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Autores principales: Kathia Salomé Ibacache Oliva, Elizabeth Novosel, Stacy Gilbert
Formato: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lenguaje:en
Publicado: 2024
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Acceso en línea:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1423979
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author Kathia Salomé Ibacache Oliva
Elizabeth Novosel
Stacy Gilbert
author_facet Kathia Salomé Ibacache Oliva
Elizabeth Novosel
Stacy Gilbert
Kathia Salomé Ibacache Oliva
Elizabeth Novosel
Stacy Gilbert
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Exploring Social Media as an Information Source in IL Instruction Kathia Salomé Ibacache Oliva Elizabeth Novosel Stacy Gilbert Social Media Information Literacy Information Sources Literacy Education Academic Libraries Librarians Library Instruction Teaching Methods Technology Uses in Education Attitudes According to a 2021 Pew Research report, over 80 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds use social media. Studies also show that higher education students use social media in both academic and everyday life. However, there is minimal research about how, or whether, librarians utilize social media in their library instruction as a source of information for students' academic work. We examined 162 responses to a survey sent to an uncounted number of librarians in higher education, asking them about their teaching practices regarding social media to enable us to answer the following research questions: (1) How are teaching librarians using social media as an information source in their instruction?; (2) What are the benefits teaching librarians perceive regarding the use of social media in instruction?; (3) What are the challenges teaching librarians perceive regarding the use of social media in instruction? The survey results showed that most librarians surveyed are not utilizing social media as an information source in their library instruction. Although our results cannot be generalized, our study sheds light on how librarians incorporate social media in information literacy (IL) instruction, the tension between scholarly literature and voices not considered authoritative, and librarians' perceptions of benefits and challenges to incorporating social media in library sessions.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1423979
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2024
record_format eric
spellingShingle Exploring Social Media as an Information Source in IL Instruction
Kathia Salomé Ibacache Oliva
Elizabeth Novosel
Stacy Gilbert
Social Media
Information Literacy
Information Sources
Literacy Education
Academic Libraries
Librarians
Library Instruction
Teaching Methods
Technology Uses in Education
Attitudes
Exploring Social Media as an Information Source in IL Instruction Kathia Salomé Ibacache Oliva Elizabeth Novosel Stacy Gilbert Social Media Information Literacy Information Sources Literacy Education Academic Libraries Librarians Library Instruction Teaching Methods Technology Uses in Education Attitudes According to a 2021 Pew Research report, over 80 percent of 18- to 29-year-olds use social media. Studies also show that higher education students use social media in both academic and everyday life. However, there is minimal research about how, or whether, librarians utilize social media in their library instruction as a source of information for students' academic work. We examined 162 responses to a survey sent to an uncounted number of librarians in higher education, asking them about their teaching practices regarding social media to enable us to answer the following research questions: (1) How are teaching librarians using social media as an information source in their instruction?; (2) What are the benefits teaching librarians perceive regarding the use of social media in instruction?; (3) What are the challenges teaching librarians perceive regarding the use of social media in instruction? The survey results showed that most librarians surveyed are not utilizing social media as an information source in their library instruction. Although our results cannot be generalized, our study sheds light on how librarians incorporate social media in information literacy (IL) instruction, the tension between scholarly literature and voices not considered authoritative, and librarians' perceptions of benefits and challenges to incorporating social media in library sessions.
title Exploring Social Media as an Information Source in IL Instruction
topic Social Media
Information Literacy
Information Sources
Literacy Education
Academic Libraries
Librarians
Library Instruction
Teaching Methods
Technology Uses in Education
Attitudes
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1423979