TY - JOUR
T1 - Epistemic beliefs and internet reliance – is algorithmic authority part of the picture?
AU - Ståhl, Tore
AU - Sormunen, Eero
AU - Mäkinen, Marita
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors are grateful for the support provided by Arcada through Filip Levälahti, Matteo Stocchetti and Nigel Kimberley, and all participating students during the data collection process. Further, author are grateful for the feedback provided by anonymous reviewers to earlier drafts of this paper. This research was funded by Svenska Kulturfonden.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, Tore Ståhl, Eero Sormunen and Marita Mäkinen.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Purpose: The internet and search engines dominate within people’s information acquisition, especially among the younger generations. Given this trend, this study aims to explore if information and communication technology (ICT) practices, internet reliance and views of knowledge and knowing, i.e. epistemic beliefs, interact with each other. Everyday practices and conceptions among beginning undergraduate students are studied as a challenge for higher education. Design/methodology/approach: The study builds upon survey-based quantitative data operationalising students’ epistemic beliefs, their internet reliance and their ICT practices. The survey items were used to compute subscales describing these traits, and the connections were explored using correlations analysis. Findings: The results suggest that the more beginning undergraduate students rely on internet-based information, the more they are inclined to epistemic beliefs where knowledge is regarded as certain, unchanging, unambiguous and as being handed down by some authority. Research limitations/implications: The approach used in the study applies to the sample used, and further research is required to test the applicability of the approach on larger samples. Practical implications: The study highlights the risk of everyday information practices being transferred into the educational context. Social implications: Ignorance of these changes may pose a risk for knowledge building on different educational levels and in a longer perspective, a threat to democracy. Originality/value: While there is some research on epistemic beliefs in relation to internet-based information, studies approaching the problem over a possible connection between epistemic beliefs and internet reliance are scarce. In addition, this study implies a conceptual bridge between epistemic beliefs and internet reliance over the concept of algorithmic authority.
AB - Purpose: The internet and search engines dominate within people’s information acquisition, especially among the younger generations. Given this trend, this study aims to explore if information and communication technology (ICT) practices, internet reliance and views of knowledge and knowing, i.e. epistemic beliefs, interact with each other. Everyday practices and conceptions among beginning undergraduate students are studied as a challenge for higher education. Design/methodology/approach: The study builds upon survey-based quantitative data operationalising students’ epistemic beliefs, their internet reliance and their ICT practices. The survey items were used to compute subscales describing these traits, and the connections were explored using correlations analysis. Findings: The results suggest that the more beginning undergraduate students rely on internet-based information, the more they are inclined to epistemic beliefs where knowledge is regarded as certain, unchanging, unambiguous and as being handed down by some authority. Research limitations/implications: The approach used in the study applies to the sample used, and further research is required to test the applicability of the approach on larger samples. Practical implications: The study highlights the risk of everyday information practices being transferred into the educational context. Social implications: Ignorance of these changes may pose a risk for knowledge building on different educational levels and in a longer perspective, a threat to democracy. Originality/value: While there is some research on epistemic beliefs in relation to internet-based information, studies approaching the problem over a possible connection between epistemic beliefs and internet reliance are scarce. In addition, this study implies a conceptual bridge between epistemic beliefs and internet reliance over the concept of algorithmic authority.
KW - Algorithmic authority
KW - Digital literacy
KW - Epistemic beliefs
KW - Internet
KW - Reliance
KW - Search engines
U2 - 10.1108/ILS-01-2021-0004
DO - 10.1108/ILS-01-2021-0004
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85112706508
SN - 2398-5348
VL - 122
SP - 726
EP - 748
JO - Information and Learning Science
JF - Information and Learning Science
IS - 11/12
ER -