Information Literacy
Information Literacy
Information Literacy
- It is the ability to locate, evaluate, and use effectively the needed information – Association of College and Research
Libraries (ACRL)
- Davis and Olsen in 1984 define information as data that have been processed into a form that is meaningful to the
recipient and is of real or perceived value in current or prospective action or decisions.
- Blokdijk (1987) enhance the definition with the insight “what reaches man’s conscience and contributes to his
knowledge”.
- Founder of Management Cybernetics Stafford Beer in 1979 declares that information is that “ which changes us”.
TASK DEFINITION
- In defining the problem an identifying the information needed, we need to choose a topic an narrow it down in such a
manageable way as to write or do a media project about it for information or for persuasion.
- Think of a topic you are interested in or enthusiastic about. Limit it to a specific aspect, a geographical area or a period of
time.
- Find the balance between you topics narrowness and broadness, If it is too narrow, you may not have anything much to
write or create, If it is too broad, you may have to drop some ideas and rewrite or rephrase the topic.
- Write down questions you may want to answer about the topic; these questions could be the what, who, why, where and
how of the chosen topic. If you feel that you need to present a side or your point of view about a topic, consider the
arguments you can use to persuade your readers.
SYNTHESIS (S)
- This is the part where you have to put the information you have extracted and thought about into one whole
presentation.
- The whole process involves re-thinking and re-writing. You can still ask yourself if you are going to write a paper
or prepare a media project such as a video recording, a poster, an electronic collage or a monologue.
- You can always go back to Task Definition where you identified your information need and decided on a topic.
Arrange and re-arrange your questions into an outline as you see fit with the information you have
incorporated into you knowledge about the topic now.
- Refine your statement of the problem. Write a rough a draft or make a storyboard. Revise, decide on the final
presentation and make a final copy.
EVALUATION (E)
- Is a one way of doing better the next class requirement.
- Ask a question such as:
Did I set out on a well-defined task?
Did the information gathering process I used lead to the task I set out to do?
Did I use the best skills I know in locating and accessing information?
Did I make a good presentation?
Was I able to make the information I gathered into a coherent synthesis? Was I able to list all my references
consistently according to an approved style?
What am I proud of my work? If I were to do it all over again, what will I improve?
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