Impacting Information Literacy Learning in First-Year Seminars: A Rubric-Based Evaluation
Author(s) -
M. Sara Lowe,
Char Booth,
Sean M. Stone,
Natalie Tagge
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
portal libraries and the academy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.015
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 1531-2542
pISSN - 1530-7131
DOI - 10.1353/pla.2015.0030
Subject(s) - rubric , information literacy , syllabus , medical education , mathematics education , intervention (counseling) , psychology , literacy , computer science , pedagogy , medicine , psychiatry
The authors conducted a rubric assessment of information literacy (IL) skills in research
papers across five undergraduate first-year seminar programs to explore the question “What impact does librarian intervention in first-year courses have on IL performance in student work?” Statistical results indicate that students in courses with greater levels of strategic faculty-librarian collaboration performed significantly better in IL outcomes than those in courses with low collaboration. Intensive librarian course support was not necessary to achieve significant learning gains; these tended to occur when librarians provided initial input into syllabus and assignment design, followed by one or two assignment-focused IL workshops
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