Transcript Document

WISER: Teaching
Information literacy
This session will give an overview of the key concepts and
models of information literacy as an important transferable skill
for all students. Teaching and library staff may like to come
together to this session to review the information skills training
provided for students in their subject areas.
Judy Reading
What is information literacy?
http://www.informationliteracy.org.uk/ is an excellent place to find
out all about it.
Some definitions:
In the UK, information literacy is defined by the Chartered Institute
of Library and Information Professionals as follows:
"Information literacy is knowing when and why you need
information, where to find it, and how to evaluate, use and
communicate it in an ethical manner. "
See the CILIP web-site for more detail about each of the eight skills
they divide information literacy into:
http://www.cilip.org.uk/professionalguidance/informationliteracy/defi
nition/
What does the ALA say?
In the US the Association of College and Research Libraries of the
American Library Association define it thus:
"Information Literacy is the set of skills needed to find, retrieve,
analyze, and use information. "
Again there is lots of information on their site at
http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlissues/acrlinfolit/informationliterac
y.htm
SCONUL 7 pillars
http://www.sconul.ac.uk/activities/inf_lit/papers/Seven_pillars.html
Information Skills in Higher Education: A SCONUL Position
Paper (2003)
This is the approach that the OULS have chosen – very relevant to
our context as a university in the UK
The seven headline skills …
1.
The ability to recognise a need for information
2.
The ability to distinguish ways in which the information ‘gap’ may be addressed
knowledge of appropriate kinds of resources, both print and non-print
selection of resources with ‘best fit’ for task at hand
the ability to understand the issues affecting accessibility of sources
3.
The ability to construct strategies for locating information
to articulate information need to match against resources
to develop a systematic method appropriate for the need
to understand the principles of construction and generation of databases
4.
The ability to locate and access information
to develop appropriate searching techniques (e.g. use of Boolean)
to use communication and information technologies, including terms international academic networks
to use appropriate indexing and abstracting services, citation indexes and databases
to use current awareness methods to keep up to date
continued…
5.
The ability to compare and evaluate information obtained from different sources
awareness of bias and authority issues
awareness of the peer review process of scholarly publishing
appropriate extraction of information matching the information need
6.
The ability to organise, apply and communicate information to others in ways appropriate
to the situation
to cite bibliographic references in project reports and theses
to construct a personal bibliographic system
to apply information to the problem at hand
to communicate effectively using appropriate medium
to understand issues of copyright and plagiarism
7.
The ability to synthesise and build upon existing information, contributing to the creation of
new knowledge
Information skills model
What are the Oxford University Library
Services doing?
If you look at our web-site you will get lots of information
http://www.ouls.ox.ac.uk/information_skills
Our user education policy has two aims:
1. To ensure that all members of the University are offered
effective support and guidance in identifying and using
appropriate information resources
2.
To develop and promote information expertise as a general
and transferable skill for students and researchers of the
University at levels appropriate to their needs
Why would academics and teaching staff
be interested?
• We want to know and intend to try and find out
• We can use common misconceptions and difficulties identified
by academics and students in using information resources as
key learning outcomes when we design our programmes
• Best to embed information literacy in teaching programmes so
we can use real tasks and natural assessment opportunities
• We need to ensure what is offered is appropriate to the needs of
specific subjects and specific groups of students at specific
points in their academic career
Designing learning opportunities
• We are interested in good pedagogic practice
• We want to make sure we can assess the value of what we do
through verifiable learning outcomes
• Team teaching would be ideal – partnership between academics
and librarians – each with distinctive role
Key concepts in information literacy
“I only have an hour … what should I cover to develop transferable
skills?”
Get students and researchers to
• use quality resources as well as Google
• Think about what keywords they are using and how they are
combining them (Boolean logic)
• Use the subject and other indexes provided
• Be prepared to work a little
Students want Google-type ease of searching linking through to
immediate full-text …
We want them to understand something of the complexity of the
information environment of their subject.