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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Crawford, John, Irving, Christine
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ968381
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author Crawford, John
Irving, Christine
author_facet Crawford, John
Irving, Christine
Crawford, John
Irving, Christine
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Information Literacy in Employability Training: The Experience of Inverclyde Libraries Crawford, John Irving, Christine Employment Potential Course Content Libraries Foreign Countries Information Literacy Family Influence Social Development Vocational Education Training Information Technology Interviews Lifelong Learning Public Libraries Internet Library Services Library Science Employment Biographies Comparative Analysis Evaluation Librarians The study is an evaluation of an employability training programme provided by Inverclyde Libraries in West Central Scotland and the role of information literacy within the training programme. Inverclyde is an area with high unemployment and pockets of multiple deprivation. Modern, applicable skills are also lacking. The findings are based on interviews with five learners and also one with an adult literacies tutor. The interviews were conducted in August 2009 and a Learning Life Histories methodology was used. Interviewees had mainly previously worked in the service industries and none had post-school qualifications, despite which all the interviewees were highly motivated. Information literacy was found to between 30% and 60% of course content depending on learner needs. Family influence was found to be the main motivation to enrol on the course and the learners sought personal social development as well as employability skills. There was found to be a lack of appropriate, relevant training materials and a lack of collaboration between the LIS sector and Community Learning and Development in developing them. The article concludes with a number of recommendations including the need to improve recruitment and course scheduling and planning.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ968381
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2012
record_format eric
spellingShingle Information Literacy in Employability Training: The Experience of Inverclyde Libraries
Crawford, John
Irving, Christine
Employment Potential
Course Content
Libraries
Foreign Countries
Information Literacy
Family Influence
Social Development
Vocational Education
Training
Information Technology
Interviews
Lifelong Learning
Public Libraries
Internet
Library Services
Library Science
Employment
Biographies
Comparative Analysis
Evaluation
Librarians
Information Literacy in Employability Training: The Experience of Inverclyde Libraries Crawford, John Irving, Christine Employment Potential Course Content Libraries Foreign Countries Information Literacy Family Influence Social Development Vocational Education Training Information Technology Interviews Lifelong Learning Public Libraries Internet Library Services Library Science Employment Biographies Comparative Analysis Evaluation Librarians The study is an evaluation of an employability training programme provided by Inverclyde Libraries in West Central Scotland and the role of information literacy within the training programme. Inverclyde is an area with high unemployment and pockets of multiple deprivation. Modern, applicable skills are also lacking. The findings are based on interviews with five learners and also one with an adult literacies tutor. The interviews were conducted in August 2009 and a Learning Life Histories methodology was used. Interviewees had mainly previously worked in the service industries and none had post-school qualifications, despite which all the interviewees were highly motivated. Information literacy was found to between 30% and 60% of course content depending on learner needs. Family influence was found to be the main motivation to enrol on the course and the learners sought personal social development as well as employability skills. There was found to be a lack of appropriate, relevant training materials and a lack of collaboration between the LIS sector and Community Learning and Development in developing them. The article concludes with a number of recommendations including the need to improve recruitment and course scheduling and planning.
title Information Literacy in Employability Training: The Experience of Inverclyde Libraries
topic Employment Potential
Course Content
Libraries
Foreign Countries
Information Literacy
Family Influence
Social Development
Vocational Education
Training
Information Technology
Interviews
Lifelong Learning
Public Libraries
Internet
Library Services
Library Science
Employment
Biographies
Comparative Analysis
Evaluation
Librarians
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ968381