Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1

Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to present the first part of three inter-related studies investigating the use and usability of e-books in higher education based on experiments conducted at the University of Strathclyde. Design/methodology/approach - A self-selected sampling method was employ...

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Main Authors: Noorhidawati, Abdullah, Gibb, Forbes
Format: Article
Published: Emerald 2008
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/25488/
https://doi.org/10.1108/00242530810899577
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spelling my.um.eprints.254882020-09-01T05:05:46Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/25488/ Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1 Noorhidawati, Abdullah Gibb, Forbes Z Bibliography. Library Science. Information Resources Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to present the first part of three inter-related studies investigating the use and usability of e-books in higher education based on experiments conducted at the University of Strathclyde. Design/methodology/approach - A self-selected sampling method was employed from undergraduate and postgraduate instructional students registered with the University of Strathclyde for academic year 2005/2006. An announcement email was posted to the student web portal for a period of three weeks inviting them to participate in the survey. Findings - This survey found that e-book awareness and the level of e-book usage amongst students was lower than anticipated: 57 per cent of students were not aware of the availability of e-books from the library and 60 per cent of them had not used an e-book. Non-users commented that e-books were not widely advertised or promoted. Despite the low levels of e-book awareness and usage non-e-book users indicated their desire to learn more about e-books. Research limitations/implications - This survey was dependent on self-selection and, therefore, there was no central control over the sample profile (e.g. gender, level of studies, academic discipline); hence, generalisation of the results should be treated with caution. Practical implications - This survey is beneficial in terms of obtaining a better understanding of e-book usage among students and the reasons why students do, and do not, use e-books. The findings should be of value to academic libraries in terms of emphasising the need to increase e-book awareness and usage amongst students. Originality/value - The findings should be of value to academic libraries in terms of emphasising the need to increase e-book awareness and usage amongst students. Emerald 2008 Article PeerReviewed Noorhidawati, Abdullah and Gibb, Forbes (2008) Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1. Library Review, 57 (8). pp. 593-605. ISSN 0024-2535 https://doi.org/10.1108/00242530810899577 doi:10.1108/00242530810899577
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic Z Bibliography. Library Science. Information Resources
spellingShingle Z Bibliography. Library Science. Information Resources
Noorhidawati, Abdullah
Gibb, Forbes
Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1
description Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to present the first part of three inter-related studies investigating the use and usability of e-books in higher education based on experiments conducted at the University of Strathclyde. Design/methodology/approach - A self-selected sampling method was employed from undergraduate and postgraduate instructional students registered with the University of Strathclyde for academic year 2005/2006. An announcement email was posted to the student web portal for a period of three weeks inviting them to participate in the survey. Findings - This survey found that e-book awareness and the level of e-book usage amongst students was lower than anticipated: 57 per cent of students were not aware of the availability of e-books from the library and 60 per cent of them had not used an e-book. Non-users commented that e-books were not widely advertised or promoted. Despite the low levels of e-book awareness and usage non-e-book users indicated their desire to learn more about e-books. Research limitations/implications - This survey was dependent on self-selection and, therefore, there was no central control over the sample profile (e.g. gender, level of studies, academic discipline); hence, generalisation of the results should be treated with caution. Practical implications - This survey is beneficial in terms of obtaining a better understanding of e-book usage among students and the reasons why students do, and do not, use e-books. The findings should be of value to academic libraries in terms of emphasising the need to increase e-book awareness and usage amongst students. Originality/value - The findings should be of value to academic libraries in terms of emphasising the need to increase e-book awareness and usage amongst students.
format Article
author Noorhidawati, Abdullah
Gibb, Forbes
author_facet Noorhidawati, Abdullah
Gibb, Forbes
author_sort Noorhidawati, Abdullah
title Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1
title_short Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1
title_full Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1
title_fullStr Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1
title_full_unstemmed Students' attitudes towards e‐books in a Scottish higher education institute: part 1
title_sort students' attitudes towards e‐books in a scottish higher education institute: part 1
publisher Emerald
publishDate 2008
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/25488/
https://doi.org/10.1108/00242530810899577
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