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Main Authors: Frank, Emily P., Pharo, Nils
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1105440
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author Frank, Emily P.
Pharo, Nils
author_facet Frank, Emily P.
Pharo, Nils
Frank, Emily P.
Pharo, Nils
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Academic Librarians in Data Information Literacy Instruction: A Case Study in Meteorology Frank, Emily P. Pharo, Nils Academic Libraries Information Literacy Case Studies Meteorology Library Instruction Graduate Students Librarians Literacy Data Foreign Countries Higher Education Library Role Librarian Attitudes Information Seeking Delphi Technique Research Design Semi Structured Interviews Questioning Techniques Data Collection Pilot Projects Questionnaires E-science has reshaped meteorology due to the rate data is generated, collected, analyzed, and stored and brought data skills to a new prominence. Data information literacy--the skills needed to understand, use, manage, share, work with, and produce data--reflects the confluence of data skills with information literacy competencies. This research assessed perceptions of data information literacy and attitudes on its instruction for graduate students in meteorology. As academic librarians have traditionally provided information literacy instruction, the research determined if they were perceived as having a role in data information literacy instruction. The modified Delphi method was applied to obtain the perspectives of a panel of experts, representing students, librarians, professors, and researchers, for the purpose of forecasting and consensus-making. Through the consideration of the University of Oslo's Department of Geosciences' Meteorology Section, the research found that data information literacy skills were relevant to the work of meteorology students. Stakeholders perceived that academic librarians could play a future role in general instruction but that they would have to overcome obstacles to be involved in data information literacy instruction. For librarians to enter this domain, they would need to improve their technical skills, enhance their discipline-specific knowledge, or rely on collaborations. The significance of these findings was limited by the modest target population under examination; as a consequence, the results were strongly linked to the specific setting. Further studies would be necessary to determine their generalizability.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1105440
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2016
record_format eric
spellingShingle Academic Librarians in Data Information Literacy Instruction: A Case Study in Meteorology
Frank, Emily P.
Pharo, Nils
Academic Libraries
Information Literacy
Case Studies
Meteorology
Library Instruction
Graduate Students
Librarians
Literacy
Data
Foreign Countries
Higher Education
Library Role
Librarian Attitudes
Information Seeking
Delphi Technique
Research Design
Semi Structured Interviews
Questioning Techniques
Data Collection
Pilot Projects
Questionnaires
Academic Librarians in Data Information Literacy Instruction: A Case Study in Meteorology Frank, Emily P. Pharo, Nils Academic Libraries Information Literacy Case Studies Meteorology Library Instruction Graduate Students Librarians Literacy Data Foreign Countries Higher Education Library Role Librarian Attitudes Information Seeking Delphi Technique Research Design Semi Structured Interviews Questioning Techniques Data Collection Pilot Projects Questionnaires E-science has reshaped meteorology due to the rate data is generated, collected, analyzed, and stored and brought data skills to a new prominence. Data information literacy--the skills needed to understand, use, manage, share, work with, and produce data--reflects the confluence of data skills with information literacy competencies. This research assessed perceptions of data information literacy and attitudes on its instruction for graduate students in meteorology. As academic librarians have traditionally provided information literacy instruction, the research determined if they were perceived as having a role in data information literacy instruction. The modified Delphi method was applied to obtain the perspectives of a panel of experts, representing students, librarians, professors, and researchers, for the purpose of forecasting and consensus-making. Through the consideration of the University of Oslo's Department of Geosciences' Meteorology Section, the research found that data information literacy skills were relevant to the work of meteorology students. Stakeholders perceived that academic librarians could play a future role in general instruction but that they would have to overcome obstacles to be involved in data information literacy instruction. For librarians to enter this domain, they would need to improve their technical skills, enhance their discipline-specific knowledge, or rely on collaborations. The significance of these findings was limited by the modest target population under examination; as a consequence, the results were strongly linked to the specific setting. Further studies would be necessary to determine their generalizability.
title Academic Librarians in Data Information Literacy Instruction: A Case Study in Meteorology
topic Academic Libraries
Information Literacy
Case Studies
Meteorology
Library Instruction
Graduate Students
Librarians
Literacy
Data
Foreign Countries
Higher Education
Library Role
Librarian Attitudes
Information Seeking
Delphi Technique
Research Design
Semi Structured Interviews
Questioning Techniques
Data Collection
Pilot Projects
Questionnaires
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1105440