TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title Page – – – – – – – i
Approval Page – – – – – – – ii
Certification Page – – – – – – iii
Dedication – – – – – – – – iv
Acknowledgements – – – – – – v
Table of Contents – – – – – – vi
List of tables – – – – – – – ix
Abstract – – – – – – – x
CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION – – – – 1
Background to the Study – – – – – 1
Statement of the Problem – – – – – 9
Purpose of the Study – – – – – – 10
Research Questions – – – – – – 11
Significance of the Study – – – – – – 11
Scope of the Study – – – – – – 12
CHAPTER TWO: LITERATURE REVIEW – – – – 13
Conceptual framework – – – – – – 13
Information and communication technologies (ICTs) 13
Users services in university libraries – – 26
ICT
facilities required for user services in university libraries – – 33
Utilization of ICT in user services in university libraries – 34
Benefits
of ICT utilization for user services in university libraries – – 38
Challenges
associated with ICT utilization in user services of university libraries- 41
Strategies
for enhancing ICT utilization in user services of university libraries – 43
Review of Empirical studies – – – – – 48
Summary of literature review – – – – – – 50
CHAPTER THREE: RESEARCH METHODS – – – 53
Research Design – – – – – – 53
Area of the Study – – – – – – – 53
Population – – – – – – 54
Sample and Sampling Technique – – – – 55
Instruments for Data Collection – – – – – 55
Validation of the Instruments – – – – – 56
Method of Data Collection – – – – – 57
Method of Data Analysis – – – – – 57
CHAPTER FOUR: PRESENTATION OF DATA – – – 58
Research Question 1 – – – – 58
Research Question 2 – – – – – 63
Research Question 3 – – – – – – 66
Research Question 4 – – – – – 68
Research Question 5 – – – – – – 69
Summary of findings of the Study – – – – – 70
CHAPTER FIVE: DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION – – 72
Discussion of the Findings – – – – – – 72
Implications of the Study – – – – – 77
Recommendations – – – – – – – 79
Limitations – – – – – – 79
Suggestion for Further Research – – – – – 80
Conclusion – – – – – – – 80
References – – – – – – – – 82
Appendix A – – – – – – – 90
Appendix B – – – – – – – 92
Appendix C – – – – – – – 96
Appendix D – – – – – – – 97
Appendix E – – – – – – – 101
List
of Tables
Table 1: Observation Checklist result on ICT facilities available in federal university libraries in South East Nigeria – 58
Table 2: Respondents view on the availability of ICT in federal university libraries in South East Nigeria – – – 61
Table 3: Respondents view on the extent of ICT utilization in providing user services – – – – – 64
Table 4: Respondents view on Users perception of the benefits derived from ICT utilization – – – 66
Table 5: Respondents view on problems associated with ICT utilization for users services in university libraries in South East Nigeria – 68
Table 6: Respondents view on Strategies for implementing and addressing problems of ICT utilization – – – – 69
Abstract
This study investigated the utilization
of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in user services of federal
university libraries in South East Nigeria. It examined the availability,
extent, users’ perception, problems and strategies of addressing the challenges
of ICT utilization. Five purposes of the study and five research questions were
raised to guide the study. A descriptive survey was used for the study, with
population of 64 library staff and 12,405 users. All 64 library staff and 400
users constitute the sample, however, 447 (96.3%) constitutes the final sample
used for the study. The instrument for data collection was observation
checklist and questionnaire. In analysing the data, descriptive statistic such
as mean scores and tables was used. The findings revealed that a number of ICT
facilities are at different levels of availability in the federal university
libraries under study. It also shows that ICT tools such as e-mails, subject
gateways, e-journals, e-books are extensively used to provide reference
services, in terms of bibliographic tools; the CD-ROMs and online databases are
widely used. It further shows that users’ perception is that ICT utilization is
beneficial, as it aids in enhancing research. Various problems ranging from
inadequate budget for ICT facilities, inadequate infrastructure, lack of
up-graded ICT skill level of users, inadequate qualified staff in libraries,
software and hardware problems are shown to hinder ICT utilization. The study
made the following recommendations: adequate infrastructure, funding, training
of library staff on ICT use for research, provision of adequate electricity
with back-up power plant, institutional subscription, as solutions in
addressing the problems of ICT utilization in federal university libraries in
South East Nigeria.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
Background to the study
The university plays a central role in the development of a nation;
it provides the intellectual force and manpower needed to sustain the
socio-economic and political aspiration of the nation. According to Wikipedia,
the free online encyclopaedia (2011),
the word university is derived
from the Latin universitas
magistrorum et scholarium, roughly meaning “community of teachers and scholars.”
