Salvato in:
Dettagli Bibliografici
Autori principali: Garwood, Deborah A., Poole, Alex H.
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 2021
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1311824
Tags: Aggiungi Tag
Nessun Tag, puoi essere il primo ad aggiungerne!!
_version_ 1867181251103817728
author Garwood, Deborah A.
Poole, Alex H.
author_facet Garwood, Deborah A.
Poole, Alex H.
Garwood, Deborah A.
Poole, Alex H.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Vital Signs: Health Literacy and Library and Information Science Pedagogy in the United States Garwood, Deborah A. Poole, Alex H. Library Science Information Science Education Health Literacy Teaching Methods Information Literacy Decision Making Health Services Medicine Benchmarking Guidelines Competence Course Evaluation Users (Information) Information Sources Program Evaluation Information Dissemination Databases Librarians Higher Education Health literacy supports individuals', families', and communities' health-care decisions. As mediators between health information seekers and medical literature, librarians are essential purveyors of health literacy. Users' trust in libraries as sources of reliable and current health information presupposes the appropriate training of librarians; however, LIS programs lack benchmarks for educating generalist students in health information. On-the-job training remains the latter's sole recourse. This research employs content analysis to explore the current state of health literacy training in LIS programs. First, we define and contextualize health literacy. Next, we posit a health literacy framework comprising five attributes based on the American Library Association's (ALA's) core competencies and relevant scholarship. Third, we examine 118 health-related courses offered by 53 LIS programs in the United States and Puerto Rico. Only 38 courses in 25 LIS programs incorporate one or more of the five attributes. Ultimately, we recommend that LIS programs train generalist students in health literacy as part of the core curriculum, thereby preparing them to develop and support users' health literacy.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1311824
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2021
record_format eric
spellingShingle Vital Signs: Health Literacy and Library and Information Science Pedagogy in the United States
Garwood, Deborah A.
Poole, Alex H.
Library Science
Information Science Education
Health
Literacy
Teaching Methods
Information Literacy
Decision Making
Health Services
Medicine
Benchmarking
Guidelines
Competence
Course Evaluation
Users (Information)
Information Sources
Program Evaluation
Information Dissemination
Databases
Librarians
Higher Education
Vital Signs: Health Literacy and Library and Information Science Pedagogy in the United States Garwood, Deborah A. Poole, Alex H. Library Science Information Science Education Health Literacy Teaching Methods Information Literacy Decision Making Health Services Medicine Benchmarking Guidelines Competence Course Evaluation Users (Information) Information Sources Program Evaluation Information Dissemination Databases Librarians Higher Education Health literacy supports individuals', families', and communities' health-care decisions. As mediators between health information seekers and medical literature, librarians are essential purveyors of health literacy. Users' trust in libraries as sources of reliable and current health information presupposes the appropriate training of librarians; however, LIS programs lack benchmarks for educating generalist students in health information. On-the-job training remains the latter's sole recourse. This research employs content analysis to explore the current state of health literacy training in LIS programs. First, we define and contextualize health literacy. Next, we posit a health literacy framework comprising five attributes based on the American Library Association's (ALA's) core competencies and relevant scholarship. Third, we examine 118 health-related courses offered by 53 LIS programs in the United States and Puerto Rico. Only 38 courses in 25 LIS programs incorporate one or more of the five attributes. Ultimately, we recommend that LIS programs train generalist students in health literacy as part of the core curriculum, thereby preparing them to develop and support users' health literacy.
title Vital Signs: Health Literacy and Library and Information Science Pedagogy in the United States
topic Library Science
Information Science Education
Health
Literacy
Teaching Methods
Information Literacy
Decision Making
Health Services
Medicine
Benchmarking
Guidelines
Competence
Course Evaluation
Users (Information)
Information Sources
Program Evaluation
Information Dissemination
Databases
Librarians
Higher Education
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1311824