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Teaching information literacy to the net generation
A description of how the National Library of Estonia is teaching information literacy skills to young people. Presented by Hela Ojasaar at the CILIPS Centenary Conference Branch and Group Day which took place 5 Jun 2008.
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- Slide 1: Teaching information literacy to
the Net Generation
Hela Ojasaar
Deputy of the Head of the Research and
Development Center
National Library of Estonia
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 2: National Library of Estonia (NLE)
• Established on December 21, 1918.
• The National Library carries out the tasks of
public and parliamentary library, and special
library of humanities and social sciences
according to National Library of Estonia Act in
accordance with described tasks in
classifications of these library types passed in
UNESCO, IFLA, ISO and in other international
organisations.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 3: Reader groups according to the Library service
quality assessment survey in 2006
others civil servants
8% 5% students,
creative postgraduate
people s
8% 48%
high
schoolers
10%
specialists researches,
14% lecturers
7%
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 4: User training at the National Library
• User training is a teaching activity and also an
essential library service which objectives are
– to achieve awareness of the Library’s services
and their active use,
– to develop the user’s knowledge and abilities
to find, select and use information in the
traditional and electronic library environment.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 5: User training programme
• Elementary training
– Module 1 Basics of information retrieval
– Module 2 E-library
• Advanced training
– Module 3 Subject information courses
– Module 4 Training according to the
requirements of those who order the training
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 6: The Net Generation Z –
youths born in or after 1990
• The Net Geners grew up
in an environment
surrounded by and
using
– graphical web
browsers,
– laptops,
– cell phones,
– instant messenger
services,
– broadband,
– wireless,
– video games.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 7: The Net-Geners
... are electronic multitaskers
... prefer to be interactive
... are non-linear thinkers
... are digital and visual learners
... tend to be more comfortable constructing their
knowledge than being instructed
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 8: The Net Generation and information
Informal instruction through trial and error.
Browsing the Web is time consuming.
Information is freely available on the Internet.
They are confident in their search abilities. They
believe they are SUPER-SEARCHERS and can
find what they need for course work and research
on their own.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 9: The library vs Google
• All information that comes from Google is
gospel truth.
• They rate convenience over quality. They want to
get information fast.
• They expect libraries and research resources to
be accessible remotely (from home), where they
can multitask comfortably and snack and watch
television.
• Research does not need to begin in a library.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 10: The information-seeking problems of high-schoolers
responding to academic information need
• The survey was carried through in 2006 in an English
comprehensive school among pupils from 13-18 years of
age.
• Information-seeking problems were explored solely within
the context of information required for school purposes.
• The respondents identified a wide range of individual issues
which they had found problematic:
– difficulties in initial decision-making;
– restrictions of the user's “information world”;
– process frustrations;
– shortcomings in the retrieved information;
– limitations on information use;
– barriers to the construction of meaning.
• Shenton, A.K. (2008), The information-seeking problems of high-
schoolers responding to academic information need, Library Review ,
Vol. 57 No 4, pp. 276-288.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 11: Identifying learning needs of young users
Observations and experience of reference
services
Web-based questionnaires, library service quality
surveys
Collaboration with teachers who can provide
advice, support and additional learning resources
Analysis and assessment of trainings feedback
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 12: Integrating information literacy skills and
Internet technologies into the curriculum
• The Ministry of Education and Research
• School librarians
• School principals and teachers
• Librarians, researchers and lecturers of
universities
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 13: Course related training sessions
• Information literacy skills are best taught at the
point of need and of relevance.
• Skills should be taught functionally and in the
context of a topic of study, incl:
– history,
– social sciences,
– economics,
– native language,
– English or German,
– informatics,
– music history,
– art history,
– basics of research.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 14: Basics of information retrieval
• The objectives of the programme are
– to develop the user’s knowledge and abilities to
determine their information needs and to find, select
and use information either in the Internet or library
environment;
– to provide learners with quality information from
traditional library sources and from Internet
resources;
– to show the users how to save time when
searching.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 15: Main topics
Internet is integrated into training sessions.
Practical session about searching Google and other
search engines effectively.
• Advantages and disadvantages of the Wikipedia as a
major reference tool.
• Subject fields and services of the NLE.
• Electronic catalogue, databases and services.
• Comparing the Internet information sources with
those of the library, pointing out the advantages of
the library.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 16: www.nlib.ee
- Slide 17: Training tips
• Visiting schools and classrooms
• Hands-on learning techniques
• Demonstration
• Handouts as learning and advertising materials
• Digital resources of the library
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 18: The oldest Estonian newspaper
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 19: The analysis and assessment of trainings
feedback
• Oral and written feedback
– training programme, training material
– teachers
– expectations, needs and skills of learners
• The results of analysis are used for
– identifying the level of information competence of
learners and individual performance,
– more effective use of educational methods,
– chronological planning of the training,
– compiling training material,
– developing pedagogical skills of teachers.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 20: www.nlib.ee
- Slide 21: Bridging the gap between the Net Generation
and the libraries
• The key information skills must be taught
rigorously.
• Implementing collaborative strategies will enable
teacher-librarians effectively teach young people
and integrate information literacy into the subject
courses / curriculum.
• Electronic and digital resources acquired by the
libraries can play a critical role in today’s students
learning.
www.nlib.ee
- Slide 22: www.nlib.ee