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INFORMATION LITERACY What is it ? How can we teach it ?

INFORMATION LITERACY What is it ? How can we teach it ?. Al Najaf Conference 7 May 2009 Fujairah HCT Pamella Asquith, Librarian FMC. INFORMATION LITERACY. Thought-Provoking Quotations Definition and History of Information Literacy as a concept Teaching Options for Info Lit

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INFORMATION LITERACY What is it ? How can we teach it ?

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  1. INFORMATION LITERACYWhat is it ? How can we teach it ? Al Najaf Conference 7 May 2009 Fujairah HCT Pamella Asquith, Librarian FMC

  2. INFORMATION LITERACY • Thought-Provoking Quotations • Definition and History of Information Literacy as a concept • Teaching Options for Info Lit • Who, What, When, How • FWC’s Old Model • FC’s New Model • Suggestions for Improvement & Development

  3. Food for thought . . . Education... has produced a vast population able to read but unable to distinguish what is worth reading. G.M. Trevelyan, British Historian (1876-1962) http://www.quotationspage.com/

  4. Food for thought . . . In your thirst for knowledge, be sure not to drown in all the information. Anthony J. D'Angelo The College Blue Book http://www.quotationspage.com/

  5. Food for thought . . . Everybody gets so much information all day long that they lose their common sense. Gertrude Stein (1874 - 1946) http://www.quotationspage.com/

  6. Food for thought . . . I'm not dumb. I just have a command of thoroughly useless information. Bill Watterson (1958 - ) “Calvin", It's a Magical World http://www.quotationspage.com/

  7. Food for thought . . . The multitude of books is making us ignorant. Voltaire (1694 - 1778) http://www.quotationspage.com/

  8. Information Literacy? Literacy- Ability to read Computer Literacy- Ability to use computers Information Literacy- Ability to think critically about and use information

  9. 1989 Information Literacy ALA White Paper “To be information literate, a person must be able to recognizewhen information is needed and have the ability to locate, evaluate, and useeffectively the needed information.” American Library Association, 1989 Presidential Committee establishing the National Forum on Information Literacy http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/publications/whitepapers/presidential.cfm

  10. 1996 A New Liberal Art “[Information literacy is] a new liberal art that extends from knowing how to use computers and access information to critical reflection on the nature of information itself, its technical infrastructure and its social, cultural, and philosophical context and impact.” Jeremy Shapiro & Shelley Hughes Educause Review 31:2 March/April 1996 http://net.educause.edu/apps/er/review/reviewarticles/31231.html

  11. 2003 Prague Declaration Sponsored by UNESCO, the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science, and the National Forum on Information Literacy “The creation of an Information Society is key to social, cultural and economic development of nations and communities, institutions and individuals in the 21st century and beyond. Information Literacy encompasses knowledge of one’s information concerns and needs, and the ability to identify, locate, evaluate, organize and effectively create, use and communicate informationto address issues or problems at hand; it is a prerequisite for participating effectively in the Information Society, and is part of the basic human right of lifelong learning.” http://portal.unesco.org/ci/en/files/19636/11228863531PragueDeclaration.pdf/PragueDeclaration.pdf

  12. 2005 Alexandria Proclamation on Information Literacy and Lifelong Learning “Information Literacy lies at the core of lifelong learning. It empowers people in all walks of life to seek, evaluate, use and create information effectively to achieve their personal, social, occupational and educational goals. It is a basic human right in a digital world and promotes social inclusion of all nations.” http://portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID=20891&URL_DO=DO_PRINTPAGE&URL_SECTION=201.html

  13. 2007 UNESCO Understanding Information Literacy: A Primer Eleven stages of the Information Literacy Life Cycle 1. Realize need 2. Identify & define info needed 3. Determine if info exists 4. Find info 5. Create unavailable info 6. Read and understand info 7. Organize, analyze, interpret & evaluate 8. Communicate info to others 9. Solve the info problem 10. Preserve & archive info for future use 11. Dispose of obsolete info http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0015/001570/157020e.pdf

  14. Teaching Info Lit : WHO ? • Librarians and Library Staff • English Faculty • Content Faculty • Paraprofessional Tutors • Peer Student Tutors • Combination of above roles

