Digital Visitor and Resident

The Digital Visitor and Resident (V&R) model provides a framework to depict how user preference and habit motivates engagement with technology and the web. V&R is commonly described as a continuum, with two modes of online engagement at either end, making a separation between different approaches to engagement. People operating in Visitor mode have a defined goal or task, and select an appropriate online tool to meet their needs as they arise.[1] For example, using a smartphone to search the internet for directions to a local bookstore, thus finding a particular piece of information online and then going offline to complete the task. There will be little in terms of social visibility or trace when online in Visitor mode. People operating in Resident mode are online to connect to, or to be with, other people. For example, posting to the wall in Facebook, tweeting, blogging, or posting comments on blogs. The web supports the projection of their identity and facilitates relationships. In other words, Residents live a percentage of their lives online. Unlike the Visitor mode, there will be online visibility and presence when in Resident mode.[2] It is very common for individuals to engage online in a mixture of Visitor and Resident modes depending on what they are trying to achieve.

Background edit

Marc Prensky's notions of digital natives and digital immigrants[3] has had a lasting influence on how educational institutions perceive students and technology. However, Prensky's model has been challenged by other researchers who have debated its parameters. One of these new models is the V&R project.[2] It contrasts with Presky's digital native in that it rejects hard divisions based on the age of the user, and instead focuses on the user's desired level of engagement.[4]

Mapping process edit

 
A detailed Digital Visitors and Residents map of online engagement from a Health and Social Care student in the UK

The Visitor-Resident continuum illustrates the range of possible modes of engagement individuals now have available to them through the web. The corresponding Digital Visitors and Residents mapping is a tool used by educators and librarians for exploring how their institutional users are engaging with the services they provide. By having students or users map their activity, they can create a picture of their overall engagement. Mapping also can be used to gain a picture of the overall digital presence of a group or department when bringing together and overlaying multiple maps.[2]

V&R study edit

The V&R project explored learners' motivations behind different types of engagement with the digital environment, when seeking information. The investigation focused on the sources learners turn to in order to gather information, and which on- and off-line spaces they choose to interact in as part of the learning process. The study used the Digital Visitors and Residents framework to map learners' modes of engagement in both personal and institutional contexts. The project assessed whether individual approaches shift according to the learners' educational stage or whether they develop practices/literacies in early stages that remain largely unchanged as they progress through their educational career. Learners from both the United Kingdom and the United States participated in the project.[2]

The V&R project used both quantitative and qualitative methods for a mixed methods approach.[5] The qualitative method of semi-structured interviews, sometimes accompanied by monthly diaries and follow-up interviews, was used to create a rich, descriptive longitudinal study of preselected individuals who represent the four educational stages (Emerging, Establishing, Embedding, and Experiencing).[6] Findings, to date, indicate that behavior patterns vary by the participants' educational stage rather than by their age, which varies within each stage. This categorization, by educational stages rather than age, contrasts with Prensky's "natives and immigrants" paradigm. However, the V&R notion reflects that individual choices about technology and information seeking derive from context— that is, from individuals' educational and professional priorities — rather than from their age.[6]

The findings also indicate that people still rely on other people to get information, especially those within their personal networks.[7] Individuals make decisions based on convenience within the context of their information needs and the situation within which the need arises. Web-based functionalities are the expected norm for services by many people, as the sources that people chose are overwhelmingly digital.[6] Interviewees mentioned search engines and social media sites far more often than physical places, when looking for information. This reliance on digital spaces coexists with a persistent need to be in contact with other people both online and face to face. Individuals expect to use their own technology to connect with institutional (and other) resources, and to engage in Resident modes of behavior.[6] There is also an underlying perception, particularly by US students, that sources such as Wikipedia should be avoided, creating a “learning black market” where these sources are covertly used and not mentioned.[7] Mentions of the free web, as represented by major media sites and Wikipedia, also far outnumbered mentions of university databases or course management systems such as Moodle, even among graduate students. Participants in all of the educational stages frequently mentioned convenience/ease of use as an important factor in obtaining information.

Undoubtedly, people seek what they need within their existing relationships, and as they move through the educational stages, their networks are increasingly populated with people who have relevant subject expertise. By the time individuals become faculty members, calling a "friend" about an article indefinitely means the friend is also an expert in the field. Relationships are a major factor in how individuals get information and whom they choose for collaboration. The desire to make contact with others also motivates people to engage with technology.[6]

Recommendations edit

Services and systems need to be embedded into individual's workflow. Therefore, the institution should provide a broad range of tools for gathering information and create simple and convenient interface designs. Institutions should also eliminate any barriers between information discovery and access, along with the promotion and marketing of services academic communities. Institutions should use individual Internet practices as a guide to linking institutional resources to those on the open web by conversing with their academic constituencies and using what they already know about people using Wikipedia. It is also important to ensure that the library, or institution, has a diverse presence in digital and physical spaces, and engages in innovative strategies for making library collections come to life, using social media.[8]

