Information literacy communities of practice in a converged service

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Presentation delivered at the IFLA Information Literacy Satellite Meeting, Limerick, 14 August 2014. Report on project initiated with Katy Wrathall.

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Information literacy communities of practice in a converged service

Clare McCluskeyIFLA Satellite Meeting, Limerick

14 August 2014

Background

• Converged service– Library– ICT– Media– Print

• Where does information literacy fit?• Is Information Learning Services a learning

organisation?

Learning organisation

• Staff development based on shared values (Camille and Wu 2010)

• Learning for both service users and staff (Bergat and d’Elia 2010)

• Information literacy at core of our learning

Information Literacy

• Those in roles focusing on IL need to be as high priority for IL training as those on periphery (Pagell and Munoo 2010)

• Users of an information service rarely distinguish between staff in different roles (Sult and Evangeliste 2009)

Lecture by nist6dhCC BY-SA 2.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

ANCIL

http://newcurriculum.files.wordpress.com/2012/07/ancil_spider_2012.jpg

Key points

• Divide between practice-based and wider learning concepts– Referencing vs ethics of information use– Information searching vs evaluation of resources– Current awareness services vs ongoing learning

Acknowledgements

With thanks to Katy Wrathall for initiating the project and providing the framework within which it took place.

References• Bergart R. and D'Elia M.J. (2010) Innovation: the language of learning libraries. Reference

Services Review, 38 (4), pp.606-620. • Camille D. and Wu A. (2010) Strong Beginnings in Academic Libraries: Employee

Orientations as a Start to a Learning Organization. Texas Library Journal, 86 (2), pp.52-54. • Pagell R.A. and Munoo R. (2010) Information literacy for the information literate: A model

and case study from the Wuhan UNESCO training the trainers in information literacy program. International Information & Library Review, 42 (2), pp.84-90.

• Secker J. and Coonan E. (2014) A New Curriculum for Information Literacy. Available at: http://newcurriculum.wordpress.com/ [Accessed: 14 July 2014].

• Sult L. and Evangeliste M. (2009) We Are All Librarians: Training in the Ever Evolving Information Commons. Reference Librarian, 50 (3), pp.248-258.

• Wenger E. (1998) Communities of Practice : Learning, Meaning, and Identity. 1st pbk. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.

• Wrathall K. (2012) Strategies for Implementing A New Curriculum for Information Literacy. Cambridge, University of Cambridge. Available from: http://implementingancil.pbworks.com/w/file/fetch/55121848/Strategies%20for%20Implementing%20ANCIL%20in%20Non-Cambridge%20HEIs%20v3.pdf.

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