Reflection
I don’t think people will be particularly interested in my search experience, but the topic – serving minority patrons – is a huge issue in the library world. If I want to share my findings with librarians and other want-to-be-librarians, I think keeping a blog will be the best way. But for now this research is more important as a pursuit of my personal interest. In fact, getting near to the end of this project, I feel as if I completed a literature review for a bigger research project. Since I found that the topic that I am most interested in had not been studied by any researchers, to me it is like finding a gap that needs to be filled up. My future is very uncertain at this point, but if there is a chance, I believe it will be a very meaningful research topic.
My research found that the same issue is taken seriously in Australia and Canada, but somehow no records of the European countries. I wonder how they are doing in those countries. I think it is a part of a bigger question – how to live with people who look different from you. I am pretty optimistic about it, and believe the U.S. is well geared for solving the problem with its long history of accepting immigrants. I have heard that Korea now has more than a million migrant workers mostly from China, South and Southeast Asia, and as a country that used to have one of the world’s most homogeneous population until just ten years ago, is having a very hard time in dealing with this abrupt change.
We generally believe that children and young adults go directly to a google search when given a research project. For the main part of my research, I mostly used online database, but for the online translators, I used google too. In library science classes, we had profuse discussions in information search behavior, and in many occasions, children and young adults’ (I think grown ups too) almost exclusively resorting to google was considered to be a problem. However, it will be really hard to convince these people to use some other “more reliable, more authentic” search tools as long as we can not provide them with a search interface that is as simple and as attractive as goole’s. I think the information search instruction should be more focused on how to evaluate the search results from google (or Bing), rather than trying to convince them to use some other resources.
From the first, this project looked very interesting to me, but another fun part was following other classmates’ projects. It was pleasant surprise to me finding each person’s topic so unique, and seeing them pursuing the topics with such enthusiasm and seriousness. I think I learned a lot from everyone’s research as well as from my own.
Yeonok,
It looks like you found an interesting topic here. If you haven’t done your research project yet for the MSU graduate program, you should consider doing this topic. As you said, you have done the lit review already and you have some great ideas for real research.
I guess I couldn’t tell overall what you had concluded. Were any of your research questions “answered”? Or was it more like they just spurred lots of new questions? Does anyone take minority patrons seriously in libraries? Without lots of second language texts, what can be done? Just send them to the internet? Or are there other answers you found?
I wondered about the other issues you brought up. Is it the library’s responsibility to provide other language materials? In the long run does that help with language acquisition? Or is that even the goal?
I guess I’m full of questions too. Hope the inquiry was satisfying for you….Nice job.
Hi, thank you for the comment. I am not sure if this topic will satisfy the graduation requirement. Because I am an ed tech major, I thought I needed to find a topic related to the use of technology in educational setting.
I think most of the questions I had was answered through this project. Even though there are voices of pros and cons, most librarians do realize the need to serve minority people. What I found is that there should be more efforts to listen to minority people’s opinion to understand their needs.