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Exploring the Development of
Information Literacy Strategies

Professor Sheila Corrall
Centre for Information Literacy Research
Presentation outline
•  The concept and context of information literacy
•  Developments in the higher education sector
        −  Research findings and university case study
•  Application to the government sector
        −  Research findings and practical action steps
•  IL networks and CPD opportunities
•  References and readings

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Information Literacy
The original definition (1979)
    ‘People trained in the application of information
    resources to their work can be called information
    literates. They have learned techniques and skills
    for utilising the wide range of information tools as
    well as primary sources in molding information-
    solutions to their problems.’
Paul Zurkowski, President, Information Industry Association
                               (in Eisenberg et al., 2004: 3)

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Information Literacy
A plain English definition
    ‘Information literacy is knowing when and why
    you need information, where to find it and how to
    evaluate, use and communicate it in an ethical
    manner.’
                                        Chartered Institute of Library & Information
                                                       Professionals (CILIP, 2004)


© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
The information problem
•  Easy access to vast quantities of information via
   search engines, Internet directories, portals, etc
•  False confidence of many Internet users in their
   ability to find the information that they need
•  Information behaviour often characterised by
   shallow searches, uncritical selection and misuse
•  Poor understanding of information management
   as a discipline, specialism and profession

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Positive developments
•  Collective efforts of (academic) librarians have
   raised awareness, produced useful tools and
   moved the IL debate onto a strategic level
        −  many universities now have formal policies/strategies
        −  UNESCO has asserted the critical role of IL in
           personal, economic, social and cultural development
•  Strong vibrant community of practitioners willing
   to advise and help newcomers to the field

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Key features of university IL strategies
•  Separate documents taking many different forms
   and/or integrated in other institutional statements
•  Extensive contextualisation (internal/external)
•  Use of formal definitions/standards/frameworks
        −  e.g. ALA definition, SCONUL Seven Pillars Model
•  End-to-end involvement of key stakeholders in
   developing, implementing and delivering strategy
•  Focus on advocacy and library staff development

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
The
SCONUL
Seven Pillars
Model for IL
• most widely used
model in the UK
• can be used as
  −  a diagnostic tool
  −  a process model

www.sconul.ac.uk
The SCONUL Seven Headline Skills
1.  Recognise a need for information
2.  Distinguish ways of addressing the information gap
3.  Construct strategies for locating information
4.  Locate and access information
5.  Compare and evaluate information obtained from
    different sources
6.  Organise, apply and communicate information to others
7.  Synthesise and build on existing information,
    contributing to the creation of new knowledge
www.sconul.ac.uk/groups/information_literacy/seven_pillars.html
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Case Study –
The University of Sheffield
Background – CILASS – Strategic engagement –
Tactics – Achievements – Critical success factors
Background
•  University commitment to research-led teaching
•  Library development of information skills tutorial
•  Some coverage of skills in Information Strategy
•  Low level of awareness of the concept of
   information literacy among staff and students
•  High level of expertise within Information Studies
•  Opportunity to bid for national funding as Centre
   of Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL)
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Centre for Inquiry-based Learning in
                                          the Arts and Social Sciences (CILASS)


                                                                              Collaborative
                     Networked                                                   inquiry
                      learning                                        Partnership


                                                           CILASS
                                                          Community
Seven
Pillars                   IL Network
                                                                          Learning spaces
   Information literacy                                                    collaboratories
      development
                                                                                     Information
                                                                                      Commons
‘Modelling the process of research within the student learning experience’
  © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
CILASS Information Literacy Network
•  Led by the Department of Information Studies
•  A cross-functional inter-disciplinary partnership
        −  library professionals, information science academics,
           academics in other areas and educational developers
•  Discipline-sensitive focus on information literacy
•  Programme of curriculum innovation placing
   information literacy at heart of student learning

