'I’m just not sure.' The persistence of uncertainty in the information seeking of undergraduate students with dyslexia

Author:

Beveridge Lynne, ,Makri Stephann,MacFarlane Andrew, ,

Abstract

As information seeking progresses, it is expected feelings of uncertainty surrounding, for example, the information need, what information will be useful to satisfy the need and how well the need has been satisfied will shift towards confidence and clarity. The six corollaries offered by Kuhlthau outline and explain areas where this shift can happen. However, does it happen for all groups of information-seekers? Undergraduate students with dyslexia often have lower information seeking-related self-efficacy than their peers and this can result in uncertainty persisting throughout information seeking. Retrospective naturalistic think aloud observations were held with 20 undergraduate students with dyslexia. After looking for information for one of their (self-chosen) assignments, participants were invited to explore their thoughts, feelings and actions with the researcher while watching a screen recording of their information seeking session. First, an inductive reflexive Thematic Analysis was conducted which revealed self-efficacy to be a key influence in the information seeking behaviour of undergraduate students with dyslexia. To investigate this further, a dedicated deductive analysis was conducted leveraging Kuhlthau’s six corollaries. The expected shift away from uncertainty towards clarity and confidence was found to be either delayed, disrupted or prevented by participants’ low self-efficacy surrounding selecting and spelling keywords and reading, interpreting and evaluating information online. Uncertainty persisted throughout information seeking and was rarely reduced or resolved. Key areas for additional support during information seeking for this user group are identified, including keyword selection and spelling, accurate reading and interpretation and confident evaluation of online information.

Publisher

University of Boras, Faculty of Librarianship, Information, Education and IT

Subject

Library and Information Sciences

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Communicating Diversity: (Cognitive) Ableism in Information-Seeking Research;Autism in Adulthood;2024-09-04

2. The reading practices of people with neuropsychiatric disabilities: a review of library and information science literature;Information Research an international electronic journal;2024-06-18

3. Drag-and-Drop Query Refinement and Query History Visualization for Mobile Exploratory Search;Proceedings of the 2023 Conference on Human Information Interaction and Retrieval;2023-03-19

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