it is an institution of higher education and research, which
grants academic degrees in a variety of subjects. It is
also regarded as a corporation that provides both undergraduate education and postgraduate education. Similarly, the
Chambers Dictionary(1999), defined the university as an institution of higher
learning, with the power to grant degrees, its body of teachers, students,
graduates etc, its colleges or its building; a corporate body. Aguolu cited in Madu (2004), in highlighting
the importance of the university in Nigeria
identified six main functions it
performs: conservation of knowledge; pursuit, promotion, and dissemination of
knowledge through teaching; advancement of knowledge through research-pure,
applied and development oriented; provision of intellectual leadership;
development of human resources for meeting manpower needs; promotion of social
and economic modernization. Ifidon and Okoli (2002) added other additional
functions of the university such as:
Promotion of intra-and inter -continental and international
understanding. However, these functions cannot be adequately carried out
without the contribution of the university library.
The university library is that kind of library situated in higher
institution of learning, more specifically a university institution. Madu (2004) defined the university library as
“one attached to an institution of higher learning of the status of a
university and that it serves primarily students, staff and others who need its
services.” From the functions of the university stated earlier, university
libraries have derived their objectives to include:
- Provision of materials for
undergraduate instruction, term papers, and projects, as well as for
supplementary reading;
- Provision of materials in
support of faculty, external and collaborative research;
- Provision of expensive standard
works, especially in the professional disciplines;
- Provision of materials for
personal development;
- Provision of specialized
information on the region within which the university is situated;
- Cooperation with other academic
libraries with a view to developing a network of academic library resources
that is at the disposal of all scholars.
The university library is positioned at the intersection of
university instruction, services and resources. It is an academic department,
which provides instruction on information literacy. But is not part of students
support services, yet provides students services such as research helps and
study spaces. The university library is not also the book store, or facilities
management, yet it provides similar resources (e.g. Computers, books, journals
and a comfortable place for reflection).
The university library by its characteristic feature is noted to
provide a wide range of services in all the areas of knowledge as taught in the
parent university. In view of these features, the university library is
decentralized with a main library coordinating departmental and faculty
libraries (Ekere, 2010).
Because the university library is established to support the
objectives of the university which is to promote teaching, learning and
research, it is imperative that it serves the undergraduate, postgraduate,
lecturers and other members of the university community. For undergraduate
students, the library is expected to provide information materials and services
specially structured for their academic pursuit. For postgraduate students,
teaching staff and research fellows, the university library is strategic in
providing information resources and services of depth quality. That is why
Agboola (2005) posit that university libraries are very important components of
university institutions. He further argued that no university can lay claim to
academic excellence without a good library to back up its teaching, research
and public service mandates. Similarly, the quality of a university is measured
largely by the quality of its library. Thus, because of the strategic place the
library occupies in the university system, no university can function effectively
without it.
University libraries all over the world have standardized methods of
arrangement of their departments (Ode and Omokaro, 2007). A typical university
library therefore is arranged into five departments namely: Technical services
department; User services which includes-(Readers services department, Research
and Bibliographic services unit) and Administrative department. The
administrative department serves mainly to control the overall staff, funds,
equipment and activities. The technical services department is subdivided into
cataloguing and classification sections; as well as the acquisition section.
The technical section is responsible for the cataloguing and classifying of all
the books, etc., procured by the library. It also processes these materials for
use, while the latter is charged with the responsibilities for the selection,
ordering, receiving and accessioning of all library books including non-book
materials. Because the services offered by the department are not directly to
the library users, they are often referred to as behind the scene services.
While the readers’ services and research and bibliographic units are
categorized as users’ services. These are services the library offers directly
to its patrons, and the focus of this study is based on users’ services in
university libraries.