  15. Teaching Info Lit : WHAT ? Tier 1: How to use the library, check out books, find books etc Tier 2: How to use specific kinds of resources : dictionaries, encyclopedias, e-books, magazines, newspapers, etc Tier 3: How to use databases, general and subject specific Tier 4: Evaluation of information resources especially websites Tier 5: Academic honesty and citing sources, writing reference lists or bibliographies Tier 6 : Academic Research Process (Big6)

  16. Teaching Info Lit : WHEN ? • During pre-semester orientation • During first semester or first year only • Ongoing at every level • All of the above

  17. Teaching Info Lit : HOW ? • Part of library orientation • Workshops or non-credit classes (PPDV) • Ad hoc requests from faculty • Within language and content courses • Separate credit class • Face-to-face • Online All of the above

  18. FWC’s old model • In past years, foundation students had 6, 1-hour class sessions in their first semester taught by the librarian; non-credit, part of “Personal and Professional Development.” • About 300 students (in 14 separate sections) with coursework that had to be assessed as well as an accessed project (total 7 assessments per student) all by only one librarian who had many other duties. • This proved unmanageable.

  19. FWC’s old model • Clearly face-to-face instruction by one librarian was not feasible and could never work unless a fulltime teaching librarian was hired. Even then, repeating a 1-hour lesson 14+ times in one week is boring for the instructor. • Needed to be some kind of online instruction. • Needed to be time-share of instruction duties.

  20. FWC’s old model • Topics, although useful for courses, were not coordinated in such a way as to deliver instruction at the optimal time. • For example, how to write citations was not taught when students were doing research and needed to be writing citations. • Topics did not take into account the low level of English and general lack of interest in reading. Unrealistic expectations of what students could achieve.

  21. New Model About 1 year ago, in collaboration with faculty and supervisors, modules were conceived and designed by librarians. Integral was the notion of time-share presentation among library staff, SSC tutors, language and content faculty at whatever point within a course deemed most useful.

  22. New Model : Content “Tiers” Tier 1: How to use the library (Taught by library staff) Tier 2 : How to use specific kinds of resources Taught by library staff or Foundations English faculty) Tier 3 & 4: How to use databases and evaluation of resources (Taught by librarians) Tier 5: Citing sources, writing reference lists or bibliographies(Taught by librarians and faculty) Tier 6: Academic Research Process (Taught by content faculty and librarians)

  23. New Model : Description A module is only 3-10 minutes but exercises and supplements can extend the lesson time, be used as reinforcement, follow up or assessment at faculty discretion. Modules are designed like an “infomercial” and “branded” with a custom look but each has different colors and avatars. Language is in a conversational style & as simple as possible.

  24. New Model : Features Printable worksheets and other materials such as flash cards are included for many modules and can be used at the faculty discretion. Narration can be imbedded (headphone quality). High-quality narration for classroom acoustics also possible but needs a separate linked file.

  25. New Model : Advantages • Absent students can access the materials for makeup. • Modules can be replayed at different points in a semester or academic year if students have forgotten the skill or content. • Modules can be made into visual displays or posters, screen savers for library PCs and played on plasma monitors around campus.

  26. Examples of Modules Tier 1: Call Numbers (PlugIn 8) Tier 2: Newspapers (PlugIn 14) Tier 3: Business Databases (PlugIn 21) Tier 4: Questions about Websites (PlugIn 38) Tier 5: MLA Intext Citations for Direct Quotes (PlugIn 28) Tier 6: The Academic Research Process (PlugIn 40)

  27. WORK IN PROGRESS Unfortunately at the beginning of the AY, not all content was finished. But, now after first year, most of the content has been developed. Problems with technical aspects of narration and playback. Lots of revision necessary because of library website interface changes. Major revisions necessary in all presentations on citations and referencing because MLA has changed the rules. Due to time loss from breaks in the semester, faculty could not spare time for 100% coverage of all topics.

  28. WORK IN PROGRESS Ongoing issue of so many sections needing coverage, too many for the same person. Classroom teachers don’t want extra lessons added to their curriculum, so coverage of library lessons has been & will always be spotty if faculty are responsible for delivery. Looking for an alternative less labor-intensive (BlackBoardVista).

  29. Conclusion • See Handout for list of all topics • Access from S drive/General/Library PlugIn Lessons • Next step : BlackBoard Vista version, 15 lessons

  30. Questions? Comments? Suggestions? Thank you for listening. pamella.asquith@hct.ac.ae

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