sessions
publisher University of Alberta
series Evidence Based Library and Information Practice
issn 1715-720X
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Objective – To determine if library instruction has an effect on resources cited in student reports. Design – Citation analysis. Setting – The study took place in the medical school of a large American university. Subjects - One hundred eighteen of 120 first-year medical student reports were analyzed. Two reports did not include any works cited and were excluded from the study. Methods - Over the course of 3 years, 15 20-minute library instruction sessions were conducted. The sessions, based on five clinical cases presented each year were conducted approximately two weeks before each report due date. Eighty-five case-specific resources were demonstrated, with teaching plans being modified from year to year based on the frequency of citation of a particular resource cited the prior year. A LibGuide online course guide also directed students to specific resources shown in the class, with content updated every year based on citation trends from the previous year. Every citation referenced in a report was then categorized into a) those that were discussed during an instruction session, b) those found on a course guide, c) those accessible through the library, d) those available from course material (i.e., PowerPoint presentation, lecture notes), or e) those which did not fall under any of the other categories. A citation could be included in multiple categories. Main Results – The 118 reports included 2983 citations. Over the 3 year period, an average of 77.51% of all citations were from library resources, 49.55% of the citations from a resource demonstrated in the class, and 21.68% from resources found in the course guide. Although citations from sources discussed in class did not increase significantly from year to year, the percent of citations from resources on the course guide significantly increased from 19.40% to 25.63%. Conclusion – Medical students cite library resources emphasized during instruction sessions.
topic instruction
medical students
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/eblip/index.php/EBLIP/article/view/21068
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