@article{Cyr_Tobin Cataldo_Brannon_Buhler_Faniel_Silipigni Connaway_Kasman Valenza_Elrod_Putnam_2021, title={Backgrounds and behaviors: Which students successfully identify online resources in the face of container collapse}, volume={26}, url={https://firstmonday.org/ojs/index.php/fm/article/view/10871}, DOI={10.5210/fm.v26i3.10871}, abstractNote={<p>In a digital environment, students have difficulty determining whether an information resource comes from a book, magazine, journal, blog, or other container, and lose the contextual information that these containers provide. This study of students from primary through graduate school looks at their ability to identify the containers of information resources, and how this ability is affected by their demographic traits, the resource features they attended to, and their behaviors during a task-based simulation. The results indicate that correct container identification requires deep engagement with a resource. Those who attended to cues such as genre and source were better able to identify container, while those who paid attention to heuristics such as its visual appearance and URL were not. Demographic characteristics, including educational cohort and first-generation student status, also had an effect.</p>}, number={3}, journal={First Monday}, author={Cyr, Christopher and Tobin Cataldo, Tara and Brannon, Brittany and Buhler, Amy and Faniel, Ixchel and Silipigni Connaway, Lynn and Kasman Valenza, Joyce and Elrod, Rachael and Putnam, Samuel}, year={2021}, month={Feb.} }