Abstract
Purpose- The purpose of this paper is to report the findings of a study to investigate changes in scholarly communication practices among a group of scholars in the UK and build upon the results that were published in a previous paper.
Design/methodology/approach- The study deployed a naturalistic inquiry approach using semi-structured interviews as a qualitative research tool. A sample of 40 participants from four UK universities were interviewed to explore the changes in informal scholarly communication behaviour.
Findings- The analysis of the interviews revealed that there are three ideal types of behaviour: the ‘Orthodox’ uses formal and traditional scholarly communication approaches; the ‘Moderate’ prioritises formal communication approaches, but at the same time is trying to get benefits from informal channels; and, the ‘Heterodox’ uses all channels available in scholarly communication.
Originality and value - The value of the current study lies in using a naturalistic inquiry approach to investigate the changes in scholarly communication practices, and to explore different scholarly communication styles. In the context of this study, the use of a naturalistic approach and grounded theory principles in connection with coding provided a stance that allows for the gathering of rich information to enable understanding and explanation of scholarly communication activities in addition to uncovering themes that related to scholarly behaviour.
Design/methodology/approach- The study deployed a naturalistic inquiry approach using semi-structured interviews as a qualitative research tool. A sample of 40 participants from four UK universities were interviewed to explore the changes in informal scholarly communication behaviour.
Findings- The analysis of the interviews revealed that there are three ideal types of behaviour: the ‘Orthodox’ uses formal and traditional scholarly communication approaches; the ‘Moderate’ prioritises formal communication approaches, but at the same time is trying to get benefits from informal channels; and, the ‘Heterodox’ uses all channels available in scholarly communication.
Originality and value - The value of the current study lies in using a naturalistic inquiry approach to investigate the changes in scholarly communication practices, and to explore different scholarly communication styles. In the context of this study, the use of a naturalistic approach and grounded theory principles in connection with coding provided a stance that allows for the gathering of rich information to enable understanding and explanation of scholarly communication activities in addition to uncovering themes that related to scholarly behaviour.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Pages (from-to) | 825-842 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | Journal of Documentation |
Volume | 73 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 11 Sept 2017 |
Keywords
- Scholarly research
- scholarly communication
- communication practices
- scholarly publishing
- scholarly collaboration
- information seeking