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Information literacy models: from experience to practice

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Title: Information literacy models: from experience to practice


1
Information literacy models from experience to
practice
  • Dr Christine Bruce 2007
  • Associate Professor, Faculty of Information
    Technology, QUT, Australia

2
QUT- BRISBANE AUSTRALIA
3
Why are we researching IL?
Learning Communities
Learning Cities
IL
Learning Organisations
Information literacy transforms Information
literacy brings about learning
4
  • Our role as information professionals is to
    provide environments and learning opportunities
    that enhance information literacy . help people
    experience the power of information practices,
    that are effective in professional, civic and
    personal life.
  • Bruce, C (2002) Information literacy as a
    catalyst for educational change.

5
Five Dimensions of IL Research
  • Bruce (2000) suggests that the territory of IL
    research may be described in terms of five
    dimensions
  • The sectoral location of the research (education
    and the community)
  • Ways of seeing IL (interacting with information)
  • What is being investigated the research object
    - (peoples experiences)
  • How the object is being investigated the
    research approach
  • Disciplinary influences

6
What is the object of research?
  • Being information literate the significance of
    researching experience
  • Experiences of
  • Information literacy
  • Internet searching
  • Using online information
  • Relationship between IL and learning
  • Making ethical decisions
  • Virtual communities

7
Research Methods
EXPERIENTIAL
Survey Phenomenography Critical Incident
Technique Self-administered Surveys Mixed
Interviews method Case Study
Archival research Literature
Analysis Grounded Theory
Positivist
Qualitative
Quantitative
IL Research
Behavioural
Interpretive
8
The Seven Faces of Information Literacy
  • Key messages
  • There are many ways in which IL can be
    experienced
  • The importance of IT varies in each experience
  • IL is a social, more than an individual
    phenomenon
  • There is a strong relationship between IL and
    learning to learn
  • For full details see Bruce, C (1997) Seven
    Faces of Information Literacy, Auslib Press,
    Adelaide.

9
Seven Faces of IL
WISDOM
INSIGHT
KNOWLEDGE BASE
PROCESS
CONTROL
SOURCES
INFORMATION AWARENESS
For full details see Bruce, C (1997) Seven
Faces of Information Literacy, Auslib Press,
Adelaide.
10
First Face IL experienced as using IT to stay
informed and to communicate
  • IT used for information awareness
  • IT helps users stay informed/communicate
  • a social experience not individual
  • dependent on expertise within a group
  • Bruce, C (1997) Seven Faces of Information
    Literacy, AUSLIB Press.

11
Second Face IL experienced as using Info
Sources
  • bibliographic
  • human
  • organisational
  • assistance of intermediaries emphasised
  • Personal skills also valued

12
Third Face IL experienced as using
infoProcesses
  • linked to problem-solving, decision-making
  • requires personal heuristics
  • a creative art

13
Fourth Face IL experienced as controlling
information
  • recognising relevant information
  • managing that information
  • making connections between information, projects,
    people
  • interconnectedness between information and parts
    of projects

Information Use
Information Technology
Information Control
14
Fifth Face IL experienced as constructing
knowledge in an unfamiliar area
  • emphasis on learning
  • Developing a personal perspective with knowledge
    gained
  • dependent on critical thinking

15
Sixth Face IL experienced as extending knowledge
  • personal knowledge experience creative
    insight/intuition
  • mysterious experience
  • develops new knowledge/ approaches to tasks/novel
    solutions

16
Seventh Face IL experienced as using
information wisely
  • personal quality
  • values and ethics combined with knowledge
  • information used for the benefit of others

17
The Net Lenses Model
  • Key messages
  • University students have different approaches to
    searching the internet which correlate with their
    ways of discerning the net environment
  • Introducing reflective processes can change what
    they see or dont see thus improving search
    capability
  • Systems, tools, learning objects and assessment
    experiences can be designed to focus attention on
    relevant parts of the envronment
  • For full details see Edwards, S. (2006) Panning
    for Gold IL and The Net Lenses Model, Adelaide,
    AUSLIB Press.

