evidence-based practice in information literacy instruction

27
Farley W. Jenkins, MLIS Librarian West Georgia Technical College [email protected] (770) 537-6066 Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Upload: georgia-council-of-media-organizations

Post on 18-Dec-2014

59 views

Category:

Education


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Presented at GaCOMO14 by Farley W. Jenkins, West Georgia Technical College

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Farley W. Jenkins, MLISLibrarianWest Georgia Technical [email protected](770) 537-6066

Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Page 2: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Or

Tales from Libraries Seeking their Student’s Attention

LITERATURE REVIEW

Page 3: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

“To be information literate, a person must be able to recognize when information is needed and have the ability to locate, evaluate, and use effectively the needed information.”

—ALA, 1989

What is Information Literacy (IL)?

Page 4: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Function of academic libraries since 188160% of ILI literature has academic libraries

focusGrowing in importance

Information Literacy Instruction (ILI)

Page 5: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Guide for academic ILIBroad set of student learning outcomesFocused on total student development

ACRL Standards

Page 6: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Measures progress towards ACRL standardsAllows apples-to-apples comparison

Standardized Assessment of Information Literacy Skills (SAILS)

Page 7: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Undergraduate information-seeking behaviorBudget and other resources are limitedPolitical status of the library

Challenges

Page 8: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Course-integrated ILICredit-bearing courses taught by librariansSeries of guest lectures and drop-in sessions

Methods

Page 9: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Trained librarians to conduct their own research

Gave librarians freedom to pursue their studies

Results used to improve every function of library

National Library of Medicine

Page 10: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Numerous ILI sessions in multiple education courses over the course of 2 years

Focus on evidence-based practiceILI test scores improved by 20%Student-Teaching probation decreased from

20% to 0%

University of New Mexico

Page 11: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Mentored undergraduate researchLibrarians serve on standing committeesNumerous group and individual ILI sessions

and research consultations

Purdue University

Page 12: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

After taking a credit course in library research:79% continued to use methods and sources93% felt more confident in research

Louisiana State University

Page 13: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Taught course on Digital Information LiteracyAsked to teach courses on Critical and Ethical

Use of Digital Information and Social Science Research

National-Louis University

Page 14: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Multiple credit-bearing ILI courses is idealOnline laboratories are less resource-

intensiveAs much ILI as politics and economics allow

Analysis

Page 15: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Or

That’s all fine in theory, but…

CASE STUDY

Page 16: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

West Georgia Technical CollegeEnrollment of 7,331Most popular subjects are allied health

sciences, business, and information technology

The Institution

Page 17: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

To increase ILI sessions to 10 per semesterCurrently teaching about 5 sessions per year

The Directive

Page 18: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Produced a series of 5-minute videosVideos can be watched in order to provide a

virtual ILI session

Online Videos

Page 19: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Presented apart from in-course sessionsGiven monthly at different dates and times

Drop-in Information Sessions

Page 20: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Flyers placed on bulletin boards in student areas

Email marketing to faculty

Outreach

Page 21: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Still too early to tellMethods will be adjusted according to

measurable outcomes

The Results

Page 22: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Or

You Gotta Start Somewhere

SUGGESTED READING

Page 23: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Hollister, C. V. (2010). Best practices for credit-bearing information literacy courses. Chicago: American Library Association.

ILI Case Studies

Page 24: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Bell, S. J., & Shank, J. D. (2007). Academic librarianship by design: A blended librarian's guide to the tools and techniques. Chicago: American Library Association.

Instructional Design

Page 25: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Association of College and Research Libraries. (2000). Information literacy competency standards for higher education. Chicago: American Library Association. Retrieved April 1, 2012, from http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/informationliteracycompetency

Chevillotte, S. (2010). Information literacy. In M. J. Bates (Ed.), Encyclopedia of library and information sciences (3rd ed., pp. 2421-2428).

Corrall, S. (2008). Information literacy strategy development in higher education: An exploratory study. International Journal of Information Management, 28(1), 26-37.

Daugherty, A. L., & Russo, M. F. (2011). An assessment of the lasting effects of a stand-alone information literacy course: The students' perspective. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 37(4), 319-326.

Mery, Y., Newby, J., & Peng, K. (2012). Why one-shot information literacy sessions are not the future of instruction: A case for online credit courses. College & Research Libraries. Advance Online Publication. Retrieved March 29, 2012, from http://crl.acrl.org/content/early/2011/08/26/crl-271.full.pdf+html

Walstrum, M., Garcia, L., & Morisson, R. (2011, March). From embedded to integrated: Digital information literacy and new teaching models for academic librarians. Paper presented at the ACRL 2011 Conference, Philadelphia, PA. Retrieved March 30, 2012, from http://www.ala.org/acrl/sites/ala.org.acrl/files/content/conferences/confsandpreconfs/national/2011/papers/from_embedded.pdf

Journal Articles

Page 26: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Questions?

Page 27: Evidence-Based Practice in Information Literacy Instruction

Education is not the learning of facts, but the training of the mind to think.

—Albert Einstein

Thank you!