ALI Information Literacy Committee Webinar: Scholarly Communications & Information Literacy...

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Slides from ALI Information Literacy Committee Webinar: Scholarly Communications & Information Literacy Instruction from Friday, March 28, 2014. 10:30-11:30 EST. Presented by Stephanie Davis-Kahl, Craig Finlay, and Franny Gaede. Committee members include: Sally Neal, Leslie Morgan, Clarence Maybee For notes from the presentation, please check out: http://bit.ly/1f0PJfr Archived version of the webinar available here: https://gomeet.itap.purdue.edu/p8r4hsekljx/. Please note that due to technical issues, recording begins about half way into the webinar.

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ALI Information Literacy Committee Webinar Scholarly Communications & Information Literacy Instruction

!Committee Members: Sally Neal, Leslie Morgan, Clarence Maybee

!Friday, March 28, 2014

10:30-11:30am EST

STEPHANIE DAVIS-KAHL Scholarly Communications Librarian

Illinois Wesleyan University. Co-author of Common Ground at the Nexus of

Information Literacy & Scholarly Communication

CRAIG FINLAY Scholarly Communications Librarian

Indiana University South Bend

FRANNY GAEDE Scholarly Communication Librarian

Butler University

Definitions

“When librarians….hear the phrase “scholarly communication,” they likely think of topics such as peer review, the journal “crisis,” open access,

impact factors, licensing, copyright, authors’ rights, and institutional repositories.  On the surface, these topics might seem far removed from

what librarians think of as tenets of information literacy instruction…”  

“At the heart of this movement is the belief that helping students become more information literate inevitably means teaching students about the

social, economic, and political forces at work in the creation, evaluation, and interpretation of information.”  (ACRL IL Standard #5)

  Thus academic information literacy sits on the bedrock of scholarly

communication—it is completely based on how scholars create, share, and vet new knowledge, as well as their specific rhetorical and citation traditions.   Duckett, Kim & Warren, Scott. (2013). Exploring the Intersections of Information Literacy and Scholarly Communication.  In Stephanie Davis-Kahl & Merinda Kaye Hensley (Eds.), Common Ground of the Nexus of Information Literacy and Scholarly Communication (25-44). http://digitalcommons.iwu.edu/bookshelf/36

Frameworks & Thresholds

Response to Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education

Foundational Information Literacy

How to introduce freshmen to scholarly communication?

Information Is Not Free

How to teach about issues of information access?

Beyond Consumers

How to empower students as content creators?

Students and Copyright

How do we make them care?

Creative Commons

Usage rights and limitations

A World of Information

Using and creating information in an international context

Interdisciplinary Learning

Making connections to scholarly communication and information literacy

Resources for Teaching

Open Access and Scholarly Communication LibGuide from IU South Bend http://libguides.iusb.edu/scholcomm !Finding Images and Media (Creative Commons Images) LibGuide from Butler http://bit.ly/NZg4zR !Creative Commons Videos http://creativecommons.org/videos !Peer Review in Five Minutes Tutorial from NCSU http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/tutorials/pr/ !Palmer, Cathy, and Julia Gelfand. 2011. “Information Literacy and Scholarly Communication Alignments and Disconnects: What Can We Learn?” Poster presented at the 2011 ACRL Annual Conference, Philadelphia, PA, April. http://bit.ly/1gtVSBU

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