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Auteur principal: Anne Jumonville Graf
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 2024
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Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1453737
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author Anne Jumonville Graf
author_facet Anne Jumonville Graf
Anne Jumonville Graf
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Centering Relevance in Information Literacy Teaching and Learning Anne Jumonville Graf Relevance (Education) Information Literacy Literacy Education Information Sources Evaluative Thinking Library Materials Media Selection Selection Criteria Selection Tools Reflection Information Systems Expertise Metacognition The process of determining whether a source of information is relevant is multidimensional, dynamic, and subjective. This essay puts information science scholarship on relevance, including the process and nature of making relevance judgments, in conversation with models of teaching and learning information literacy. Teaching librarians are encouraged to recognize students' relevance judgments as sites of reflection and instruction. This essay suggests a variety of ways librarians might do this, from re-thinking source evaluation methods to emphasizing the opportunities available at the source selection stage. The process of determining relevance is a practical site of reflective possibility and deserves greater attention in information literacy teaching and learning. Discussing relevance judgments can help students better understand and evaluate sources, reflect on their own and others' perspectives and motivations, and create opportunities to discuss the impact of information systems.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1453737
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2024
record_format eric
spellingShingle Centering Relevance in Information Literacy Teaching and Learning
Anne Jumonville Graf
Relevance (Education)
Information Literacy
Literacy Education
Information Sources
Evaluative Thinking
Library Materials
Media Selection
Selection Criteria
Selection Tools
Reflection
Information Systems
Expertise
Metacognition
Centering Relevance in Information Literacy Teaching and Learning Anne Jumonville Graf Relevance (Education) Information Literacy Literacy Education Information Sources Evaluative Thinking Library Materials Media Selection Selection Criteria Selection Tools Reflection Information Systems Expertise Metacognition The process of determining whether a source of information is relevant is multidimensional, dynamic, and subjective. This essay puts information science scholarship on relevance, including the process and nature of making relevance judgments, in conversation with models of teaching and learning information literacy. Teaching librarians are encouraged to recognize students' relevance judgments as sites of reflection and instruction. This essay suggests a variety of ways librarians might do this, from re-thinking source evaluation methods to emphasizing the opportunities available at the source selection stage. The process of determining relevance is a practical site of reflective possibility and deserves greater attention in information literacy teaching and learning. Discussing relevance judgments can help students better understand and evaluate sources, reflect on their own and others' perspectives and motivations, and create opportunities to discuss the impact of information systems.
title Centering Relevance in Information Literacy Teaching and Learning
topic Relevance (Education)
Information Literacy
Literacy Education
Information Sources
Evaluative Thinking
Library Materials
Media Selection
Selection Criteria
Selection Tools
Reflection
Information Systems
Expertise
Metacognition
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1453737