Publication | Closed Access
The effect of the Web on undergraduate citation behavior 1996-1999
119
Citations
5
References
2001
Year
Scholarly PortalsEducationBibliometricsCommunicationJournalismImpact FactorAltmetricsSocial MediaInformation RetrievalCitation AnalysisContent AnalysisEconomicsWebometricsLearning AnalyticsWeb ScienceCitation GraphUndergraduate Term PapersUndergraduate CitationArts
A citation analysis of undergraduate term papers in microeconomics revealed a significant decrease in the frequency of scholarly resources cited between 1996 and 1999. Book citations decreased from 30% to 19%, newspaper citations increased from 7% to 19%, and Web citations increased from 9% to 21%. Web citations checked in 2000 revealed that only 18% of URLs cited in 1996 led to the correct Internet document. For 1999 bibliographies, only 55% of URLs led to the correct document. The authors recommend (1) setting stricter guidelines for acceptable citations in course assignments; (2) creating and maintaining scholarly portals for authoritative Web sites with a commitment to long-term access; and (3) continuing to instruct students how to critically evaluate resources.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1