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First-year College Students
& Information Literacy:
What Skills Are Needed
Most?

                                   PSLA 2009
                                Emily Rimland
                Information Literacy Librarian
                        Penn State University
Today’s Agenda:
1. Interactive and participatory
2. What IL Skills are needed most?
  a. IL skills & standards
  b. What you think
  c. What others think
3. Examples of K-16 skill continuums
4. Examples of college research assignments
5. Discussion, questions, etc.
Why is this discussion important?
•   Your seniors are our freshmen
•   Mandates & assessment
•   We have shared expectations (lifelong learning)
•   So we can understand our students better
•   Share best practices
What type of library do you work in?
1.   High school
2.   Middle school
3.   Elementary school
4.   Public Library
5.   Academic Library
6.   Another kind of library
What percentage of freshman do you think
are “adequately prepared” for college-level
research?
1.   0 - 20% are adequately prepared
2.   21 - 40%
3.   41- 60%
4.   61- 80%
5.   81-100%
AASL & ACRL Standards
• AASL: Information Literacy Skills for Student
  Learning (K-12)

• ACRL: Information Literacy Competency
  Standards for Higher Ed (Post-secondary)

• AASL Standards for the 21st Century Learner
AASL/AECT Standards
• 3 categories, 9
  standards

• General and
  comprehensive-meant
  to be customized

• Address information
  literacy plus social
  responsibility and
  independent learning
AASL Standards
Category I: Information Literacy
Standard 1: Accesses information efficiently and effectively
Standard 2: Evaluates information critically and competently
Standard 3: Uses information effectively and creatively

Category II: Independent Learning
Standard 4: Pursues information related to personal interests
Standard 5: Appreciates and enjoys literature and other creative expressions of
   information
Standard 6: Strives for excellence in information seeking and knowledge
   generation

Category III: Social Responsibility
Standard 7: Recognizes the importance of information to a democratic society
Standard 8: Practices ethical behavior in regard to information and information
   technology
Standard 9: Participates effectively in groups to pursue and generate
   information
ACRL Standards
• 5 standards, many indicators and outcomes

• Emphasis on cognitive skills

• Picks up where AASL leaves off
ACRL Standards
Standard 1: The information literate student determines the nature and extent
   of the information needed.

Standard 2: The information literate student accesses needed information
   effectively and efficiently.

Standard 3: The information literate student evaluates information and its
   sources critically and incorporates selected information into his or her
   knowledge base and value system.

Standard 4: The information literate student, individually or as a member of a
   group, uses information effectively to accomplish a specific purpose.

Standard 5: The information literate student understands many of the
   economic, legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information and
   accesses and uses information ethically and legally.
AASL Standards for the 21st C. Learner
• 4 standards +
  skills, responsibilities, dispositions & strategies
• Broader in scope, address multiple literacies:
  – Digital
  – Visual
  – Textual
  – Technological
A C o m p a ris o n o f th e B a s ic T e n e ts o f th e

AASL & ACRL Standards Compared
       A C R L In fo rm a tio n L ite ra c y C o m p e te n c y S ta n d a rd s fo r H ig h e r E d u c a tio n
      a n d th e A A S L / A E C T In fo rm a tio n L ite ra c y S ta n d a rd s fo r S tu d e n t L e a rn in g

           A A S L /A E C T K -1 2 S ta n d a rd s              A C R L P o s t-S e c o n d a ry S ta n d a rd s

                             A n In fo rm a tio n lite ra te in d ivid u a l is a b le to :



                                                                D e te rm in e th e e xte n t o f in fo rm a tio n
                                                                                   needed
        A c c e s s in fo rm a tio n e fficie n tly a n d
                         e ffe ctive ly
                                                                  A c c e s s th e n e e d e d in fo rm a tio n
                                                                       e ffe ctive ly a n d e fficie n tly



        E va lu a te in fo rm a tio n critica lly a n d        E va lu a te in fo rm a tio n a n d its so u rce s
                       co m p e te n tly                                           critica lly



                                                              In c o rp o ra te se le cte d in fo rm a tio n in to
                                                                         o n e ’s kn o w le d g e b a se
          U s e in fo rm a tio n a ccu ra te ly a n d
                        cre a tive ly
                                                                    U s e in fo rm a tio n e ffe ctive ly to
                                                                    a cco m p lish a sp e cific p u rp o se