18
Reflective Model for Learning to Search the
Internet (Edwards and Bruce, 2000)
19
The Outcome Space
FOR MORE INFO...
Edwards, S.L. Bruce, C.S. (2002) Needles,
haystacks, filters and me the IT confidence
dilemma. Refereed Conference Paper presented at
Lifelong Learning Conference 2nd Yeppoon,
Central Queensland, Australia, 16-19 June 2002.
pp. 165-171. ISBN 187 6780 19 3
20
Category 1 Information Searching is finding a
needle in a haystack
Information Environment Including structure and
layout Little or no distinction between library
catalogues and library databases
0
External Hozizon
Search Tool Structure including Search Options,
Advanced search features and help
Search Strategies Need to plan, reflect and refine
Books including Textbooks Readings
Internal Hozizon
Logical Operators or Boolean Use of terms like
and or and not
Search Window including Search Engines and all
Library Resources
People including Friends, peers and Library Staff
SEARCH TOPIC
Synonyms Use of alternative terms and even spell
checking
Search Engine Favourite Limited few used
Information Quality Primary or Secondary sources
of information
Other Search Engines The Multitude of them
Wildcard Use including truncation
21
Category 2 Information Searching is finding a
way through the maze
0
Tool Structure including Search Options, Advanced
search features and help
External Hozizon
Refined Search Strategies Reflection begins
Logical Operators or Boolean Use of terms like
and or and not
Basic Search Strategy
Internal Hozizon
Information Environment Including structure and
layout Little or no distinction between library
catalogues and library databases
Library Sources including Books, Search tools,
catalogue and databases
Topic Search Process
People including Friends, peers and Library Staff
Wildcard Use including truncation
Search Engines Still prefer favourites
Synonyms Use of alternative terms and even spell
checking
Information Quality Primary or Secondary sources
of information
Other Internet Databases Including library or
other public domain databases
22
Category 3 Information Searching is using the
tools as a filter
0
External Hozizon
Primary or Secondary sources of information
Information Quality
Internal Hozizon
Information Environment structure and layout
Domain Searching
Search Engines
Reflection
Search Tool Structure
Term Analysis Use of Dictionary, Thesauri
TOPIC
Internet Databases
Refined Search Strategies
Library Sources
People
Synonym Use spell checking
Logical Operators or Boolean
Wildcard Use including truncation
Other Database Vendors Dialog, CITEC, etc.
Advanced Search and help
23
Category 4 Information Searching is panning for
gold
0
External Hozizon
Use of Dictionary Thesauri Term Analysis
Primary or Secondary sources Information Quality
Internal Hozizon
Domain Searching
Information Environment structure and layout
Reflection
Search Engines
Internet Databases
Info Quality
TOPIC
Library Sources
Search Refining Process
People
Synonym Use spell checking
Wildcard Use including truncation
Logical Operators or Boolean
Advanced Search and help
Other Database Vendors Dialog, CITEC, etc.
24
Reflective online information use model Hilary
Hughes, Christine Bruce Sylvia Edwards
Lifelong Learning Conference, Yeppoon (2006)

25
Six Frames for IL Education
  • Key messages
  • IL education is experienced differently
  • The different frames through which IL education
    may be experienced can be described in terms of
    six dimensions
  • Educators and learners in the same context may
    experience IL education differently
  • Educators and learners in the same context will
    have preferred primary and secondary frames
  • For full details see Andretta, S (Ed) ( in press,
    2007) Challenge and Change IL for the 21st
    century, AUSLIB Press, Adelaide.

26
Six Frames for IL Education(Bruce, Edwards,
Lupton, 2006)
27
0
CONTENT FRAME
28
The Content Frame
  • Users of the Content Frame usually adopt a
    discipline orientation. Their focus is on what
    learners should know about IL
  • A typical example in relation to IL education
    might be teaching IL sessions within a discipline
    based subject and providing lectures on a key set
    of information tools and techniques. This might
    be followed by a test of recall.

