Title: Information Literacy: research perspectives
1Information Literacy research perspectives
- Professor Peter Brophy
- Manchester Metropolitan University
2The JISC Information Environment
3Literacies from A to Z
- Adult
- Basic
- Business
- Childrens
- Computer
- Early
- Emotional
- Family
- Financial
- Functional
- Health
- Information
- IT
- Media
- Numerical
- Technological
- Visual
- Workforce
4Information literacy
- is described as the overarching literacy
essential for twenty-first century living - is conceivably the foundation for learning in
our contemporary environment of continuous
technological change. - is generally seen as pivotal to the pursuit
of lifelong learning - Bruce, 2002
5Information Literacy
- to be information literate, a person must be
able to recognise when information is needed and
have the ability to locate, evaluate and use
effectively the needed information ultimately,
information literate people are those who have
learned how to learn - American Library Association, 1989
6The business of human learning
- Â Â "I want a poor student to have the same means
of indulging his learned curiosity, of following
his rational pursuits, of consulting the same
authorities, of fathoming the most intricate
inquiry as the richest man in the kingdoms." - Antonio Panizzi, 1836
7Pedagogical models 1
- Objectivism views the world as an ordered
structure of entities which exists and has
meaning quite apart from the observer or
participant. Much of science and technology has
traditionally been taught on this basis what
needs to be achieved by learning is a closer and
closer approach to complete (and thus correct)
understanding. - Brophy, 2001
- In this understanding the goal of instruction
is to help the learner acquire the entities and
relations and the attributes of each - to build
the correct propositional structure. - Duffy and Janassen, 1993
8Pedagogical models 2
- Learning is a constructive process in which the
learner is building an internal representation of
knowledge, a personal interpretation of
experience. This representation is constantly
open to change, its structure and linkages
forming the foundation to which other knowledge
structures are appended. Learning is an active
process in which meaning is developed on the
basis of experience. This view of knowledge does
not necessarily deny the existence of the real
world .. but contends that all we know of the
world are human interpretations of our experience
of the world. learning must be situated in a
rich context, reflective of real world contexts
for this constructive process to occur. - Bednar et al., 1993
9Knowledge and meaning
- any expression of knowledge is couched in
language and is therefore a statement of meaning.
- One of the central problems of philosophy is
- to concentrate on understanding how meaning
takes place and therefore, en passant, how
knowledge is expressed. - Sotiriou and Gilroy (In the press)
10Language
Let us imagine a language ...The language is
meant to serve for communication between a
builder A and an assistant B. A is building with
building-stones there are blocks, pillars, slabs
and beams. B has to pass the stones, and that in
the order in which A needs them. For this purpose
they use a language consisting of the words
'block', 'pillar', 'slab', 'beam'. A calls them
out - B brings the stone which he has learnt to
bring at such-and-such a call. - Conceive of this
as a complete primitive language. Wittgenstein
Philosophical Investigations (1965)
Meaning is embedded within a social context and
so finds expression through the use made of
particular terms. Sotiriou and Gilroy (In the
press)
11Standing outside,looking in ?
- we need to understand the practices of these
communities before we can effectively teach
information literacy - Tuominen et al., 2005
12The challenge for IL .
- An academic discipline is not primarily
content, in the sense of facts and principles. It
is rather primarily a lived and historically
changing set of distinctive social practices. It
is in these practices that content is
generated, debated and transformed via certain
distinctive ways of thinking, talking, valuing,
acting and, often, writing and reading. - Gee, 2003