1 / 15

Features of I nformation Age and Knowledge Society

SERACHING SKILLS T RAINING MAY NOT BE ENOUGH E xperiences from information Competency course B . Niedźwiedzka , K. Czabanowska Information Studies Department Institute of Public Health CM UJ, Kraków, Poland. Features of I nformation Age and Knowledge Society.

pennyl
Télécharger la présentation

Features of I nformation Age and Knowledge Society

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SERACHING SKILLS TRAINING MAY NOT BE ENOUGHExperiences from information Competency course B. Niedźwiedzka, K. CzabanowskaInformation Studies DepartmentInstitute of Public Health CM UJ, Kraków, Poland

  2. Features of Information Age and Knowledge Society • „information smog” in health care field • wealth of information of bad or unknown quality Information Fatigue Syndrome • increasing sophistication of research methods • growing independence of information users • Requirements of „evidence based health care”

  3. How information is „produced” and disseminated? How to manage ? How to process? How to select ? How to evaluate ? What are the appropriate inf. tools?

  4. To respond to Information Age demands information skills teaching has to transform into information competency teaching

  5. Competency = knowledge + skills

  6. Balance shifted skills knowledge skills skills knowledge

  7. Information competency • current knowledge of information sources • ability to develop a strategy of information seeking • search skills • Ability to assess the quality of information source • critical appraisal skills based on knowledge of research methods • understanding of the economic, legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information

  8. Information Competency credit course, 2nd year undergraduate. Content: • Evidence based health care (principles, history of paradigm, rules of conduct) • Scientific journals (peer review, rankings, impact factor, open access publishing) • Electronic sources of information • Grey literature • Problems of information quality (quality of sources, quality of research, quality of internet sources

  9. Information Competency credit course, Content: • Searching of databases ( Medline, EMBASE, CINAHIL, Cochrane Library,OECD, Science Citation Index, etc.) • Organizations which generate, procure, evaluate and disseminate research information (i.e. R&D, HTA Agencies, Cochrane Collaboration) • Systemic and organizational developments for evidence based practice

  10. Information Competency credit ourse, Content: • Problems of dissemination of information/innovations • Managers and policy-makers as information users and their responsibility for facilitating dissemination and uptake of information • Evidence-friendly organization • Critical appraisal of publications • Abstracting and summarizing • Rules of writing research papers

  11. The general goal of the course is to: widen basic knowledge of information production, disemination and use rather then to master skills Search skills = 1/3 of total teaching

  12. Examples of methods • lectures on: • scientific communication • factors influencing dissemination of evidence practicalexercises in: quality assessment of information sources structural abstractingand summarising • group work: • developing strategy of information seeking

  13. Organisation of teaching Research Methods Course work on a research project Final written assignment Information competency training

  14. Effects of IC training educates professionals who are concious and carefull information users increases understanding of factors affecting production dissemination and uptake of innovation promotes implementation of research culture in health policy making and in health care institutions

  15. Effective IC teaching qualified instructor - information specialist (not = computer specialist) fully integrated with subject curriculum credited mix of teaching methods possibly close collaboration with subject teachers • Proved and recommended! • liaison with Research Methods course

More Related