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Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology | 2005

Comparing faculty information seeking in teaching and research: Implications for the design of digital libraries

Christine L. Borgman; Laura J. Smart; Kelli A. Millwood; Jason R. Finley; Leslie Champeny; Anne J. Gilliland; Gregory H. Leazer

ADEPT is a 5-year project whose goals are to develop, deploy, and evaluate inquiry learning capabilities for the Alexandria Digital Library, an extant digital library of primary sources in geography. We interviewed nine geography faculty members who teach undergraduate courses about their information seeking for research and teaching and their use of information resources in teaching. These data were supplemented by interviews with four faculty members from another ADEPT study about the nature of knowledge in geography. Among our key findings are that geography faculty are more likely to encounter useful teaching resources while seeking research resources than vice versa, although the influence goes in both directions. Their greatest information needs are for research data, maps, and images. They desire better searching by concept or theme, in addition to searching by location and place name. They make extensive use of their own research resources in their teaching. Among the implications for functionality and architecture of geographic digital libraries for educational use are that personal digital libraries are essential, because individual faculty members have personalized approaches to selecting, collecting, and organizing teaching resources. Digital library services for research and teaching should include the ability to import content from common office software and to store content in standard formats that can be exported to other applications. Digital library services can facilitate sharing among faculty but cannot overcome barriers such as intellectual property rights, access to proprietary research data, or the desire of individuals to maintain control over their own resources. Faculty use of primary and secondary resources needs to be better understood if we are to design successful digital libraries for research and teaching.


acm/ieee joint conference on digital libraries | 2004

How geography professors select materials for classroom lectures: implications for the design of digital libraries

Christine L. Borgman; Gregory H. Leazer; Anne J. Gilliland-Swetland; Kelli A. Millwood; Leslie Champeny; Jason R. Finley; Laura J. Smart

A goal of the Alexandria Digital Earth Prototype (ADEPT) project is to make primary resources in geography useful for undergraduate instruction in ways that promote inquiry learning. The ADEPT education and evaluation team interviewed professors about their use of geography information as they prepare for class lectures, as compared to their research activities. We found that professors desired the ability to search by concept (erosion, continental drift, etc.) as well as geographic location, and that personal research collections were an important source of instructional materials. Resources in geospatial digital libraries are typically described by location, but are rarely described by concept or educational application. This paper presents implications for the design of an educational digital library from our observations of the lecture preparation process. Findings include functionality requirements for digital libraries and implications for the notion of digital libraries as a shared information environment. The functional requirements include definitions and enhancements of searching capabilities, the ability to contribute and to share personal collections of resources, and the capability to manipulate data and images.


Proceedings of The Asist Annual Meeting | 2006

From Prototype to Deployable System: Framing the Adoption of Digital Library Services

Leonard W. D'Avolio; Christine L. Borgman; Leslie Champeny; Gregory H. Leazer; Anne J. Gilliland; Kelli A. Millwood

The Alexandria Digital Earth Prototype Project (ADEPT) is a 5-year (1999-2004) effort, with a goal of developing effective models for implementing digital libraries in undergraduate instruction. The ADEPT team has created a digital learning environment (DLE) that adds educational value to a digital library by offering a suite of services for teaching. Encouraged by the results of implementations in undergraduate geography classrooms, the team now shifts its focus from experimental prototype to deployable system. Everett Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovations theories are used as frameworks for analyzing this complex transition. Recommendations for lowering the barriers to adoption related to complexity, trialability, and observability include the prioritization of development efforts focused on stabilizing the system, the creation of documentation and an online demonstration, and anonymous logins to the system. To increase perceived relative advantage, existing technical and copyright issues in integrating the Alexandria Digital Library must be overcome. To increase compatibility, the speed at which pedagogical change is achieved must be rethought. Finally, recruitment efforts should focus on innovators and early adopters before moving on to early majority, late majority, or laggard adopters.


Cognition and Instruction | 2005

The quality of students' use of evidence in written scientific explanations

William A. Sandoval; Kelli A. Millwood


Archive | 2007

What Can Argumentation Tell Us About Epistemology

William A. Sandoval; Kelli A. Millwood


acm/ieee joint conference on digital libraries | 2004

Developing a digital learning environment: an evaluation of design and implementation processes

Leslie Champeny; Christine L. Borgman; Gregory H. Leazer; Anne J. Gilliland-Swetland; Kelli A. Millwood; Leonard W. D'Avolio; Jason R. Finley; Laura J. Smart; Richard E. Mayer; Richard A. Johnson


Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology | 2005

Comparing faculty information seeking in teaching and research: Implications for the design of digital libraries: Research Articles

Christine L. Borgman; Laura J. Smart; Kelli A. Millwood; Jason R. Finley; Leslie Champeny; Anne J. Gilliland; Gregory H. Leazer


Archive | 2004

Getting ready for class: The information seeking behavior of geography professors in support of teaching

Christine L. Borgman; Laura J. Smart; Kelli A. Millwood; Jason R. Finley; Leslie Champeny; Anne J. Gilliland-Swetland; Gregory H. Leazer


international conference of learning sciences | 2006

A comparison of students' conceptions about the nature of argumentation in school and professional science

Kelli A. Millwood


Center for Embedded Network Sensing | 2006

EDU 0: Education Overview

Karen Kim; Christine L. Borgman; June Chang; Melissa S. Cook; Amy Fann; Deborah A. Fields; Kathy Griffis; Richard Guy Aletha Harven; Kelli A. Millwood; William A. Sandoval; Linda Sax; Vandana Thadani; Wesley Uehara; Jillian C. Wallis; Joe Wise; Deborah Estrin; Michael F. Allen; Dave Caron; Paul H. Davis; Eric Graham; Ramesh Govindan; Michael Hamilton; Mark Hanson; Tom Harmon; John S. Heidemann; Jenny Jay; William J. Kaiser; Jens Palsberg; Greg Pottie; Mohammad H. Rahimi

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Laura J. Smart

University of California

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Vandana Thadani

Loyola Marymount University

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Aletha Harven

University of California

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