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Strategic engagement
IL now prominent in strategy and policy statements
•  specified as a formal objective of the University
   Learning, Teaching and Assessment Strategy
•  listed in Characteristics of the Sheffield Graduate
•  identified as key theme of Library Strategic Plan
•  incorporated in Departmental LTA Strategies
        −  with some examples of Departmental IL Strategies
•  included in undergraduate induction checklist
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Tactical deployment
•  Workshops offering help with LTA strategies
   used to raise awareness and share experiences
•  Project funding used to stimulate IL initiatives
   and deliver Library staff development programme
•  Presentations reporting progress on IL initiatives
   delivered at internal and external conferences
•  Series of events and blog postings organised as
   Information Literacy Week to reach more people
•  IL Network extended to bring in more key players
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Operational achievement
•  Widespread use of customised online IL tutorials
•  Many examples of academic and library staff
   working together on new IBL learning resources,
   workshops, assessments and IL presentations
•  Academics using Seven Pillars in their teaching
•  Library staff more involved in IL teaching within
   Information Studies (classroom and Second Life)
•  Information literacy part of everyday vocabulary

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Critical success factors @ Sheffield
•  Explicit links to current institutional concerns
•  Formal incorporation in core business strategy
•  Financial incentives for staff to launch IL projects
•  IL network group to focus and co-ordinate effort
•  Stakeholder-based multi-professional partnership
•  Dedicated specialist support to take work forward
•  Senior people acting as institutional champions
•  Departmental contacts acting as local advocates
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Government sector

Research evidence – skills needs – key task for
info pros – information literacy initiatives/strategies
Research evidence: government sector
‘a…relatively introverted information environment’
•  Searching for information a major activity, but
   poor awareness of advanced search techniques
•  Existing policy used as starting point for search,
   heavy reliance on people and standard sources
•  Problems with information overload and quality
•  Staff need help with updating, horizon scanning
   and accessing a broader range of sources
                                              (Crawford & Irving, 2009; Taylor & Corrall, 2007)
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Skills needs for government workers I
•  Ability to outline and recognise the information
   environment and its information sources
•  Skills to use the information sources and
   information systems common to the organisation
   and related to their own work
•  Skills to use the information sources of the open
   net and information media
                                Kauhanen-Simanainen (2007: 116-117)

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Skills needs for government workers II
•  Skills relating to information production, including
   both the core content and meta-information
•  Skills of cooperation, as well as communication
   and networking skills
•  Knowledge of the most important principles of
   the legislation and concomitant ethical
   procedures connected with the use of information
                                Kauhanen-Simanainen (2007: 116-117)

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Key task for government info pros
‘The key task for information specialists working in
government is to awaken awareness about the need to
develop information and Media Literacy and actively assess
and promote the versatility of information sources and their
use. In the easily accessible surface information world, the
information specialists have to signpost the versatility of the
information environment, increase the visibility openness,
vertical depth and lateral direction of the information
channels to encompass different areas, conflicting sources
and the past, present and future.’
                                                          Kauhanen-Simanainen (2007: 143)
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Info lit initiatives: government sector
GCHQ                                                                Scottish Government
•  Service development                                              •  Training sessions
        − e-Learning modules,                                         −  Google Treasure Hunt
          with online assessment                                      −  Essential Internet Skills
          (recognising one-to-one
                                                                      −  Advanced Information Skills
          sessions not scalable)
        − Intranet training portal                                  •  Information drop-ins
        − Blog, alerting people to                                    −  help at people’s desks
          new resources available                                   •  Promoting information skills
•  External speakers                                                  −  corporate induction events


© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Scottish Government: an IL strategy model
•  Librarians have identified and strengthened partnerships
   with internal and external stakeholders
        −  Corporate Learning Services, HR Development Advisers,
           Skills & Learning Team, Social Researchers, Policy Team,
           NHS Scotland, CILIPS, Scottish Information Literacy Project
•  Raised awareness of key role IL plays in organisation
   and gained recognition of IL as vital skillset for staff
•  Achieved substantial section on IL in Information Strategy
   and submitted draft IL Strategy to senior management
    www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Education/skills-strategy/progress/sg/
    supportingindividuals/InformationLiteracies

