posted on 2017-01-30, 00:00authored byCatherine Lantz, Glenda Maria Insua, Annie R. Armstrong, Annie Pho
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to compare two bibliography assignments completed
after one-shot library instruction to determine which research skills first-year students retain over
the course of a semester.
Design/Methodology/Approach: A rubric was developed for citation analysis of student
annotated bibliographies and final bibliographies. Each assignment was scored on a three-point
scale, and four criteria were assessed: the quality of sources used, variety of sources used,
quality of annotations (for first assignment only), and citation accuracy.
Findings: Students scored highest on the quality of sources used in both assignments,
although there was a statistically significant decline in overall scores from the first assignment to
the second. Students had the most difficulty with writing annotations, followed closely by citation
accuracy. Students primarily cited journal articles in their annotated bibliographies and
reference sources in their final bibliographies. Website use increased notably from one
assignment to the other.
Originality/Value: This research is unique in its analysis of two separate bibliography
assignments completed by first-year students over the course of a semester. It is of interest to
librarians teaching one-shot library instruction or any librarian interested in assessing the
research skills of first-year students.