An Analysis of User Satisfaction of K University’s Library Service
Abstract
This study purposed to discover whether or not academic libraries reflect these changing roles. We selected K University as the research target and surveyed user satisfaction of materials, staff services, facilities, electronic devices, media, and so on.
The research findings are as follows: 1) the frequency of library visits of University K was on the high side, 2) the primary purpose of using the academic library was associated with learning or reading, therefore, the most used library spaces were related to that, 3) the most used library materials were ‘general books’, the most unused were ‘reference books’, 4) the most preferred way to obtain needed materials when failing to find wanted materials was ‘Contact librarian’. A similar phenomenon occurred in terms of facility use, 5) university K’s users were usually satisfied with the loan policy, 6) the rate of users who don't know whether there is user education was very high, the rate of users who have no experience with user education was extremely low. These research findings can be referenced by library management to improve libraries’ service quality and take advantage of complex spatial configurations.
URL: http://ijkcdt.net/xml/00638/00638.pdfPublication Facts
Reviewer profiles N/A
Author statements
Indexed in
- Society
- N/A
- Publisher
- RIKCDT(Research Institute for Knowledge Content Development & Technology)
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2015 International Journal of Knowledge Content Development & Technology

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
- The authors retain copyright in their work.
-
The RIKCDT is granted a non-exclusive, perpetual worldwide license to publish, disseminate, and maintain the version of record in all media formats, including print and electronic formats.
-
The article will be published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license, which permits users to read, download, and share the work for non-commercial purposes with appropriate attribution, but does not permit any modification, adaptation, or creation of derivative works.
-
IJKCDT articles may not be republished in whole or in part, whether for commercial purposes, in print or online.
- No dispute shall be raised on matters RIKCDT already managed on research papers published in previous journal.