The Annotated Bibliography and Citation Behavior: Enhancing Student Scholarship in an Undergraduate Biology Course

Author:

Flaspohler Molly R.1,Rux Erika M.1,Flaspohler John A.2

Affiliation:

1. *Carl B. Ylvisaker Library and

2. Department of Biology, Concordia College, Moorhead, MN 56562

Abstract

Contemporary undergraduates in the biological sciences have unprecedented access to scientific information. Although many of these students may be savvy technologists, studies from the field of library and information science consistently show that undergraduates often struggle to locate, evaluate, and use high-quality, reputable sources of information. This study demonstrates the efficacy and pedagogical value of a collaborative teaching approach designed to enhance information literacy competencies among undergraduate biology majors who must write a formal scientific research paper. We rely on the triangulation of assessment data to determine the effectiveness of a substantial research paper project completed by students enrolled in an upper-level biology course. After enhancing library-based instruction, adding an annotated bibliography requirement, and using multiple assessment techniques, we show fundamental improvements in students' library research abilities. Ultimately, these improvements make it possible for students to more independently and effectively complete this challenging science-based writing assignment. We document critical information literacy advances in several key areas: student source-type use, annotated bibliography enhancement, plagiarism reduction, as well as student and faculty/librarian satisfaction.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Education

Reference20 articles.

1. American Library Association/Association of College and Research Libraries/STS Task Force on Information Literacy for Science and Technology (2005). Information Literacy Standards for Science and Engineering/Technology In: accessed 13 June 2007 Chicago, IL: American Library Association, http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards/infolitscitech.htm.

2. Information literacy in a biology laboratory session

3. Integrating Information Literacy into the Science Curriculum

4. Helping Students Succeed at a Creative Writing Assignment in the Biological Sciences

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