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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Julien, Heidi, Hoffman, Cameron
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ875979
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author Julien, Heidi
Hoffman, Cameron
author_facet Julien, Heidi
Hoffman, Cameron
Julien, Heidi
Hoffman, Cameron
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Information Literacy Training in Canada's Public Libraries Julien, Heidi Hoffman, Cameron Library Personnel Public Libraries Foreign Countries Information Literacy Internet Library Services Library Role Access to Computers Interviews Users (Information) Phenomenology The purposes of the study were to explore the role of Canada's public libraries in developing the public's information literacy (IL) skills, to explore current IL training practices, and to explore the perspectives and IL experiences of individuals who visit public libraries to access the Internet. This article documents the second phase of a larger study, which included semistructured interviews of library staff (n = 28) and customers (n = 25) as well as site observations conducted at five public libraries. Analyses were conducted qualitatively within a phenomenological framework. Results show that the primary use of the Internet in public libraries is communication. Customers reported confidence in using the Internet, while library staff indicated that customers' IL skills were poor. Greater attention needs to be paid to connecting to customers who believe they are highly information literate yet may lack sufficient skills.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ875979
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2008
record_format eric
spellingShingle Information Literacy Training in Canada's Public Libraries
Julien, Heidi
Hoffman, Cameron
Library Personnel
Public Libraries
Foreign Countries
Information Literacy
Internet
Library Services
Library Role
Access to Computers
Interviews
Users (Information)
Phenomenology
Information Literacy Training in Canada's Public Libraries Julien, Heidi Hoffman, Cameron Library Personnel Public Libraries Foreign Countries Information Literacy Internet Library Services Library Role Access to Computers Interviews Users (Information) Phenomenology The purposes of the study were to explore the role of Canada's public libraries in developing the public's information literacy (IL) skills, to explore current IL training practices, and to explore the perspectives and IL experiences of individuals who visit public libraries to access the Internet. This article documents the second phase of a larger study, which included semistructured interviews of library staff (n = 28) and customers (n = 25) as well as site observations conducted at five public libraries. Analyses were conducted qualitatively within a phenomenological framework. Results show that the primary use of the Internet in public libraries is communication. Customers reported confidence in using the Internet, while library staff indicated that customers' IL skills were poor. Greater attention needs to be paid to connecting to customers who believe they are highly information literate yet may lack sufficient skills.
title Information Literacy Training in Canada's Public Libraries
topic Library Personnel
Public Libraries
Foreign Countries
Information Literacy
Internet
Library Services
Library Role
Access to Computers
Interviews
Users (Information)
Phenomenology
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ875979