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Hauptverfasser: Stevens, Christy R., Campbell, Patricia J.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2008
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ810887
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author Stevens, Christy R.
Campbell, Patricia J.
author_facet Stevens, Christy R.
Campbell, Patricia J.
Stevens, Christy R.
Campbell, Patricia J.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Collaborating with Librarians to Develop Lower Division Political Science Students' Information Literacy Competencies Stevens, Christy R. Campbell, Patricia J. Student Research Political Science Research Libraries Information Literacy Librarians Library Instruction Competence College Students Role Computer Uses in Education Librarian Teacher Cooperation College Faculty Cooperative Planning Academic Standards Assignments Periodicals Annotated Bibliographies Library Materials Journal Articles Student Projects Studies suggest that course-integrated information literacy instruction is an effective way to enhance the quality of student research. However, many political science professors are unfamiliar with the growing information literacy movement in higher education today, with strategies for integrating information literacy into their courses and assignments, and with opportunities to collaborate with librarians beyond requesting a 50-minute library instruction session for their classes. This paper addresses these issues, beginning with a discussion of the emergence of information literacy as an important discourse in higher education today and a description of the Association of College and Research Libraries' "Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education." It then reviews relevant literature on library instruction and librarian/course faculty collaboration, illustrating that effective information literacy instruction requires that librarians and course faculty work together beyond "one-shot" library instruction sessions. Collaboratively developed research assignment sequences are posited as an effective way for librarians and political science professors to work together to enhance lower division students' information literacy competencies. Finally, the paper provides a practical example of a collaboratively developed assignment sequence for a lower division American Government class that is mapped to the "Information Literacy Competency Standards." (Contains 6 tables and 10 notes.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ810887
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle Collaborating with Librarians to Develop Lower Division Political Science Students' Information Literacy Competencies
Stevens, Christy R.
Campbell, Patricia J.
Student Research
Political Science
Research Libraries
Information Literacy
Librarians
Library Instruction
Competence
College Students
Role
Computer Uses in Education
Librarian Teacher Cooperation
College Faculty
Cooperative Planning
Academic Standards
Assignments
Periodicals
Annotated Bibliographies
Library Materials
Journal Articles
Student Projects
Collaborating with Librarians to Develop Lower Division Political Science Students' Information Literacy Competencies Stevens, Christy R. Campbell, Patricia J. Student Research Political Science Research Libraries Information Literacy Librarians Library Instruction Competence College Students Role Computer Uses in Education Librarian Teacher Cooperation College Faculty Cooperative Planning Academic Standards Assignments Periodicals Annotated Bibliographies Library Materials Journal Articles Student Projects Studies suggest that course-integrated information literacy instruction is an effective way to enhance the quality of student research. However, many political science professors are unfamiliar with the growing information literacy movement in higher education today, with strategies for integrating information literacy into their courses and assignments, and with opportunities to collaborate with librarians beyond requesting a 50-minute library instruction session for their classes. This paper addresses these issues, beginning with a discussion of the emergence of information literacy as an important discourse in higher education today and a description of the Association of College and Research Libraries' "Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education." It then reviews relevant literature on library instruction and librarian/course faculty collaboration, illustrating that effective information literacy instruction requires that librarians and course faculty work together beyond "one-shot" library instruction sessions. Collaboratively developed research assignment sequences are posited as an effective way for librarians and political science professors to work together to enhance lower division students' information literacy competencies. Finally, the paper provides a practical example of a collaboratively developed assignment sequence for a lower division American Government class that is mapped to the "Information Literacy Competency Standards." (Contains 6 tables and 10 notes.)
title Collaborating with Librarians to Develop Lower Division Political Science Students' Information Literacy Competencies
topic Student Research
Political Science
Research Libraries
Information Literacy
Librarians
Library Instruction
Competence
College Students
Role
Computer Uses in Education
Librarian Teacher Cooperation
College Faculty
Cooperative Planning
Academic Standards
Assignments
Periodicals
Annotated Bibliographies
Library Materials
Journal Articles
Student Projects
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ810887