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Practical action steps – questions
•  Situation analysis – what are the big issues (strategic
    or operational) causing concern in your organisation?
     −  is there an IL dimension which could act as a hook?
•  Stakeholder mapping – who are the key players with
    a potential interest or involvement in the areas identified?
     −  can you get their support as partners in IL initiatives?
•  Portfolio development – where should you target your
    efforts and how should you deliver IL interventions?
•  Professional standards – adopt or develop your own?
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
IL networks and CPD offerings
•  The Information Literacy Website
•  CILIP CSG Information Literacy Group
•  LIS-INFOLITERACY@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
•  Sheila Webber’s Information Literacy Weblog
•  LILAC (Librarians’ Info Lit Annual Conference)
•  University of Sheffield specialist modules and
   PGCert/PGDip/MA in Information Literacy

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
References
Crawford, J. & Irving, C. (2009) ‘Information literacy in the
 workplace: a qualitative exploratory study’, Journal of
 Librarianship and Information Science, 41 (1), 29-38.
Eisenberg, M.B. et al. (2004) Information Literacy: Essential
  Skills for the Information Age. Libraries Unlimited.
Kauhanen-Simanainen, A. (2007) Corporate Literacy:
 Discovering the Senses of the Organisation. Chandos.
Taylor, K. & Corrall, S. (2007) ‘Personalised service?
 Changing the role of the government librarian’, Journal of
 Information Science, 33 (3), 298-314.

© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
Further reading
Corrall, S. (2007) ‘Benchmarking strategic engagement
 with information literacy in higher education: towards a
 working model’, Information Research, 12 (4), paper 328.
 http://InformationR.net/ir/12-4/paper328.htm
Corrall, S. (2008) ‘Information literacy strategy development
 in higher education: an exploratory study’, International
 Journal of Information Management, 28 (1), 26-37.
Foreman, J. & Thomson, L. (2009) ‘Information literacy in
 the Scottish Government’, Librarians’ Information Literacy
 Annual Conference. www.slideshare.net/scottishlibraries/
 informationl-iteracy-in-the-scottish-government
© The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies

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Exploring the Development of Information Literacy Strategies

