Important: Blog Report #4

I just want to check in with everyone about Blog Report number four. This blog report should highlight a single article from your own individual research into your communities’ information behaviors and needs. Please do not select an article from our course readings —  if anybody has started down this path that is fine. Just switch gears and write up one of the articles you found. It helps you get into the LRM as well.

Image: Edinburgh, Royal Mile

12 thoughts on “Important: Blog Report #4

  1. Dao Tran

    Hello Professor,

    For blog report #4, can I use this article: Associations between mastery of life and everyday life information-seeking behavior among older adults: Analysis of the Pew Research Center’s information engaged and information wary survey data?

    Reference:
    Choi, W., Park, M. S., & Lee, Y. (2022). Associations between mastery of life and everyday life information‐seeking behavior among older adults: Analysis of the Pew Research Center’s information engaged and information wary survey data. Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology, 73(3), 393–406. https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.24556

    Thank you for your time

  2. Dao Tran

    Hello Professor,
    If the article that I use to summarize for the assignment has three authors, am I required to study all three authors or only focus on the first one?
    Thank you for your answer,
    Dao

  3. Jackie Rogoff

    I’m actually having a lot of trouble finding a peer-reviewed article about information behavior and crosswords. For assignments so far, I’ve taken a wide-angle view with serious leisure and then drawn comparisons between the crossword community and studies that exist for similar communities, but having to do a single article is tripping me up. The only article I’ve been able to find (so far) that even mentions crosswords is https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lisr.2011.12.002 but it’s not really what I’m looking for. I haven’t found success with “puzzles” either, except jigsaw puzzles (Garcia, 2013, “Explorers, Detectives, Matchmakers, and Lion Tamers: Understanding Jigsaw Puzzlers’ Techniques and Motivations”).

    I’m planning to ask a librarian for more help today, but if that doesn’t work out, would it be okay to summarize an article about a similar community? (Either the jigsaw puzzle one, or others I’ve found about board gamers or fanfiction.) Or should I think about changing focus?

    1. Michael Stephens Post author

      @jrogoff. It is absolutely OK to summarize an article about a similar community. Students do it all the time and they should because there’s never going to be enough specific articles on some of our information communities. If you find a useful study under the realm of serious leisure and LIS I think you can draw connections between whatever group they’re looking at and your community. I would even venture to say articles on gamers information behaviors could even inform your views of crossword puzzle folks. I’m glad you asked this question.

      1. Jackie Rogoff

        Thank you Professor! I will do that. Incidentally, there are actually a lot of crossword puzzles in peer reviewed journals (ask me how I know). Seeing as everyone likes doing crosswords, someone should really study that…

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