njasl presentation december2010

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Progression Standards for Information Literacy: Putting the Standards Into Practice In association with: The New Jersey Chapter of the Association of College & Research Libraries (NJ-ACRL) The Virtual Academic Library Environment (VALE) The Central New Jersey Academic Reference Librarians Group (CJARL) New Jersey Association of School Librarians Friday, December 3, 2010 Ruth Hamann, Passaic County Community College Gary Schmidt, Ocean County College Nancy Weiner, William Paterson University

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Page 1: Njasl presentation december2010

Progression Standardsfor Information Literacy:

Putting the Standards Into Practice

In association with:

The New Jersey Chapter of the Association of College & Research Libraries (NJ-ACRL)

The Virtual Academic Library Environment (VALE)

The Central New Jersey Academic Reference Librarians Group (CJARL)

New Jersey Association of

School Librarians

Friday, December 3, 2010

Ruth Hamann, Passaic County Community CollegeGary Schmidt, Ocean County College

Nancy Weiner, William Paterson University

Page 2: Njasl presentation december2010

Session Outline

• Why is Information Literacy (IL) important?

• The evolution of the Progression Standards

• A closer look at the Progression Standards

• Putting the Progression Standards into practice in your classroom

Page 3: Njasl presentation december2010

Why is Information Literacy important?

• Because the President says so?

“National Information Literacy

Awareness Month [every October,

starting 10/2009] highlights the need for all Americans to be adept in the skills necessary to effectively navigate the Information Age.”

Source:http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/Presidential-Proclamation-National-Information-Literacy-Awareness-Month/

Page 4: Njasl presentation december2010

• Because the State of New Jersey says so?

“An institution shall have in place a plan that articulates how students will obtain information literacy skills as they progress through the curriculum.”

TITLE 9A, Chapter 1. Licensure Rules, 9A:1-1.9 Library

Why is Information Literacy important?

Source:http://library.njit.edu/docs/nj-commission-higher-ed-licensure-rules-effective-20080728.pdf

Page 5: Njasl presentation december2010

• Because Middle States says so?

“Information literacy … instruction should occur in an integrated and coherent approach throughout the curriculum so that students experience increasingly sophisticated concepts as they progress through the institution.”

Why is Information Literacy important?

Source:http://www.msche.org/publications/devskill050208135642.pdf

Page 6: Njasl presentation december2010

• Because the your academic officers say so?

Why is Information Literacy important?

Source:http://www.state.nj.us/highereducation/PDFs/XferAgreementOct08.pdf

NJCC Learning Goal Category #4Technological Competency ORInformation Literacy

NJCC Learning Objectives d.Students will recognize when information is needed and be able to locate, evaluate, and use information.

New Jersey Community College General EducationLearning Goals & Objectives

Page 7: Njasl presentation december2010

• Because of what it is:

Coined in 1974 by Paul Zurkowski (Foster 2007) when he used the term, “information literates” to describe people who use large quantities of information for their job.

First used in an academic context in 1989 when the American Library Association (ALA) began advocating its integration into college curriculum.

“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.”

Why is Information Literacy important?

Source:http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/publications/whitepapers/presidential.cfm

Page 8: Njasl presentation december2010

What does this mean in the classroom?

• Can my students think beyond Google and Wikipedia?

• Can they find books to support their learning?

• Can they find scholarly journal or magazine articles?

• Can they thoroughly evaluate information?

• Can they think critically about information?

Page 9: Njasl presentation december2010

What does “Lampitt” mean to you?

A. Text-speak for switching on the lights?

B. The family from “The Beverly Hillbillies”?

C. A 2007 state law concerning the transfer of credits between two and four year colleges?

Page 10: Njasl presentation december2010

Pamela R. Lampitt (D)

Assemblyperson from New Jersey 6th Legislative District (Camden)

Each public institution of highereducation, in consultation withthe New Jersey Commission onHigher Education and the NewJersey Presidents’ Council , shallestablish and enter into acollective Statewide transferagreement that provides for theseamless transfer of academiccredits from a completedassociate of arts or associate ofscience degree program to abaccalaureate degree program.

Source:http://www.njleg.state.nj.us/2006/Bills/A4000/3968_R1.PDF

Page 11: Njasl presentation december2010

Comprehensive State-WideTransfer Agreement

General Education Foundation Course Category #4 (of 9):

Technology

NJCC Goal Category #4 (of 9):

Technological Competency or Information Literacy

Course Criteria:

Any course that emphasizes common computer technology skills that helps students to access, process, and present information.

