Title of article
Personality traits, gender, and information competency among college students
Author/Authors
Kwon، Nahyun نويسنده Department of Library and Information Science , , Song، Hana نويسنده Department of Human Resource Development/Child Psychology ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی - سال 2011
Pages
21
From page
87
To page
107
Abstract
This study examines the influence of personality traits on information competency. Furthermore, it seeks to determine whether or not gender moderates the relationship between personality traits and information competency. Data were collected using standardized survey instruments, including Costa and McCrae’s NEO-Five Factor Inventory. The surveys were administered to a convenient sample of 185 college students at a large public university in the southeastern United States. The study results show that three of the five personality traits were significant determinants of information competency among the population sample. Those students, who are more conscientious, open to experience, and extroverted tended to report greater information competency than students who are not. Neither neuroticism nor agreeableness was identified as determinants. Revealing the moderating role of gender, the study uncovers gender-specific personality traits that affect information competency. Specifically, the study finds extroversion to be a male-specific trait and openness to experience a female-specific trait. The results identify conscientiousness as the most consistent and robust determinant of information competency across both genders. The concluding analysis relates the findings’ implications to information literacy.
Journal title
Malaysian Journal of Library and Information Science
Serial Year
2011
Journal title
Malaysian Journal of Library and Information Science
Record number
692035
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