Title: Empower and Change
1Empower and Change
- Multicultural Activism, Educational Reform, and
Information Literacy
Lee LaFleur Social Sciences Bibliographer, Mann
Library, Cornell University ljl26_at_cornell.edu
2Background and Introduction
- Great social transformations usually result in
the marginalization of large sections of the
population. Marginalization associated with the
transition from the industrial to the information
society has an important cultural element. The
knowledge prioritized by the new forms of life is
distributed unevenly among individuals, according
to social group, gender, ethnic group, and age. - -Ramon Flecha
- University of Barcelona, Spain
3Background and Introduction
- Although the information revolution creates
opportunities for improving the conditions of
human existence, the social model that is
becoming hegemonic in its wake deepens existing
inequalities and generates others - -Ramon Flecha
- University of Barcelona, Spain
4Background and Introduction
- The challenge of education today to provide
access to the new technologies and to the
literacies needed for competence in order to
overcome some of the divisions and inequalities
that have plagued contemporary societies during
the entire modern age. - -Douglas Kellner
- UCLA
5Empower and Change
- History and Principles of Multicultural Education
- Information Literacy
- Information Literacy as a Social Movement
6Ethnic Studies
- 1960s
- African Americans, Asian Americans, Latinos/as,
Native Americans - More diversity among faculty
- Curricular reform
- Knowledge relevant to community
-
-
7Multicultural Education
- 1970s
- Women
- Gays and Lesbians
- People with Disabilities
8Ethnic Studies and Multicultural Education
- Ethnic Studies
- Single or selected groups studied
- Single courses
- Academic programs and departments
- Multicultural Education
- All groups studied
- Across curriculum
- Interdisciplinary
-Thomas LaBelle and Christopher Ward
9Multicultural Education
Multicultural Education that is also Social
Reconstructionist
- Equal opportunity
- Cultural pluralism
- Reflect the concerns of diverse cultural groups
- Acknowledge multiple identities
- Eliminate oppression of one group by another
- Cross-cultural coalitions
- Democratic process / decision making
- Social responsibility
- Real world relevance
Christine Sleeter and Carl Grant
10 Great social transformations usually result in
the marginalization of large sections of the
population. Marginalization associated with the
transition from the industrial to the information
society has an important cultural element. The
knowledge prioritized by the new forms of life is
distributed unevenly among individuals, according
to social group, gender, ethnic group, and age.
-Ramon Flecha University of
Barcelona, Spain
11Is Information the Answer?
- The manner in which our country deals with
the realities of the Information Age will have
enormous impact on our democratic way of life and
on our nations ability to compete in an
international marketplace. Within Americas
information society, the potential exists to
address many long-standing social and economic
inequalities. To reap such benefits, people- as
individuals, and as a nation must become
information literate. - -National Forum on Information Literacy
- http//www.infolit.org/.
12 Report of the ALA Presidential Committee on
Information Literacy
- 1989 American Library Association
-
- To be information literate, a person must be
able to recognize when information is needed and
have the ability to locate, evaluate, and use
effectively the needed information -
13 Report of the ALA Presidential Committee on
Information Literacy
- Imagine, for example, a family which is being
evicted by a landlord who claims he is within his
legal rights. Usually they will have to accept
the landlords expert opinion, because they do
not know how to seek information to confirm or
disprove his claim.
14 Report of the ALA Presidential Committee on
Information Literacy
- The process of searching and interacting with
the ideas and values of their own and other
cultures deepens peoples capacities to
understand and position themselves within larger
communities of time and place. By drawing on the
arts, history, and literature of previous
generations, individuals and communities can
affirm the best in their cultures and determine
future goals.
15 Report of the ALA Presidential Committee on
Information Literacy
- It is unfortunate that the very people who most
need the empowerment inherent in being
information literate are the least likely to have
learning experiences which will promote these
abilities. Minority and at-risk students,
illiterate adults, people with English as a
second language and economically disadvantaged
people are among those most likely to lack access
to the information that can improve their
situations.
