In my instruction sessions with students, I often do a quick poll of how many people
use Google Scholar to find articles - the percentage has gone up substantially in recent
years, and it makes me wonder about the money we spend on buying
access to bibliographic index databases. But that's a discussion for another day.
These days, every faculty member and grad student I have asked in individual consultation sessions uses Google Scholar.
I'd say most librarians have conflicted feelings about Google Scholar, and this interview doesn't do anything to change that. We still don't know where Google Scholar is looking - or where it is not looking. But it's interesting to hear from a person who is instrumental in developing something which in ten years has transformed how scholarly research is discovered.
These days, every faculty member and grad student I have asked in individual consultation sessions uses Google Scholar.
I'd say most librarians have conflicted feelings about Google Scholar, and this interview doesn't do anything to change that. We still don't know where Google Scholar is looking - or where it is not looking. But it's interesting to hear from a person who is instrumental in developing something which in ten years has transformed how scholarly research is discovered.
See also a linked article:
1 comment:
Impressive interview. As an girl with traditional thinking, like I reject reading electronic books. I'd like to think that the traditional or old stuff are full of glamour. It's true of the scholar search engine. I still believe that I can acquire the most authoritative papers from Goggle Scholar. So I will support it all the time.-from BOC Sciences
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