ERIC Number: EJ1252044
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2020-Apr
Pages: 19
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: EISSN-1533-242X
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Reading Academic Citations: How Professors and Graduate Students Read for Different Purposes
Eckstein, Grant; Miner, Sarah; Watkins, Katie; James, Judy; Sims, Mornie; Baker, Allison Wallace; Grahl, Larissa
Reading Matrix: An International Online Journal, v20 n1 p1-19 Apr 2020
Citations provide truncated yet socially complex information about sources in academic texts which students are obliged to read, comprehend, and then ultimately produce as part of an academic discourse community. While researchers have observed a developmental process whereby students produce citations during source-based writing, little work has investigated the reading stage when students visually encounter citations. In this study, we explored academic reading behaviors by examining eye movements of 27 graduate students and 18 professors as they read 6 authentic research texts for various purposes (summary, analysis, synthesis). Results of factorial ANOVAs showed no differences between students and professors but did reveal that both groups spent far less time looking at citations than surrounding text and that reading purposes affected citation reading behavior. These results indicate that students and professors read academic citations in similar ways. Further, the findings suggest that synthesizing sources, not just summarizing or analyzing them, results in greater attention to citations; thus, students developing their academic writing and citation skills may benefit from synthesizing multiple sources.
Descriptors: Citations (References), Reading Processes, Eye Movements, Graduate Students, College Faculty, Academic Language, Information Sources, Attention, Reader Text Relationship, Reading Writing Relationship
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Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research
Education Level: Higher Education; Postsecondary Education
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Language: English
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