User services are those
services a library provides directly to its patrons. University libraries make
use of user services extensively to meet the information need of its patrons.
These services are: user education (orientation/instruction services),
inter-library loan/connection services, abstracting and indexing services,
bibliographical services, reference services, information services and
circulation services. Added to the list are photocopying services; online
services;; compilation of reading list and bibliographies; e-mail; internet
connectivity; CD-ROM searching and publishing (Ifidon, 2006). Anyoagu (2007)
also outlined the following as user services university libraries provide to
enable users access information from both physical and virtual resources:
inter-library loan services; current awareness services; selective
dissemination of information services; document delivery services; photocopying
services; repackaging services; e-mail; facsimile services; compilation of
reading lists and bibliographies; microfilming services; reference services;
internet services; indexing and abstracting of journal articles services;
binding services; internet services;
content of journals received; on-line bibliographic search and referral
services. Some of these services are more feasible in the digital environment
than the traditional library. It has been observed that these services are
rendered in varying degrees depending on the university libraries.
Information and communication technology (ICT) has radically altered
the concept of reality which is embedded in time and space within the physical
and social worlds. This is because the time and distance it takes to
communicate and transact business around the physical world has been relatively
eliminated, thus unifying the world into a globally-knit community. The concept
of ICT is made of three important associative terms: information, communication
and technology. Information is whatever that is capable of causing a human mind
to change its opinion about the current state of the world (de Wattevile and
Gilbert, 2000; Womboh and Abba, 2008). It re-enforces people’s opinion of the
current state of the world and adds to one’s knowledge. Communication refers to
the transfer or exchange of information from person to person or from one place
to another (James et al, 2004). Technology refers to the use of scientific
knowledge to invent tools that assist human beings in their efforts to overcome
challenges posed by the natural environment and improve the quality of life.
Collectively, ICT is a general concept used to describe a range of technologies
for gathering, storing, retrieving, processing, analyzing and transmitting
information. (ESCAP, 2000; Wilson, 2000; Marcelle, 2000; Kiiski and Pohjole,
2000). For Adetimirin (2007), information and communication technology
facilitates access to electronic information which has become invaluable in
complementing traditional library resources.
The earliest
use of information technology in Nigerian university was the introduction of
microform technology at the University of Ibadan with the purchase of three
microform readers in 1948. The first instance of the usage of computers in
Nigeria University was when IBM established the African Education Centre at the
University of Ibadan (UI Computing Center) in 1963. By 1977 the total computer
installations in Nigeria had grown to 70 and by the late 1970s computer science
courses had been established at the Universities of Nigeria, Lagos, Ibadan, Ife
and others. Early information technological developments also included the
computerization of the serial holdings at IU where they were then printed and
used in a book format by 1975. By 1979, a computer generated list of serials
held by the ABU Library complex was produced. Libraries at UNN, IU and ABU all
produced computerized lists of serials in the 1970s and the Nigeria Library
Association initiated a project to coordinate these automated lists, however,
this was discontinued in 1984. At ABU a circulation system was initialized in
1976, but constraints from power interruptions and machine breakdown prevented
rapid progress. A Plessey microcomputer system was installed in the Lagos
University Library in 1982 but because of the lack of replacement parts
progress on this project was stalled.
Meanwhile, the adoption of information and
communications technology and its utilization as an enabling tool was more
slowly introduced into Nigerian university libraries as they are seen then as primarily
storehouses for books, despite the clamour for “virtual libraries”. The development
and implementation of information technology in the university libraries of
Nigeria is still a work in progress, this is because Nigeria is severely
challenged by lack of basic infrastructures which have prevented development in
most areas. The national electricity grid is still underdeveloped in 2011 and
this basic necessity for technological development has made progress in
information technological implementation a difficult programme. The
implementation of the tools necessary for information technological development
requires stable electrical infrastructure in order to ensure success. IAEA
statistics for 2005 show that Nigerians consumed 72 KWh per capita; a clear
disparity compared to the per capita use of 13,228KWh that existed in the
USA. Available electric power in the
national grid has been decreasing in Nigeria rather than growing as the 6,000
megawatts set as an output goal for 2009 could not be met and the available
power in the country has dropped from 3400 megawatts in December of 2009 to
2400 as of June 2011 because of the lack of gas reaching the power plants. For
those who are fortunate enough to be located in an area which is provided with
at least a minimum of electricity there remains the difficult task of accessing
the Internet. Paying for access to an Internet service or setting up a
satellite connection is affecting the budget of most university libraries.