16 Information Literacy
- Information literacy instruction must present
the political, social, economic and cultural
contexts in which knowledge is created and
organized.People need to understand the western
model of discipline based research and how it
structures and biases certain types of knowledge
over others. - -Thomas Eland, Minneapolis Community
Technical College
17Transformation through Information Literacy?
18Information Literacy as a Social Movement
- Social Movement-
- a collective enterprise seeking to establish a
new order of life. They have their inception in
a condition of unrest and derive their motive
power on one hand from dissatisfaction with the
current form of life, and on the other hand, from
wishes and hopes for a new scheme of living - -Herbert Blumer
19Organization and Resource Mobilization
Information Literacy as a Social Movement
- General Social Movements
- Specific Social Movements
Information Literacy as specific social movement
for educational reform
20Organization and Resource Mobilization
- Social Movement Organization (SMO)
- Social Movement Industry (SMI)
- Social Movement Sector (SMS)
John McCarthy and Mayer Zald
21Organization and Resource Mobilization
- Social Movement Sector (SMS)
ALA (SMO)
Information Literacy (SMI)
ACRL (SMO)
Greenpeace (SMO)
Environmentalism (SMI)
Feminism (SMI)
NOW (SMO)
Multiculturalism (SMI)
NAME (SMO)
SMO Social Movement Organization
SMISocial Movement Industry
22Organization and Resource Mobilization
- Adherents
- Those individuals and organizations that believe
in the goals of the social movement - Constituents
- Those individuals and organizations providing
resources for a social movement
- Potential Beneficiaries
- Those individuals and organizations that would
benefit from the goals of a social movement
23Information Literacy that is Multicultural and
Social Reconstructionist
- Recruit constituents
- Convey Value and Utility
- Resource sharing
- Social movements with mutual goals
- Information Literacy Multiculturalism
Environmentalism
- Partner with potential beneficiaries
- Underserved groups
- Community Technology Centers
- Information Literacy Social capital
Cyberpower - -Abdul Alkalimat
-
24Information Literacy that is Multicultural and
Social Reconstructionist
- Administrative Considerations
- Instructor preparation
- Assessment
25References
- American Library Association. Presidential
Committee on Information Literacy. Final Report.
(Chicago American Library Association, 1989) - Blumer, Herbert, Social Movements in Studies in
Social Movements a Social Psychological
Perspective, (New York Macmillan, 1969). - Abdul Alkalimat and Kate Williams, Social Capital
and Cyberpower in the African American Community
A Case Study of a Community Technology Center in
the Dual City. lthttp//www.communitytechnology.org
/cyberpower/gt (21 March 2002). - Shirley Behrens, Conceptual Analysis and
Historical Overview of Information Literacy,
College and Research Libraries (July 1994)
p.309-322. - Thomas Eland, lthttp//www.earlham.edu/discus/messa
ges/51/51.htmlgt - Ramon Flecha, New Educational Inequalities in
Critical Education in the New Information Age,
(Lanham, MD Rowman Littlefield, 1999), p.67. - Douglas Kellner, Multiple Literacies and
Critical Pedagogy in a Multicultural Society,
lthttp//www.gseis.ucla.edu/courses/ed253a/dk/mlmc.
htm.gt (25 March 2002)
26- Thomas J La Belle and Christopher R. Ward, Ethnic
Studies and Multiculturalism (Albany, NY State
University of New York Press 1996), p.2 - Thomas J. La Belle and Christopher R. Ward
Multiculturalism and Education Diversity and its
impact on Schools and Society, (Albany, NY State
University of New York Press 1994) p.1. - John D McCarthy and Mayer N. Zald, Resource
Mobilization and Social Movements A Partial
Theory, American Journal of Sociology 82, no. 6,
(1977) p.1212-1238. - National Forum on Information Literacy-An
Overview lthttp//www.infolit.org/gt(25 March 2002) - Saundra L. Shirley, Digital Divide-Technology
Policy Brief (Washington DC Office for
Information Technology Policy of the American
Library Association, 2000). - Christine E. Sleeter and Carl A. Grant Making
Choices for Multicultural Education Five
approaches to Race, Class and Gender (New York
Wiley 1999)
27- The concept of information literacy has created
some controversy because its nature continues to
evolve. - - National Institute on Information Literacy