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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Newell, Terrance S.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ965626
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author Newell, Terrance S.
author_facet Newell, Terrance S.
Newell, Terrance S.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Thinking beyond the Disjunctive Opposition of Information Literacy Assessment in Theory and Practice Newell, Terrance S. Computer Simulation Ethnography Role Perception School Libraries Media Specialists Information Literacy Learning Resources Centers Theory Practice Relationship Academic Achievement Librarians Library Science Alternative Assessment Educational Environment School library literature has illuminated several structural barriers (such as lack of time and role perception conflict) that impede many school library media specialists (SLMSs) from fulfilling their student assessment role in practice, and specialists have identified technology as a mediating artifact that could aide in an expansion of that role. The purpose of this study is twofold: (1) to interrogate a middle school's information literacy assessment system for internal disturbances (tensions and contradictions) between system elements that restrict the SLMS's ability to assess information literacy; and (2) to design a technology-based instrument that addresses these system disturbances and enables SLMSs to expand their assessment roles. The researcher used rapid design ethnography coupled with an activity theory (AT)-based analysis to produce an indepth description of the assessment system disturbances. A technology-based assessment instrument was then designed and developed to address the system disturbances. The ethnographic methods and AT analysis informed the design and development of a Virtual Reality Information Literacy Learning and Assessment Space (VILLAS). VILLAS addresses the four primary assessment disturbances illuminated in recent library literature in addition to the site-specific disturbances identified in this study, and it has the potential to decrease the distance between the librarian's assessment roles as envisioned in theory and as realized in practice. (Contains 2 tables and 2 figures.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ965626
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2004
record_format eric
spellingShingle Thinking beyond the Disjunctive Opposition of Information Literacy Assessment in Theory and Practice
Newell, Terrance S.
Computer Simulation
Ethnography
Role Perception
School Libraries
Media Specialists
Information Literacy
Learning Resources Centers
Theory Practice Relationship
Academic Achievement
Librarians
Library Science
Alternative Assessment
Educational Environment
Thinking beyond the Disjunctive Opposition of Information Literacy Assessment in Theory and Practice Newell, Terrance S. Computer Simulation Ethnography Role Perception School Libraries Media Specialists Information Literacy Learning Resources Centers Theory Practice Relationship Academic Achievement Librarians Library Science Alternative Assessment Educational Environment School library literature has illuminated several structural barriers (such as lack of time and role perception conflict) that impede many school library media specialists (SLMSs) from fulfilling their student assessment role in practice, and specialists have identified technology as a mediating artifact that could aide in an expansion of that role. The purpose of this study is twofold: (1) to interrogate a middle school's information literacy assessment system for internal disturbances (tensions and contradictions) between system elements that restrict the SLMS's ability to assess information literacy; and (2) to design a technology-based instrument that addresses these system disturbances and enables SLMSs to expand their assessment roles. The researcher used rapid design ethnography coupled with an activity theory (AT)-based analysis to produce an indepth description of the assessment system disturbances. A technology-based assessment instrument was then designed and developed to address the system disturbances. The ethnographic methods and AT analysis informed the design and development of a Virtual Reality Information Literacy Learning and Assessment Space (VILLAS). VILLAS addresses the four primary assessment disturbances illuminated in recent library literature in addition to the site-specific disturbances identified in this study, and it has the potential to decrease the distance between the librarian's assessment roles as envisioned in theory and as realized in practice. (Contains 2 tables and 2 figures.)
title Thinking beyond the Disjunctive Opposition of Information Literacy Assessment in Theory and Practice
topic Computer Simulation
Ethnography
Role Perception
School Libraries
Media Specialists
Information Literacy
Learning Resources Centers
Theory Practice Relationship
Academic Achievement
Librarians
Library Science
Alternative Assessment
Educational Environment
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ965626