Title: Information Literacy: a learning-focussed approach
1Information Literacy a learning-focussed approach
- Sharon Markless
- Kings College London
- Senior Associate, Information Management
Associates - Independent Consultant
2- It makes no sense to decide how one is going to
teach before one has made some study of how
people learn. - (Eric Sotto When Teaching becomes Learning 1994)
- and yet...
- much information literacy work is planned for
teaching rather than for learning.
3Sessions I have seen
- Start from lists of skills and strategies that
users need to know/use - Content heavy we only get them for a short
time - Structured according to the logic of the content
and in the image of the librarian - Based on listen, watch, repeat the steps a
transmission model of teaching librarians claim
to support independence and activity but deliver
passive learning - Ignore students own conceptual frameworks and
strategies expect them to graft on new
information
4What are we trying to achieve?
- analytical and critical information users
- problem-solvers, applying strategies, skills and
concepts appropriately - Synthesisers, able to see connections
- Constructors of new understanding and meaning
- flexible thinkers
- Is all this possible using a transmission model?
- How do people learn to behave like this?
5-
- We teachers and others are in the grip of an
astonishing delusion. We think we can take a
picture, a structure, a working model of
something constructed in our minds out of long
experience and familiarity, and by turning it
into a string of words or actions transplant it
whole into the mind of someone else -
- (John Holt, in Sotto q.v.)
6The way forward?
- A shift in emphasis from teaching to learning
- understand the magnitude of the changes you want
- what sort of learning? - genuine curiosity about how learners think about
and do things start with them - understand that people learn new strategies/
behaviours in different ways but there are some
basic structures/principles - interactions to reflect appropriate theories and
principles (what is your role?)
7Some particular challenges in enhancing
Information Literacy
- learners interactions with information are
complex and not fully understood - the search process has cognitive and emotional,
as well as behavioural, aspects - confusion, hesitation and uncertainty must be
acknowledged as part of the search process - students need to own the search process it must
fit into how they think and operate
8What we need to know about learning
- What factors support effective learning? How can
we influence them? - How does learning occur? (Key learning theories
e.g. construction, problem-solving, building on
experience, deep v surface) - Different approaches to learning (styles,
preferences) - There is nothing so practical as good theory.
- (Michael Fullan 1991)
9 Influences on effective learning
- Relevance
- real needs/ real consequences
- timeliness
- clear achievable goals
- active engagement/challenge
- feedback answers what can I do to improve?
- feeling valued and respected
- ownership/choices/responsibility
10 Building on key factors
- engage students in discussion about their
expectations of the library - work to meet the information needs and problems
that students have at the time - involve students in looking at how they currently
find things/use information - focus on how students can become more effective
and efficient
11 Learning theories 1
- Behaviourist
- Focus on skills and behaviour
- Highly structured
- Small sequential steps
- Feedback/reinforcement
- Teacher control
- What is this theory useful for? What are we
trying to achieve?
12 Learning theories 2
- Cognitive
- Focus on meaning and understanding
- Active participation and enquiry
- Problem solving
- Constructing knowledge from
- information
- Resource rich
- Teacher sets up problems/tasks
13What theory underpins your sessions?
- Skinner fixed world of knowledge transmission
to learners bolt-on - Vygotsky/Piaget scaffolding zone of proximal
intervention conceptual development built
in/embedded - Bruner construction of meaning discussion
review and reflection integrated
14Implications of learning as construction for
session design
- Rich, problem-solving environment
- Authentic contexts and tasks rather than
predetermined instructional sequences - Reflective practice
- Focus on knowledge construction not reproduction
(deep versus surface learning)
15 Surface learning v deep learning
- Surface learning recall, recite, repeat
- structure based on content
- transmission of lots of knowledge
- didactic strategies
- Deep learning critical analysis,
understanding/insight, application of knowledge,
problem solving - participation/ activity essential
- Recap, summarize, choose key learning points
- careful structuring to include reflection and
analysis - Different approaches for different ends.
16 Experiential learning cycle
The experiential learning cycle
17 Scaffolding
- The most important single factor influencing
learning is what the learner already knows
ascertain this then you can determine where the
gaps are and teach him accordingly
(Ausubel 1968) -
- Establish what meanings and concepts the
learner has already generated from their
backgrounds, abilities and experiences and then
find ways of helping them generate new meanings
and concepts. This is where teaching starts.
(Wittrock 1986)
18 Problem solving
- Adults learn from problems rather than from
subjects. (Daines 1992) -
- A good teacher will be able to clarify the
nature of the problem and have the generosity to
give learners the opportunity to discover the
solution for themselves. The only way of really
learning something is to grapple actively with it
a teachers task is to tell learners what to
look for, without telling them what to see
(Sotto, op.cit.)
19 Setting Problems
- devise questions to which learners seek answers
using their experience, existing strategies and
extra high quality support material that you
provide (e.g. instructions, worksheets, diagrams,
information on search engines). - encourage learners to discuss answers in order to
clarify their ideas, analyse their strategies, or
formulate questions to ask you - choose questions/tasks carefully and monitor
- resist the urge to get in there and do something
20 Learning approaches and preferences
- Research into learning styles
- cognitive styles
- A useful tool for reflection on ones own
teaching practice and beliefs about good
teaching and learning - how individuals prefer
to learn can heavily influence how they teach. - A framework to think about the range of teaching
strategies used and why things might not be
working a basis on which to introduce more
variety into teaching.
21 Learning preferences
- Activist
Reflector - Random learners open ended self-directed
- Pragmatist Theorist
- Logical sequential learners clear structure and
direction
22Approaches to learning
- Abstract Concrete
- Diverger Converger
- Scanner . Focuser
- Holistic . Serialistic
- Reflective .. Impulsive
23Promoting the educational role of the librarian
- Planning for learning
- Real evaluation/reflection on how students have
learned - Action research
- Analysis of e-learning materials
24- Key principles of learning provide an exciting
basis from which a library programme can be
developed. They define the functions and roles of
the library team they become the basis of
criteria for the development of resources they
shape the allocation of physical space - Ross Todd, Virtual Paper at IASL conference,
2001