  • 1. Exploring the Development of Information Literacy Strategies Professor Sheila Corrall Centre for Information Literacy Research
  • 2. Presentation outline •  The concept and context of information literacy •  Developments in the higher education sector −  Research findings and university case study •  Application to the government sector −  Research findings and practical action steps •  IL networks and CPD opportunities •  References and readings © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 3. Information Literacy The original definition (1979) ‘People trained in the application of information resources to their work can be called information literates. They have learned techniques and skills for utilising the wide range of information tools as well as primary sources in molding information- solutions to their problems.’ Paul Zurkowski, President, Information Industry Association (in Eisenberg et al., 2004: 3) © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 4. Information Literacy A plain English definition ‘Information literacy is knowing when and why you need information, where to find it and how to evaluate, use and communicate it in an ethical manner.’ Chartered Institute of Library & Information Professionals (CILIP, 2004) © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 5. The information problem •  Easy access to vast quantities of information via search engines, Internet directories, portals, etc •  False confidence of many Internet users in their ability to find the information that they need •  Information behaviour often characterised by shallow searches, uncritical selection and misuse •  Poor understanding of information management as a discipline, specialism and profession © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 6. Positive developments •  Collective efforts of (academic) librarians have raised awareness, produced useful tools and moved the IL debate onto a strategic level −  many universities now have formal policies/strategies −  UNESCO has asserted the critical role of IL in personal, economic, social and cultural development •  Strong vibrant community of practitioners willing to advise and help newcomers to the field © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 7. Key features of university IL strategies •  Separate documents taking many different forms and/or integrated in other institutional statements •  Extensive contextualisation (internal/external) •  Use of formal definitions/standards/frameworks −  e.g. ALA definition, SCONUL Seven Pillars Model •  End-to-end involvement of key stakeholders in developing, implementing and delivering strategy •  Focus on advocacy and library staff development © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 8. The SCONUL Seven Pillars Model for IL • most widely used model in the UK • can be used as −  a diagnostic tool −  a process model www.sconul.ac.uk
  • 9. The SCONUL Seven Headline Skills 1.  Recognise a need for information 2.  Distinguish ways of addressing the information gap 3.  Construct strategies for locating information 4.  Locate and access information 5.  Compare and evaluate information obtained from different sources 6.  Organise, apply and communicate information to others 7.  Synthesise and build on existing information, contributing to the creation of new knowledge www.sconul.ac.uk/groups/information_literacy/seven_pillars.html © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 10. Case Study – The University of Sheffield Background – CILASS – Strategic engagement – Tactics – Achievements – Critical success factors
  • 11. Background •  University commitment to research-led teaching •  Library development of information skills tutorial •  Some coverage of skills in Information Strategy •  Low level of awareness of the concept of information literacy among staff and students •  High level of expertise within Information Studies •  Opportunity to bid for national funding as Centre of Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL) © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 12. Centre for Inquiry-based Learning in the Arts and Social Sciences (CILASS) Collaborative Networked inquiry learning Partnership CILASS Community Seven Pillars IL Network Learning spaces Information literacy collaboratories development Information Commons ‘Modelling the process of research within the student learning experience’ © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 13. CILASS Information Literacy Network •  Led by the Department of Information Studies •  A cross-functional inter-disciplinary partnership −  library professionals, information science academics, academics in other areas and educational developers •  Discipline-sensitive focus on information literacy •  Programme of curriculum innovation placing information literacy at heart of student learning © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 14. Strategic engagement IL now prominent in strategy and policy statements •  specified as a formal objective of the University Learning, Teaching and Assessment Strategy •  listed in Characteristics of the Sheffield Graduate •  identified as key theme of Library Strategic Plan •  incorporated in Departmental LTA Strategies −  with some examples of Departmental IL Strategies •  included in undergraduate induction checklist © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 15. Tactical deployment •  Workshops offering help with LTA strategies used to raise awareness and share experiences •  Project funding used to stimulate IL initiatives and deliver Library staff development programme •  Presentations reporting progress on IL initiatives delivered at internal and external conferences •  Series of events and blog postings organised as Information Literacy Week to reach more people •  IL Network extended to bring in more key players © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 16. Operational achievement •  Widespread use of customised online IL tutorials •  Many examples of academic and library staff working together on new IBL learning resources, workshops, assessments and IL presentations •  Academics using Seven Pillars in their teaching •  Library staff more involved in IL teaching within Information Studies (classroom and Second Life) •  Information literacy part of everyday vocabulary © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 17. Critical success factors @ Sheffield •  Explicit links to current institutional concerns •  Formal incorporation in core business strategy •  Financial incentives for staff to launch IL projects •  IL network group to focus and co-ordinate effort •  Stakeholder-based multi-professional partnership •  Dedicated specialist support to take work forward •  Senior people acting as institutional champions •  Departmental contacts acting as local advocates © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 18. Government sector Research evidence – skills needs – key task for info pros – information literacy initiatives/strategies