InfoKit edit

The infoKit draws on the findings and methods of the Jisc/OCLC funded Digital Visitors and Residents (V&R) project which is underpinned by an alternative to Prensky's typing of technology users. It contains advice on evaluating the services you offer to your users. The focus is primarily on digital/online services but set within the broader context of more traditional services, exploring the relationship between the two.[2]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Booth, Char (2009). Informing Innovation: Tracking Student Interest in Emerging Library Technologies at Ohio University. ISBN 978-0-8389-8526-7.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Evaluating digital services: a Visitors and Residents approach". www.jiscinfonet.ac.uk. Retrieved 2015-09-26.
  3. ^ "Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants Part 2: Do They Really Think Differently?null". On the Horizon. 9 (6): 1–6. 2001-11-01. doi:10.1108/10748120110424843. ISSN 1074-8121. S2CID 145201624.
  4. ^ Hockly, Nicky (2011-07-01). "The digital generation". ELT Journal. 65 (3): 322–325. doi:10.1093/elt/ccr041. ISSN 0951-0893.
  5. ^ ""I always stick with the first thing that comes up on Google. . ." Where People Go for Information, What They Use, and Why". Retrieved 2015-09-26.
  6. ^ a b c d e Lynn Silipigni Connaway; Donna Lanclos; Erin M. Hood. ""I Find Google a lot Easier than Going to the Library Website." Imagine Ways to Innovate and Inspire Students to Use the Academic Library" (PDF).
  7. ^ a b "New infokit details information about findings and outputs from Visitors and Residents project". www.oclc.org. Retrieved 2015-09-26.
  8. ^ Desantis, Nick (2012-01-06). "On Facebook, Librarian Brings 2 Students From the Early 1900s to Life". The Chronicle of Higher Education Blogs: Wired Campus. Retrieved 2015-09-26.

Further reading edit

  1. Silipigni Connaway, Lynn, and Kevin M. Randall. 2013. "Why the Internet is More Attractive than the Library". The Serials Librarian. 64 (1-4): 41–56.
  2. Connaway Lynn Silipigni, Erin Hood, Donna Lanclos, David White, and Alison Le Cornu. 2013. "User-centered decision making: A new model for developing academic library services and systems". IFLA Journal. 39 (1): 20–29.
  3. Connaway, Lynn Silipigni, David White, and Donna Lanclos. 2011. Visitors and residents: What motivates engagement with the digital information environment? Proceedings of the 74th ASIS&T Annual Meeting. (48):1-7.
  4. Connaway, Lynn Silipigni, David White, Donna Lanclos, and Alison Le Cornu. 2012. Visitors and residents: What motivates engagement with the digital information environment? Information Research. 18(1).
  5. Engelsmann, Hazel C., Elke Greifeneder, Nikoline D. Lauridsen, and Anja G. Nielsen. 2014. "Validation of the visitor and resident framework in an e-book setting." Information Research. 19(2): 19–2.
  6. Fagan, Jody Condit. 2010. Visitors and residents in library web spaces. Journal of Web Librarianship. 4(4): 301–303.
  7. Hopkins, David, and Sue Beckingham. 2012. Are students aware of their “digital footprint” and the effect their online presence/activity may have on current or future employment prospects? In The 7th Plymouth Enhanced Learning Conference (PELeCON 2012), April 18–20, 2012, Plymouth.
  8. Oliveira, Eloiza, Carvalho, Jose Mauro Goncalves Nunes, Caio Abitbol Carvalho, and Gabriel Moura Souza Miranda Rodrigues. 2014. Digital visitors and digital residents: Overcoming the concept of digital natives. In Proceedings of the 2014 9th Iberian Conference on Information Systems and Technologies. NP: IEEE.
  9. Ramanigopal, C. S., G. Palaniappan, and N. Hemalatha. 2012. "Social Networking: Problems and Prospects of the Knowledge Society." International Journal of Research in Management, Economics and Commerce (IJRMEC). 2(2): 116–129.
  10. Reed, Peter. 2013. "Hashtags and retweets: using Twitter to aid Community, Communication and Casual (informal) learning." Research in Learning Technology. 21.
  11. Tschofen, Carmen, and Jenny Mackness. 2012. "Connectivism and dimensions of individual experience." The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning. 13(1): 124–143.
  12. West, Trudi, and Carina Paine. 2012. "The opportunities of mobile learning for executive education." The Ashridge Journal.
  13. White, David. 2008. Not “natives” & “immigrants” but “Visitors” & “Residents.” TALL Blog: Online Education with the University of Oxford, April 23.
  14. White, David, and Alison Le Cornu. (2011). Visitors and residents: A new typology for online engagement. First Monday. 16(9).
  15. Wright, Fiona, David White, Tony Hirst, and Alan Cann. 2014. "Visitors and Residents: mapping student attitudes to academic use of social networks". Learning, Media and Technology. 39(1): 126–141.
  16. Wu, Kim Somaly, and Donna Lanclos. 2011. "Re-imagining the users' experience: An ethnographic approach to web usability and space design." Reference Services Review. 39(3): 369–389.

External links edit