1. This paper is dedicated to the valuable advice of my research supervisor, Dr. Lynne McKechnie, of the University of Western Ontario's Faculty of Information and Media Studies.
2. “Information Needs and Information-Seeking Behavior of Graduate Students at the University of Botswana”;Fidzani;Library Review,1998
3. Fidzani, “Information Needs”; Roberto Delgadillo and Beverly P. Lynch, “Future Historians: Their Quest for Information,” College and Research Libraries 60.3 (1999): 245–259.
4. Karl J. Weintraub, “The Humanist Scholar and the Library,” Library Quarterly 50.1 (1980): 22–39; and Eugene Garfield, “Is Information Retrieval in the Arts and Sciences Inherently Different from That in Science?” Library Quarterly 50.1 (1980): 40–57, represent the pioneering studies of the information-seeking behavior of humanists. Sue Stone, “Humanist Scholars: Information Needs and Uses,” Journal of Documentation 38.4 (1982): 292–313; and Rebecca Watson-Boone, “Information Needs and Habits of Humanities Scholars,” Reference Quarterly 34.2 (1994): 203–216, summarize the most productive years of scholarship in this area. In addition, Stephen Wiberley's extensive work on humanists and technological adaptation deserves mention (“Patterns of Information Seeking in the Humanities” with William G. Jones, College and Research Libraries 50.6 [1989]: 638–645; “Time and Technology” College and Research Libraries 61.5 [2000]: 421–431).
5. “Process Not Product in Course-Integrated Instruction: A Generic Model of Library Research”;Mellon;College and Research Libraries,1984