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Information literacy for lifelong learning Abdelaziz Abid Information Society Division. Thematic Debate. Invited experts addressed four key questions: What is Information Literacy? What are people’s needs? What education programmes are needed to meet these needs?
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Information literacy for lifelong learningAbdelaziz AbidInformation Society Division
Thematic Debate • Invited experts addressed four key questions: • What is Information Literacy? • What are people’s needs? • What education programmes are needed to meet these needs? • What strategies and actions can UNESCO and IFAP implement?
Information Literacy WSIS declared “common desire to build a people-centered, inclusive… Information Society, where everyone can create, access, utilize and share information and knowledge…”
What is Information Literacy? • The concept not well understood by Governments or societies; • The term does not translate easily into French or other languages and this makes it difficult to promote at an international level;
What is Information Literacy? • Of particular relevance in a digital world are the abilities to evaluate information critically and to create information; • The latest definition of Information Literacy, produced by CILIP (2004) is: “Information literacy is knowing when and why you need information, where to find it, and how to evaluate, use and communicate it in an ethical manner.”
What are People’s Needs? • Information literacy- concern to all sectors of society; • Developing countries need a more proactive role in determining solutions most appropriate to needs; • The 2005 EFA Report revealed there are 799 million adult illiterates and 64% of these are women; • Information literacy enables people to access information about their health, their environment, their education and work; • People require ICT literacy to access digital information; in information societies this is a necessary pre-condition for information literacy.
What Education Programmes are Needed? • Migration from “unconscious incompetent” to “conscious incompetent” and only then to “conscious competent”; • An Information Literacy curriculum (at all levels) accepted by Governments and education administrators; • Educationalists to change focus from information technologies to information;
What Education Programmes are Needed? • Teachers are a barrier in creating more information literate students and therefore education programmes must be directed at them in the first instance; • Opportunity for information literacy to become a cornerstone in programmes developed as part of the United Nations’ Decade for Literacy, especially for women and out-of-school girls.
Strategy • Develop international policy guidelines • Support curriculum development and distance learninginitiatives- training in IL should be included in initial and in-service training programmes as part of teachers’ ongoing professional development. • Promote models of best practice that can assist in the adoption of information literacy skills. • Support exchange of experiences and professional development