Source:http://www.state.nj.us/highereducation/PDFs/XferAgreementOct08.pdf

Page 12: Njasl presentation december2010

Source:http://www.state.nj.us/highereducation/PDFs/XferAgreementOct08.pdf

NJCC Learning Goal Category #4Technological Competency ORInformation Literacy

NJCC Learning Objectives d.Students will recognize when information is needed and be able to locate, evaluate, and use information.

New Jersey Community College General EducationLearning Goals & Objectives

Comprehensive State-WideTransfer Agreement

Page 13: Njasl presentation december2010

Building Consensus through Collaboration

The Initial Mandate came from the Executive Committee of the Virtual Academic Library Environment (VALE)

VALE Shared Information Literacy Committee (VALE_SIL)

The NJ Chapter of the Association of College &

Research Libraries (ACRL ) User Education Committee

The Central Jersey Academic Reference Librarians Group

(CJARL)

Page 14: Njasl presentation december2010

Task Force

• Task Force formed in December, 2008

• 8 librarians:

– 4 from two-year colleges; 4 from four-year colleges

• Our purpose was to produce:

– Standard competencies for students transferring from a two- to a four-year institution

– A document that faculty could embrace

– A framework for institutions to customize

– A blueprint for faculty/librarian collaboration

Page 15: Njasl presentation december2010

Task Force

Front Row - seated (l to r): Amy Clark, Ruth Hamann, Eleonora Dubicki

Back Row - standing (l to r): Pamela Price, Jacqui DaCosta, Gary Schmidt, Nancy Weiner

(not pictured: Nancy Madacsi)

Page 16: Njasl presentation december2010

Building the Standards

• Association of College & Research Libraries Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education

• SUNY-OswegoInformation Literacy Learning Outcomes for Undergraduates

• Ideas and Best Practices fromOther Institutions

Page 17: Njasl presentation december2010

Incorporating Progression

Two Levels of Progression:

Level #1: Introductory/Novice- Emphasizes “General Skills”

- To be met upon completion 30-32 credits

Level #2: Gateway/Developing- Emphasizes “Discipline-Specific Skills”

- To be met upon completion 60-64 credits

Page 18: Njasl presentation december2010

Framework Structure

FIVE DISTINCT & CONSISTENT “COMPETENCIES” (i.e., STANDARDS)

OUTLINED OVER TWO LEVELS OF PROGRESSION

Page 19: Njasl presentation december2010

Room to Grow: The Future of the Standards

• K-12

• Upper-level Undergraduate

• Graduate

Page 20: Njasl presentation december2010

EndorsementsTo date, the Progression Standards have been endorsed by the following agencies:

11/2009: VALE Executive Committee

2/2010: VALE Members' Council

3/2010: New Jersey Association of School Librarians (NJASL)

5/2010: New Jersey Library Association Executive Board

8/2010: NJ State College Council of Academic Vice Presidents

8/2010: Provosts at the senior public colleges and universities

Page 21: Njasl presentation december2010

Standards in Practice(SAMPLE ASSIGNMENTS)

• Move away from “traditional” research papers

• Adaptable: Can be used within any discipline

• Flexible: Integrated into existing courses

• Added Value: Mapped directly to Progression Standards

Page 22: Njasl presentation december2010

• Opposing Viewpoints

– Ideal for first year students

– Develops essential research skills

– Provides structure and creativity

– Incorporate additional Literacies

Standards in Practice(SAMPLE ASSIGNMENTS)

Page 23: Njasl presentation december2010

• Citation Examination

– Emphasizes both Introductory & Gateway skills

– Deconstruct citation to locate resources

– Recognize value of bibliographies

– Incorporates technology

Standards in Practice(SAMPLE ASSIGNMENTS)

Page 24: Njasl presentation december2010

• Annotated Bibliography

– Standalone element of traditional research papers

– Focused on subject specific resources

– Evaluation of selected sources

– Demonstrate consistent use of a citation style

Standards in Practice(SAMPLE ASSIGNMENTS)

Page 25: Njasl presentation december2010

Ruth Hamann: [email protected] Schmidt: [email protected] Weiner: [email protected]

Our Contact Information

More information is available through our WIKI:

http://njla.pbworks.com/w/page/12189896/Progression-Standards-for-Information-Literacy