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Information Literacy Instruction: We
All Have a Role
The Libraries are committed to the goal
of seeing York University students graduate with a level
of "information literacy" (IL) that will allow
them to become effective lifelong learners for career
success, for making a contribution to their community,
and for personal fulfillment. Librarians, through their
reference and instructional encounters with students,
ideally in close collaboration with course instructors,
strive to teach students how to find, evaluate, and
use information both in their course assignments and
in their lives after graduation.
We believe that by the end of their stay
at York University, students should have acquired the
basic research skills needed to:
- Identify the nature and extent of information needed
to address a problem.
- Identify sources for the required information and
devise a strategy for acquiring it.
- Evaluate the quality and credibility of the information
found.
- Analyze and synthesize the information effectively
in relation to the original problem.
- Understand the principles of academic integrity
and the ethical aspects of information and its use
The Association of College & Research
Libraries (ACRL), a division of the American Library
Association (ALA), has developed a set of Information
Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education,
which has been widely endorsed by Canadian academic
libraries.
Librarians at York gave over 500 IL classes
this year in which they introduced these essential concepts
to more than 12,000 students. Because librarian time
is limited, however, and because there are so many students
and so many individual course offerings at York, it
is not possible for librarians to reach everyone through
such classes alone.
To address this challenge, the Libraries would like
to take a more programmatic approach to the delivery
of IL instruction so that our limited resources can
be deployed in as rational and effective a way as possible
to achieve the goals noted above.
To this end, we have established this
year for the first time a Libraries-wide Information
Literacy Committee and are in the process of recruiting
a librarian who will dedicate a significant portion
of his/her time to improving IL instruction and articulating
a process for the IL program's development. Through
these initiatives, we hope to further develop the IL
teaching skills of our librarians, to devise ways of
assessing the needs of students and measuring our successes,
to improve our communications on IL-related matters
with the York community, to find ways of working more
closely with course instructors (who will always have
an important role in teaching students to be critical
users of information), and to develop online IL tutorials
and other resources to be used by librarians or even
course instructors.
Because there is no single approach to
instruction that will satisfy all needs, librarians
have been experimenting with the teaching of IL concepts
in a number of ways that are different from the more
typical, though not always ideal, one-session guest
lectures and workshops that we offer upon request. We
are proud of the energy and creativity of our librarians,
and we encourage you to share with us any ideas you
may have for collaborating in the teaching of IL skills
to our students.
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