Transcript Slide 1

INFORMATION
LITERACY
What is Information Literacy
(IL)?
•Information Literacy is the set of skills needed to find, retrieve,
analyze, and use information.
•It has become increasingly clear that students cannot learn
everything they need to know in their field of study in a few
years of college. Information literacy equips them with the
critical skills necessary to become independent lifelong
learners.
•Too often we assume that as students write research papers
and read textbooks they are gaining sufficient IL skills. This is
not so. IL skills may be introduced but what is needed is a
parallel curriculum in IL forming a strong foundation of a
college education.
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“Information literacy is a
mean to express personal
ideas, develop arguments,
refute opinions of others,
learn new things…”
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“Those who are not information literate
are unable to make informed decisions
given an information related problem and
must rely on others rather than thinking
for themselves”.
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The problem…
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•More than a third of recent college grads with
jobs are working in positions that do not
require a degree!
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•Economists call that figure the
"mal-employment" rate, and right now it
tops 36% for college-educated workers
under the age of 25, according to figures
crunched by Andrew Sum, director of the
Center for Labor Market Studies at
Northeastern University.
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•Not surprisingly, hospitality and retail are the most
common occupations of the mal-employed.
•Of the nearly 3 million recent college grads, 152,000
are working in retail sales and nearly 100,000 work as
waiters, bartenders or in other food service posts.
• Another 80,000 serve as clerks or customer service
representatives, with 60,000 working in construction or
manual labor.
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•Labor demand is still weak, and you have increased competition
for jobs with adults who thought the situation would have
improved by now.
•Taking a job below your education level carries a high financial
toll. The mal-employed earn up to 40% less per week than their
peers. That could make it harder for them to pay off their student
loans, move into their own apartments and even get married.
•It can also affect their earnings for decades, since they enter the
wage ladder at a lower rung (Carl Van Horn, founding director of
the Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers
University).
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•Millennials’ Joblessness Costs the Government $8.9
Billion a Year
•Nearly three-quarters of hiring managers complain that
millennials – even those with college degrees – aren’t
prepared for the job market and lack an adequate “work
ethic,” according to a survey from Bentley University, a
private business school in Waltham, Mass.
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•Employer’s attitudes about hiring millennials
often transcend concerns about training and
technical skills.
•Many are put off by the fact that entry-level
candidates are clueless about how to navigate
an office setting, according to an analysis by
Time.
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•For instance, a survey by the Workforce
Solutions Group at St. Louis Community
College found that more than 60 percent of
employers said applicants lack
“communication and interpersonal skills” — an
increase of about 10 percentage points in just
two years. Many managers also said that
today’s applicants can’t think critically and
creatively, solve problems or write well.
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•The National Association of Colleges and Employers surveyed
more than 200 employers about their top 10 priorities in new
hires.
•Overwhelmingly, they wanted candidates who are team
players, problem solvers and who can plan, organize
and prioritize their work. Technical and computerrelated know-how placed much further down the list.
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•Time noted that jobs are going unfilled as a result,
which hurts companies and employees.
•Companies say candidates are lacking in motivation,
interpersonal skills, appearance, punctuality and
flexibility.
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•While roughly two thirds of business leaders
and recruiters say that “hard” technical skills
and “soft” skills are equally important, a
majority say they’d prefer to hire a recent
graduate with industry-specific skills than a
liberal arts graduate who needs to be trained
first.
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•Further adding to the confusion, when
asked to assess the importance of a
comprehensive set of individual skills,
business leaders put “soft” skills at the
top of their list, along with traits like
integrity, professionalism and a positive
attitude.
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…they’d also prefer to hire candidates with the
industry-specific skills that help them hit the
ground running, even if those candidates have
less potential for future growth.”
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•Economists and other experts offer
many reasons why millennials have
had a hard time finding suitable work
these last few years.
•But many agree that inadequate
preparation for the job market is
definitely one of them.
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• “There is more demand for skill and education,
and young people have less skill and experience
than the typical worker,” Rory O’Sullivan, the
policy and research director of the Young
Invincibles, an advocacy group, said recently.
• “We don’t do a very good job of training them
out of school to be prepped and ready to go.”
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•A November 2012 study by the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce Foundation noted that in a weak
job market, “the young adult workforce is
usually the last to be hired and first to be fired.
In down markets, when jobs are harder to find,
many millennials make the choice to stay in
school, lowering the participation rate.”
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•“There is also more competition from
more experienced workers for those
companies that are hiring. More than half
of baby boomers nearing retirement have
delayed doing so, making it harder to find
space for new workers.”
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Suggestions from
a former job
provider…
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•Young graduates should not have to turn to career “boot
camps” to get employed. We need to make our graduates
employable.
• We need to have professors who care and have more one on
one interactions with the students (Not the T.As).
• Students want to see professors who have passion for what
they teach combined with “real world experience”.
• Better communication between professors and students is
needed.
• Make the classes interesting – We need to fix the “disconnect”
and close the gap.
•Professors need to be respectful of our students (our
customers) and talk to them and not “at” them! Use the
Golden Rule: “Treat People the way you would like to
be treated”
•We need to use common sense: They are asked to buy
an $85.00 text book for the class and only 1/3 of it is
used during the semester.
•Do not ignore the students who need our assistance.
We need to respond to them with a sense of urgency.
•We need to require internships and provide “pathway
sessions” to prepare them to enter the work force.
•We need to design curriculum “with the end in mind”
•Grade fairly: grade inflation does not help!
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•We need to teach problem solving (bring 3 solutions –
think on your feet) … critical thinking.
•We need to push them out their comfort zone.
•We need to stop packaging the content and not train
them to memorize the information. Cookie cutter
assignments and multiple choices!
• Teach multi-tasking, how to take initiative, be a good
speller.
Etc…
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We need to think out of the box!
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•Intelligence is overrated (Albert
Einstein’s IQ was estimated at 160,
•Madonna’s is 140,
•and JFK was 119)!
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We need to teach the “soft skills”!
… and
We need to put more emphasis on
Emotional Intelligence – Personal traits,
social graces, communication, personal
habits, ability to interact effectively with
coworkers and customers…
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…communication skills,
• conflict resolutions and
negotiations,
• personal effectiveness,
• creative problem solving,
• strategic thinking,
• team building,
• influencing skills
• selling skills,
• and ACCOUNTABILITY
…to name a few.
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Why?
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A person's soft skill EQ is an
important part of their individual
contribution to the success of an
organization.
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•EQ is so critical to success that it
accounts to 58% of performance in all
types of jobs.
•The link between EQ and earnings is so
direct that every point increase in EQ
adds $1,300 to an annual salary!
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60 MINUTES – YEAR UP
•http://www.cbsnews.com/news/jobs-program-aids-fortune-500underprivileged-youth/
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