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Moira Bent National Teaching Fellow Faculty Liaison Librarian. Perceptions of Information Literacy in the transition into Higher Education. National Teaching Fellowship Project. Strand one: (theory) How people perceive IL and how it fits into teaching and learning
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Moira Bent National Teaching Fellow Faculty Liaison Librarian Perceptions of Information Literacy in the transition into Higher Education
National Teaching Fellowship Project Strand one: (theory) How people perceive IL and how it fits into teaching and learning Strand two: (practical application) A pragmatic view of the transition into HE, information related issues which students face and where the university library fits into the picture. Strand three: (fun!) Visits and networking - opportunities to make contacts in the IL field and discover what is happening elsewhere.
Strand 3 : Visits and networking • IL experts – discussing ideas, focusing project • Conferences/ meetings • Local schools and librarian’s groups • Local students and lecturers • Wildlife? • Yellow eyed penguin, NZ
Visits and networking – the big trip! 18th October to 18th November 2006 • University of Canterbury at Christchurch NZ • Christchurch Polytechnic University • QUT Library and research group • University of Queensland • University of Western Australia • Curtin University of Technology • Murdoch University http://blogs.ncl.ac.uk/moira.bent
Strand 1 : the theory • Seven faces of IL - Bruce • Relational model – Bruce/Edwards/Lupton • Perceptions in HE – Webber/Johnston • IL in schools - Crawford/Irving; Williams/Wavell • Transition – Lonsdale/Armstrong; Taylor(QUT) Kea, NZ
Seven Faces of IL (Bruce) • Information technology conception • Information sources conception • Information process conception • Information control conception • Knowledge construction conception • Knowledge extension conception • Wisdom conception
Content Competency Learning to learn Personal relevance Social impact Relational – “variation” “People see teaching and learning differently” The 6 Frames of IL (Bruce et al)
Teachers’ conceptions of student IL: Finding Linguistic understanding Making connections Practical skills Critical awareness of sources Independent learning Info lit in the classroom (Williams/Wavell)
Gathering data • Local schools • Newcastle University • PCAP - academic staff • T&L seminar – academic staff • Library staff in Australia/ NZ Galah • Perceptions of IL – what does it mean to me, my friends/colleagues, my teachers/students, my school/uni
Interviews and Focus groups • What are the characteristics of an information literate person? • Do students leave school adequately prepared for HE in terms of IL? • Whose responsibility is it? • What can we do to improve the situation?
Preliminary results • Most teachers regard themselves as information literate • Teachers do see IL as important and feel it’s their responsibility to encourage students • Main issues are with time in the curriculum • Many school students rely totally on Wikipedia • Teacher’s perceptions of student abilities differ from student perceptions
Practical outcomes • More links with university libraries • Access for study • Access to resources • Visits/awareness in both directions • IL sessions for teachers • Library as focus for all kinds of information • Virtual/ physical
What next? What questions should I be asking? Wandering mind?