  • 19. Research evidence: government sector ‘a…relatively introverted information environment’ •  Searching for information a major activity, but poor awareness of advanced search techniques •  Existing policy used as starting point for search, heavy reliance on people and standard sources •  Problems with information overload and quality •  Staff need help with updating, horizon scanning and accessing a broader range of sources (Crawford & Irving, 2009; Taylor & Corrall, 2007) © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 20. Skills needs for government workers I •  Ability to outline and recognise the information environment and its information sources •  Skills to use the information sources and information systems common to the organisation and related to their own work •  Skills to use the information sources of the open net and information media Kauhanen-Simanainen (2007: 116-117) © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 21. Skills needs for government workers II •  Skills relating to information production, including both the core content and meta-information •  Skills of cooperation, as well as communication and networking skills •  Knowledge of the most important principles of the legislation and concomitant ethical procedures connected with the use of information Kauhanen-Simanainen (2007: 116-117) © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 22. Key task for government info pros ‘The key task for information specialists working in government is to awaken awareness about the need to develop information and Media Literacy and actively assess and promote the versatility of information sources and their use. In the easily accessible surface information world, the information specialists have to signpost the versatility of the information environment, increase the visibility openness, vertical depth and lateral direction of the information channels to encompass different areas, conflicting sources and the past, present and future.’ Kauhanen-Simanainen (2007: 143) © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 23. Info lit initiatives: government sector GCHQ Scottish Government •  Service development •  Training sessions − e-Learning modules, −  Google Treasure Hunt with online assessment −  Essential Internet Skills (recognising one-to-one −  Advanced Information Skills sessions not scalable) − Intranet training portal •  Information drop-ins − Blog, alerting people to −  help at people’s desks new resources available •  Promoting information skills •  External speakers −  corporate induction events © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 24. Scottish Government: an IL strategy model •  Librarians have identified and strengthened partnerships with internal and external stakeholders −  Corporate Learning Services, HR Development Advisers, Skills & Learning Team, Social Researchers, Policy Team, NHS Scotland, CILIPS, Scottish Information Literacy Project •  Raised awareness of key role IL plays in organisation and gained recognition of IL as vital skillset for staff •  Achieved substantial section on IL in Information Strategy and submitted draft IL Strategy to senior management www.scotland.gov.uk/Topics/Education/skills-strategy/progress/sg/ supportingindividuals/InformationLiteracies © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 25. Practical action steps – questions •  Situation analysis – what are the big issues (strategic or operational) causing concern in your organisation? −  is there an IL dimension which could act as a hook? •  Stakeholder mapping – who are the key players with a potential interest or involvement in the areas identified? −  can you get their support as partners in IL initiatives? •  Portfolio development – where should you target your efforts and how should you deliver IL interventions? •  Professional standards – adopt or develop your own? © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 26. IL networks and CPD offerings •  The Information Literacy Website •  CILIP CSG Information Literacy Group •  LIS-INFOLITERACY@JISCMAIL.AC.UK •  Sheila Webber’s Information Literacy Weblog •  LILAC (Librarians’ Info Lit Annual Conference) •  University of Sheffield specialist modules and PGCert/PGDip/MA in Information Literacy © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 27. References Crawford, J. & Irving, C. (2009) ‘Information literacy in the workplace: a qualitative exploratory study’, Journal of Librarianship and Information Science, 41 (1), 29-38. Eisenberg, M.B. et al. (2004) Information Literacy: Essential Skills for the Information Age. Libraries Unlimited. Kauhanen-Simanainen, A. (2007) Corporate Literacy: Discovering the Senses of the Organisation. Chandos. Taylor, K. & Corrall, S. (2007) ‘Personalised service? Changing the role of the government librarian’, Journal of Information Science, 33 (3), 298-314. © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies
  • 28. Further reading Corrall, S. (2007) ‘Benchmarking strategic engagement with information literacy in higher education: towards a working model’, Information Research, 12 (4), paper 328. http://InformationR.net/ir/12-4/paper328.htm Corrall, S. (2008) ‘Information literacy strategy development in higher education: an exploratory study’, International Journal of Information Management, 28 (1), 26-37. Foreman, J. & Thomson, L. (2009) ‘Information literacy in the Scottish Government’, Librarians’ Information Literacy Annual Conference. www.slideshare.net/scottishlibraries/ informationl-iteracy-in-the-scottish-government © The University of Sheffield / Department of Information Studies