Quality of Researchers' Searches of the ERIC Database
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.v7n25.1999Keywords:
Databases, Educational Research, Information Retrieval, Online Searching, Questionnaires, Researchers, Search Strategies, User Needs (Information)Abstract
During the last ten years, end-users of electronic databases have become progressively less dependent on librarians and other intermediaries. This is certainly the case with the Educational Resources Information Center (ERIC) Database, a resource once accessed by passing a paper query form to a librarian and now increasingly searched directly by end-users. This article empirically examines the search strategies currently being used by researchers and other groups. College professors and educational researchers appear to be doing a better job searching the database than other ERIC patrons. However, the study suggests that most end-users should be using much better search strategies.Downloads
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Published
1999-08-25
How to Cite
Hertzberg, S., & Rudner, L. (1999). Quality of Researchers’ Searches of the ERIC Database. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 7, 25. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.v7n25.1999
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