At LCC we have been involved in two basic projects: Project One is based on evaluation of sources,...

19
Information Literacy Grant Lower Columbia College, Spring 2009

Transcript of At LCC we have been involved in two basic projects: Project One is based on evaluation of sources,...

Information Literacy Grant

Lower Columbia College, Spring 2009

At LCC we have been involved in two basic projects:

Project One is based on evaluation of sources, in particular, periodical articles.

Project Two is based on creation of a research guide, and leading students to do appropriate research.

Introduction

Three classes were involved.

Rather than giving students a rubric for identifying whether an item is scholarly, substantive, popular, sensational, or newspaper, we give students samples of different kinds of articles, and have them build their own rubrics.

Once they have identified differences between the types of articles, and their audiences, students need to select an article appropriate for different needs.

Project One: Source Evaluation

Basic Evaluation Rubric

We have used this basic idea in three classes:

Environmental studies capstone class,

introductory English

class,

English research class

Determining the level of scholarship, authorship, and audience of an article.

To do this exercise, you will look at each of three articles. The articles will be from different periodicals (magazines, journals, newspapers, etc).

As you look at them, see if you can tell any differences in the following:  

•How long is the article?  •What kind of language does it use – plain English or technical?

•Are there authors? Does it tell you anything about the authors?

• Is there a bibliography? How much of one? What kind of sources does it seem to have?

•What is the name of the journal/magazine it comes from? •Does it seem to have a particular format? •Can you identify other differences between them?

The lesson plan will be available to other instructors at the end of the grant period.

Assignment evaluating sources accessed through databases (or online).

Read about the differences between Scholarly and Popular articles. Pick a topic or be given one by your instructor.

a disease such as lupus or juvenile diabetes or OCD. The influence of gaming or television on academic performance. Contributions of a minority (jews, BGLST, Blacks, Chicanos, etc) to mainstream American culture).

Review how to access periodical articles. Using either Gale or Proquest, you need to find two articles on the same topic: (pick 2 of the three).

They should deliver the same general message, but of course the way it is presented would be different. One article would be appropriate for a teenager. One would be appropriate for a professional in the field One appropriate for the parent of a teenager.

Print the first page of both articles. Cite both articles. Write a paragraph for each article, explaining why it would be appropriate for the audience you have

identified. You will be graded on the following 4 criteria, 25% for each one:

◦ correct MLA citations ◦ college level writing, including grammar and sentence structure ◦ thoughtful evaluations of the sources ◦ appropriate choices of sources.

   

Students had to review three different articles and identify differences between them.

They also learned techniques for locating articles and steps in doing research.

The instructor gave students an assignment which used these ideas, but it has not yet been evaluated for information literacy.

Results from the first presentation are not yet in.

◦ Students evaluated the articles to see how they fit into the rubric above.

◦ ◦ They did not analyze their articles to determine

whether they were scholarly, popular, or substantive.

◦ They did not apply these criteria to other articles they identified on their own.

◦ Students did, however, notice that the articles were different, and also got practice locating articles identified by another person (me).

Results from the second presentation are mixed.

No (1) Somewhat (2)

Yes (3)

Can student locate articles?

Can student tell differences between articles?

Can student identify level of scholarship?

Results indicated that students could locate articles, and could differentiate between writing styles, but they had difficulty identifying a reason for these differences.

Papers were evaluated using the following rubric:

This group had an in-class presentation, and the opportunity to interact with the librarian and the instructor – the librarian was embedded in this part of the class.

Students also received the explanation in person,

and the assignment was posted in Angel.

The instructor and the librarian worked together to develop a grading rubric and grade students’ responses.

The third group produced the most effective results.

No Somewhat yes

Correct citations?

Quality of writing

Thoughtful evaluations

Appropriate choice of sources

In general, we found that students did an adequate job of finding and evaluating sources.

They tended to assume

that individuals could read at a higher level than is generally true (i.e., high school students reading Business Week, parents reading technical or scholarly journals).

Evaluations were thoughtful, writing was good.

These papers were evaluated using the following rubric:

Project One: Identifying the level and type of information in different articles is one piece of the information we have been trying to provide through this grant.

Project Two, the second aspect of the grant, is larger and the follow-up activities after the pilot will take longer.

Together with a business administration instructor, library staff created an online subject guide for research in business administration.

Business classes are frequently distance classes, and students can not come for research orientations on campus.

Project Two: Research Guide

The subject guide was created as a web page on the library’s web site.

We followed the general guidelines of the library on research steps, but tailored them to business administration.

Suggested sources included:

business encyclopedias, call numbers for business

administration, databases for research in

business, search tips, web pages, citation guidelines.

A Camtasia video was made to demonstrate the research process for students.

The video was inserted into the online class.

The instructor required the students to view it and had a quiz for them afterwards.

Students have been using some of the information from the tutorial already

this quarter.

The final project for the class will require that students use the correct citation format and an appropriate type and variety of sources.

Instructors are currently reviewing the drafts to provide us with professional association links, but students are still finding the “beta” subject guides to be useful.

Subject guides are handed out in orientations,

and linked on the Library Services web page.

As an extension of the grant activities, Library Services has been preparing “subject guides” in a few disciplines.

Subject guides have so far been prepared for

environmental science, psychology, and sociology.

More research guides

Additional information literacy workshops

FUTURE PLANS