                                                               U n d e rs ta n d th e e co n o m ic, le g a l a n d
         A d d re sse d w ith in th e th re e S o cia l        so cia l issu e s su rro u n d in g th e u se o f
                R e sp o n sib ility sta n d a rd s               in fo rm a tio n , a n d a cce ss a n d u se
                                                                   in fo rm a tio n e th ica lly a n d le g a lly

   Table prepared by Ellysa Stern Cahoy, Penn State University, used with permission
Which IL standard do you think is MOST
important for an entering freshman to have?
1. Access information effectively and efficiently
2. Evaluate information critically and competently
3. Use information accurately and creatively
What some others thought:
• Inspired today’s questions
• Survey by Robert Schroeder of 40 school &
  academic librarians in OR
• % adequately prepared:
  – High school librarians majority answered 21-40%
  – Academic librarians majority answered 0-20%
What some others thought (cont.)
• Related to the standards:
  – Majority of combined respondents:
     • #1 = “accesses needed information effectively and
       efficiently” (33%)
     • #2 = “determines the nature and extent of the information
       needed” (19%)
  – However, large spread between high school &
    academic librarians’ responses for these 2 areas
  – High school librarians placed more emphasis on
    “evaluates information and its sources critically and
    incorporates selected information into knowledge
    base”
Acquisition of skills: where and when
• Rochester Regional Library Council’s “Core
  Library and Research Skills Grade 9-14+”
CLOC group continuum




   Community Librarians Outreach and Collaboration, K-16 Information Literacy Skills Checklist.
   http://ncohen.myweb.uga.edu/ILcollege.htm
Oregon’s 8 Proficiencies
Students who are ready to begin upper-division
  coursework can…
1. Identify gaps in their knowledge.
2. Find information efficiently and effectively.
3. Evaluate and select information.
4. Treat research as a multi-stage, recursive learning
  process.
5. Ethically, legally, and safely use information .
6. Recognize safety issues.
7. Manipulate and manage information.
8. Create, produce, and communicate.


 Oregon Information Literacy Summit: http://blogs.library.oregonstate.edu/ilsummit/2007-
 summit/proposed-proficiences/
Examples of assignments
English (Rhetoric & Composition)
 Find a topic and format that lend themselves to at least 5 pages
 of rigorous analysis backed up by at least three respectable
 outside sources.
 Identify a problem or issue, take a stand, translate your stand
 into a thesis statement, support the reasons for your position
 with details and examples that you’ve discovered during the
 course of your research, and marshal your reasoning, research,
 and appeals as you try to persuade others to accept your
 position.
Examples continued
Communication Arts & Sciences (Speech)
 …research one issue of civic importance and do three speeches
 on the one subject throughout the semester.

 …Each speech has a bibliographic requirement of 5-7
 sources, including the NYT.

 “In my experience teaching the course, the students tend to rely
 on google even after the library visit, but I can’t understand why.
 I will be changing the requirements for the speeches so that they
 must include not only one citations from the New York Times but
 also citations from one journal article and one book.”
Examples continued
Engineering
Define in a few sentences your research topic. Locate each of the following:
   a handbook
   a dictionary
   a journal article
   a newspaper article
   a standard (individual or a collection)
   a book
   a report
   a web site
• a patent (give this a try using www.uspto.gov)

   Do not pick the first resource that comes up in a search.
   Select what you judge to be the best resource you can find for each of these
   categories.

   In addition to locating and citing the resources, you should write a short (2-3
   sentence) description detailing why this pertinent to your project.

   For some topics, you may not find an example for each. If you don’t find an
   appropriate example, note where you searched and what terms you used.
Examples continued
Geo Sciences
Locating a refereed paper on the geology of a national park:
• A refereed or scholarly paper may be described as a paper that
  is written by an expert for other experts
• Some databases index only scholarly journals; others index a
  mixture of newspapers as well as scholarly and popular
  journals. The following databases should help you locate an
  appropriate article:
  Proquest, GeoRef, Web of Science
What we’re doing at PSU
• Library evangelists
• Convenience trumps quality discussions
  (Google & Wikipedia)
• Collaborating with instructors
• Alleviating library anxiety
• Hold office hours (virtual and F2F), multiple
  ways to contact us
• Collaborate with K-12 librarians about bridging
  the divide
What you can do
• Emphasize evaluating information:
  scholarly v. popular, freely available v.
  proprietary

