PurposeThe aim is to develop information behaviour profiles for nursing students, to help inform information literacy programmes. Methodology The methods include further analysis of quantitative findings (previously reported in part 1), together with qualitative research data collection and analysis. Critical incident type interviews with 11 students were transcribed and analysed using an interpretative categorisation method that used dendrograms for data display and analysis. From the regression analysis of the quantitative data, the micro-processes for information seeking were linked to learning styles, and then to personality traits to generate information seeking profiles. Integration of the qualitative findings led to development of a task-based information search model. Findings The start list of seven categories for qualitative analysis (derived from a literature review) was refined (one category added, one removed, with some relabeling). The quantitative data analysis revealed seven profiles (Deep Adventurer, Deep Identifier, Deep Investigator, Strategic All-rounder, Strategic Collector, Surface Co-ordinator, Surface Skimmer, each linked to a particular learning style, personality trait, and preferred information seeking microprocesses).
Research implications/limitationsThe data was collected at only one university and the profiles and the model need to be validated with data from other groups of nursing students. The findings on micro-processes consolidate and extend previous research. Practical implications The profiles should inform information literacy programmes as they show that information search profiles may be more varied than assumed. The information search model extends previous task-based information search models. Originality The information search profiles have not been identified previously.
IntroductionPart I of the paper (Stokes and Urquhart, 2011) discussed the quantitative findings of a mixed-methods doctoral research study on the development of information seeking profiles among nursing students, based on personality, self-efficacy and learning style. The quantitative element of the study used a questionnaire (sample n=194) consisting of three validated scales for personality (Saucier, 1994), learning styles (Entwistle, 1997), and self-efficacy with information literacy (Kurbanoglu et al., 2006), a section on information seeking preferences based on Foster's (2004) model, as well as some demographic questions.Bawden and Robinson's (2011) chapter on 'information styles' summarises many studies that investigated the role of learning styles, self-efficacy, and personality in terms of information-related behaviour finding many plausible and consistent relationships. Particular personality traits and differing learning styles seem to influence the way individuals search for information with individual studies finding marked relationships between Conscientiousness and Strategic learners; and between Openness and Deep learners (Diseth, 2003, Diseth and Martinsen, 2003, Diseth, 2011. These re...