Despite the
constraints that university libraries face, they have moved ahead of all others
in the implementation of information and communication technology. Some of the
libraries are receiving major funding from organizations such as the World Bank
and the MacArthur and Carnegie Foundations and if reliable infrastructure can
be set in place and adequate capacity building occurs they will then stand the
highest likelihood of succeeding.
In the past, the university library acted as intermediary between
the information and seekers of information. Today, these roles are changing. A
good number of users currently interface directly with information. The
internet which is an aspect of information and communication technology (ICT)
have reduced the mediating role played by university library, making it
possible for students, faculty members, researchers and the general public to
access information without setting a foot at the traditional library structure.
Thus, with just a click, either at home or cyber café’ or some remote location
information can be downloaded or uploaded.
However, studies have shown that the plethora of information found
on the internet have their peculiar challenges. This is because it is not all
information on the World Wide Web (www) that is useful; some are obsolete,
subjective, irrelevant, and even when useful, are restricted from access except
when a password is provided, which must be paid for by subscription. In view of
this observed defect, the onus is still on the university library to provide
the platform on which access to objective and useful information can be
accessed. The university library is also expected to provided ever-increasing
and varied services to patrons that they never see; virtual referencing and
support of distance education (open university of Nigeria) which has created a
whole new type of library users; the faceless patrons and all of these have
made the role of the university library challenging as well as exciting.
Africa suffers
from the most expensive broadband costs in the world, at over $900 a month
compared to approximately $100 per month in the Americas and Europe. Mobile
phone use has grown; there are currently a total of 70,337,657 telephone
subscribers and 11 million Internet users in Nigeria. Nigeria has just emerged
as the largest mobile telecom market in Africa with more than 61 million mobile
subscribers. If the rapid rise of mobile technology continues, it may provide
new access roads onto the information superhighway which could avoid the
problems inherent in power generation, but only if competition among telecom
companies could help in reducing the cost for accessing the Internet through
mobile communications. This method of access to the Internet does not look like
an immediate solution for all, although there is a trend towards the use of
data-enabled handsets by those who can afford this option.
In 2001,
Nigeria developed the National Policy for Information Technology (NPIT) which
is a general policy for the development of IT (information and communication
technologies) in Nigeria. It represents the policy drive of the Federal
Government of Nigeria concerning ICTs, what they do and can do, how they can be
developed and applied, and the time frame within which to achieve ICT
capability in Nigeria by 2005. The National Information Technology Development
Agency (NITDA), the implementing agency, was established with a major aim of
using information technology for education, particularly within and between
Nigerian universities. Unfortunately this project failed a few years after it
was set up.
The Nigerian
University Commission (NUC) had made plans for a network (NuNet) to provide
internet connectivity and e-mail to University Libraries. A feasibility study
was done in 2000 at great cost, but the project has not proven to be sustainable
as “the e-mail system experiences downtimes that stretch into weeks and even
the NUC Headquarters has little to show for the years of effort: though the
building was built with network wiring in every room and a sophisticated
backbone and an emergency power supply, only a handful of computers are
attached to the network and the only network service is TELNET email access.”
(NLA Newsletter, 2002).
Federal University libraries in South East Nigeria share similar
historical antecedents as well as objectives and functions with university
libraries in other parts of Nigeria. Meanwhile, the only distinction is in
geographical location, implying that these libraries are mainly found in the
five states comprising: Abia State; Anambra State; Enugu State; Ebonyi State;
and Imo State. Like other universities in Nigeria, their functions include
teaching, research and community service, while their historical antecedent in
terms of ICT utilization share similarities with other federal university
libraries in Nigeria. However, the focus of this study is on the utilization of
ICT in user services of federal university libraries in South East Nigeria,
with emphasis on the examination of the availability of ICT facilities; extent
of ICT utilization, users perception of benefits derived; problems associated
with ICT utilization and strategies in containing the problems associated with
ICT utilization in users services.
Statement of the Problem