• Consider the standards in creating your library
  curriculum

• Explore strategies for addressing multiple
  literacies

• Visit a local academic library with students
Questions or
Comments?
         Emily Rimland
 Information Literacy Librarian
  Penn State University Park
      erimland@psu.edu

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PSLA09 First Year College Students & Information Literacy

  • 1. First-year College Students & Information Literacy: What Skills Are Needed Most? PSLA 2009 Emily Rimland Information Literacy Librarian Penn State University
  • 2. Today’s Agenda: 1. Interactive and participatory 2. What IL Skills are needed most? a. IL skills & standards b. What you think c. What others think 3. Examples of K-16 skill continuums 4. Examples of college research assignments 5. Discussion, questions, etc.
  • 3. Why is this discussion important? • Your seniors are our freshmen • Mandates & assessment • We have shared expectations (lifelong learning) • So we can understand our students better • Share best practices
  • 4. What type of library do you work in? 1. High school 2. Middle school 3. Elementary school 4. Public Library 5. Academic Library 6. Another kind of library
  • 5. What percentage of freshman do you think are “adequately prepared” for college-level research? 1. 0 - 20% are adequately prepared 2. 21 - 40% 3. 41- 60% 4. 61- 80% 5. 81-100%
  • 6. AASL & ACRL Standards • AASL: Information Literacy Skills for Student Learning (K-12) • ACRL: Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Ed (Post-secondary) • AASL Standards for the 21st Century Learner
  • 7. AASL/AECT Standards • 3 categories, 9 standards • General and comprehensive-meant to be customized • Address information literacy plus social responsibility and independent learning
  • 8. AASL Standards Category I: Information Literacy Standard 1: Accesses information efficiently and effectively Standard 2: Evaluates information critically and competently Standard 3: Uses information effectively and creatively Category II: Independent Learning Standard 4: Pursues information related to personal interests Standard 5: Appreciates and enjoys literature and other creative expressions of information Standard 6: Strives for excellence in information seeking and knowledge generation Category III: Social Responsibility Standard 7: Recognizes the importance of information to a democratic society Standard 8: Practices ethical behavior in regard to information and information technology Standard 9: Participates effectively in groups to pursue and generate information
  • 9. ACRL Standards • 5 standards, many indicators and outcomes • Emphasis on cognitive skills • Picks up where AASL leaves off
  • 10. ACRL Standards Standard 1: The information literate student determines the nature and extent of the information needed. Standard 2: The information literate student accesses needed information effectively and efficiently. Standard 3: The information literate student evaluates information and its sources critically and incorporates selected information into his or her knowledge base and value system. Standard 4: The information literate student, individually or as a member of a group, uses information effectively to accomplish a specific purpose. Standard 5: The information literate student understands many of the economic, legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information and accesses and uses information ethically and legally.
  • 11. AASL Standards for the 21st C. Learner • 4 standards + skills, responsibilities, dispositions & strategies • Broader in scope, address multiple literacies: – Digital – Visual – Textual – Technological
  • 12. A C o m p a ris o n o f th e B a s ic T e n e ts o f th e AASL & ACRL Standards Compared A C R L In fo rm a tio n L ite ra c y C o m p e te n c y S ta n d a rd s fo r H ig h e r E d u c a tio n a n d th e A A S L / A E C T In fo rm a tio n L ite ra c y S ta n d a rd s fo r S tu d e n t L e a rn in g A A S L /A E C T K -1 2 S ta n d a rd s A C R L P o s t-S e c o n d a ry S ta n d a rd s A n In fo rm a tio n lite ra te in d ivid u a l is a b le to : D e te rm in e th e e xte n t o f in fo rm a tio n needed A c c e s s in fo rm a tio n e fficie n tly a n d e ffe ctive ly A c c e s s th e n e e d e d in fo rm a tio n e ffe ctive ly a n d e fficie n tly E va lu a te in fo rm a tio n critica lly a n d E va lu a te in fo rm a tio n a n d its so u rce s co m p e te n tly critica lly In c o rp o ra te se le cte d in fo rm a tio n in to o n e ’s kn o w le d g e b a se U s e in fo rm a tio n a ccu ra te ly a n d cre a tive ly U s e in fo rm a tio n e ffe ctive ly to a cco m p lish a sp e cific p u rp o se U n d e rs ta n d th e e co n o m ic, le g a l a n d A d d re sse d w ith in th e th re e S o cia l so cia l issu e s su rro u n d in g th e u se o f R e sp o n sib ility sta n d a rd s in fo rm a tio n , a n d a cce ss a n d u se in fo rm a tio n e th ica lly a n d le g a lly Table prepared by Ellysa Stern Cahoy, Penn State University, used with permission
