|
Calling all Faculty! We need your students!
SAILS (Standardized Assessment of
Information Literacy Skills)
York University Libraries are participating
in Phase III of a North America-wide project called
SAILS, (Standardized Assessment of Information Literacy
Skills). The ultimate goal of this project is to first
assess how well undergraduate students are able to find,
evaluate, assimilate and use information to serve their
academic needs, and then use that data to determine
how universities can develop programs that will hone
these skills and prepare our students for successful
careers in the information age.
This project has been developed in three
phases at Kent State University, in collaboration with
the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL).
It involves the creation of a survey questionnaire for
measuring student information research skills. Phase
III encompasses refining and finalizing the questions
in the survey, and this is where we need your help.
The survey is standardized, easily administered,
reliable, and is based on the ACRL Information Literacy
Competency Standards for Higher Education. The SAILS
project team at Kent State University estimates that
140 North American institutions will have taken part
in the test by spring of 2005, and York University is
the sixth Canadian university to participate in this
important initiative.* To see a description of the SAILS
project, please see http://sails.lms.kent.edu/.
Why have we become involved? The Information
Literacy Committee at York University Libraries has
decided to become involved at Phase III of SAILS because
this will eventually provide a way for faculty and librarians
to establish a baseline for the information literacy
skills of incoming students, and compare this to the
results of a retest after they have received information
literacy instruction, and have applied these skills
to their projects and papers. We will be able to determine
how effectively we have taught the necessary skills
of finding, evaluating and using information. This in
turn will provide us with guidelines on how we can make
our IL program even better by working in closer collaboration
with you, the faculty.
Our part is to administer to a minimum
of 200 undergraduates, a 35-question anonymous web-based
survey to collect reliable data regarding their understanding
of using information. This will be sent to Kent University
along with some personal data: gender, GPA, major and
level of study. All of the responses will be anonymous,
and the results will only appear in aggregated form.
This project has been approved by the Human Participants
Review Sub-committee, and so meets the ethical standards
outlined in the SSHRC/NSERC/CIHR Tri-Council Policy
Statement Ethical Conduct for Research Involving
Humans (August 1998). We ask for your cooperation
and participation in this endeavour so that York University
Libraries can work cooperatively with you to design
and deliver an Information Literacy Program that will
set your students up for success in their university
careers.
For more information about SAILS, please
contact one of the members of the SAILS sub-committee:
- Sophie Bury, Peter F. Bronfman Business Library,
sbury@yorku.ca
- Jennifer Dekker, Leslie Frost Library, dekkerj@yorku.ca
- Ilo Maimets, Steacie Science and Engineering Library,
ilo@yorku.ca
* The other Canadian
institutions are: University of British Columbia,
University of Alberta, Brandon University, University
of Manitoba and University of Western Ontario.
<< newsletter
home
|