29
0
COMPETENCY FRAME
30
The Competence Frame
  • Users of the Competency Frame usually adopt a
    behavioural or performance orientation. They ask
    what learners should be able to do, and at what
    level of competence?
  • A typical example in IL education might be the
    design of sequenced instruction to teach the use
    of an electronic tool supplemented by testing to
    determine the level of skill that has been
    attained by the learner at specified points in
    the learning process

31
0
LEARNING TO LEARN FRAME
32
Learning to learn frame
  • Users of the learning-to-learn frame (Figure 5)
    usually adopt a constructivist orientation. They
    ask what it means to think like an information
    literate professional, for example an architect,
    engineer, journalist or landscape designer
  • A typical example might be setting a real life
    problem in which the need to access, evaluate and
    use information from a range of sources is
    central and appropriately supported.

33
0
PERSONAL RELEVANCE FRAME
34
Personal relevance frame
  • Users of the Personal Relevance frame usually
    adopt an experiential orientation. In relation to
    IL education they need learners to develop a
    sense of what IL can do for them.
  • A typical example might be participating in a
    community project that required engagement with
    relevant information services and providers then
    subsequently reflecting on the experience and
    what was learned about both the subject and
    information use in that context.

35
0
SOCIAL IMPACT FRAME
36
Social impact
  • Users of this frame usually adopt a social reform
    orientation. Their interest is in how IL impacts
    society, in how it may help communities inform
    significant problems.
  • A typical example might involve focussing
    learners attention on various issues and values
    associated with problems surrounding the Digital
    Divide, and proposing tasks related to policy,
    technology or training designed to assist in
    bridging that divide.

37
0
RELATIONAL FRAME
38
Relational Frame
  • Users of this frame are oriented towards the ways
    in which learners are aware of IL or specific
    relevant phenomena associated with IL. They are
    interested in designing experiences that help
    learners discern more powerful ways of seeing the
    phenomena in question.
  • A typical example might involve helping students
    learn to search the internet by designing
    experiences that focus their attention on
    previously undiscerned aspects of the experience

39
  • What are the challenges of environments where
    teaching and learning and IL are seen
    differently?
  • How can we use an appreciation of different ways
    of seeing to progress the practice of IL
    education?

40
The Sense of Control Model
  • A virtual community for people with long-term,
    physical disabilities (Tilley)
  • TILLEY, C.
  • Aim
  • to develop a theoretical framework for a virtual
    community for a specific group of people, that
    is, people with long-term, physical disabilities.
  • Method
  • Grounded theory - theory that is developed
    inductively from a corpus of data
  • Outcomes
  • The major result of this study was the
    development of a theoretical model or framework
    for a virtual community for people with long-term
    physical disabilities that may be consulted for
    use by stakeholders whenever such a virtual
    community is proposed.
  • Identification of a broad range of
    recommendations for discussion

For full details see Tilley, Bruce, Hallam and
Hills (2006) Information Research, 11, 3.
41
The Virtual Community Model
  • Key messages
  • A sense of control is the foundation element of
    virtual communities for the disabled.
  • The key domains in which persons with
    disabilities participate include Education,
    Fantasy, Information, Interest, Relationship,
    Transaction
  • Key barriers include costs, the need for
    assistive equipment and technological training
  • Key facilitators of access are information and
    IT literacy

42
6 Types of E-communities A Model of Virtual
Community for Persons with Disabilities Christine
Tilley, PhD, QUT, 2007.
43
Phenomenon a sense of control
44
From experience to practice
  • The journey of commitment to IL involves walking
    a path that starts with understanding the nature
    and character of information literacy
  • then shifts
  • To understanding how to bring about IL

45
  • We know from uncovering peoples experiences that
    fostering information literacy is about more than
    teaching skills and capabilities.
  • It is about fostering the experiences required
    for engaging confidently in new information
    practices
  • It is also about scaffolding programs and systems
    to help people as they go about their information
    practices.

46
Acknowledgements
  • With thanks to
  • LILAC for inviting this paper
  • Colleagues from QUT who have contributed to IL
    Research Sylvia Edwards, Mandy Lupton, Hilary
    Hughes, Christine Tilley, Helen Partridge,
    Camille McMahon, Natalie Cuffe, Helmut Klaus and
    others
  • AUSLIB Press for so kindly disseminating the
    results of key projects
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