  • 13. Which IL standard do you think is MOST important for an entering freshman to have? 1. Access information effectively and efficiently 2. Evaluate information critically and competently 3. Use information accurately and creatively
  • 14. What some others thought: • Inspired today’s questions • Survey by Robert Schroeder of 40 school & academic librarians in OR • % adequately prepared: – High school librarians majority answered 21-40% – Academic librarians majority answered 0-20%
  • 15. What some others thought (cont.) • Related to the standards: – Majority of combined respondents: • #1 = “accesses needed information effectively and efficiently” (33%) • #2 = “determines the nature and extent of the information needed” (19%) – However, large spread between high school & academic librarians’ responses for these 2 areas – High school librarians placed more emphasis on “evaluates information and its sources critically and incorporates selected information into knowledge base”
  • 16. Acquisition of skills: where and when • Rochester Regional Library Council’s “Core Library and Research Skills Grade 9-14+”
  • 17. CLOC group continuum Community Librarians Outreach and Collaboration, K-16 Information Literacy Skills Checklist. http://ncohen.myweb.uga.edu/ILcollege.htm
  • 18. Oregon’s 8 Proficiencies Students who are ready to begin upper-division coursework can… 1. Identify gaps in their knowledge. 2. Find information efficiently and effectively. 3. Evaluate and select information. 4. Treat research as a multi-stage, recursive learning process. 5. Ethically, legally, and safely use information . 6. Recognize safety issues. 7. Manipulate and manage information. 8. Create, produce, and communicate. Oregon Information Literacy Summit: http://blogs.library.oregonstate.edu/ilsummit/2007- summit/proposed-proficiences/
  • 19. Examples of assignments English (Rhetoric & Composition) Find a topic and format that lend themselves to at least 5 pages of rigorous analysis backed up by at least three respectable outside sources. Identify a problem or issue, take a stand, translate your stand into a thesis statement, support the reasons for your position with details and examples that you’ve discovered during the course of your research, and marshal your reasoning, research, and appeals as you try to persuade others to accept your position.
  • 20. Examples continued Communication Arts & Sciences (Speech) …research one issue of civic importance and do three speeches on the one subject throughout the semester. …Each speech has a bibliographic requirement of 5-7 sources, including the NYT. “In my experience teaching the course, the students tend to rely on google even after the library visit, but I can’t understand why. I will be changing the requirements for the speeches so that they must include not only one citations from the New York Times but also citations from one journal article and one book.”
  • 21. Examples continued Engineering Define in a few sentences your research topic. Locate each of the following: a handbook a dictionary a journal article a newspaper article a standard (individual or a collection) a book a report a web site • a patent (give this a try using www.uspto.gov) Do not pick the first resource that comes up in a search. Select what you judge to be the best resource you can find for each of these categories. In addition to locating and citing the resources, you should write a short (2-3 sentence) description detailing why this pertinent to your project. For some topics, you may not find an example for each. If you don’t find an appropriate example, note where you searched and what terms you used.
  • 22. Examples continued Geo Sciences Locating a refereed paper on the geology of a national park: • A refereed or scholarly paper may be described as a paper that is written by an expert for other experts • Some databases index only scholarly journals; others index a mixture of newspapers as well as scholarly and popular journals. The following databases should help you locate an appropriate article: Proquest, GeoRef, Web of Science
  • 23. What we’re doing at PSU • Library evangelists • Convenience trumps quality discussions (Google & Wikipedia) • Collaborating with instructors • Alleviating library anxiety • Hold office hours (virtual and F2F), multiple ways to contact us • Collaborate with K-12 librarians about bridging the divide
  • 24. What you can do • Emphasize evaluating information: scholarly v. popular, freely available v. proprietary • Consider the standards in creating your library curriculum • Explore strategies for addressing multiple literacies • Visit a local academic library with students
  • 25. Questions or Comments? Emily Rimland Information Literacy Librarian Penn State University Park erimland@psu.edu