Information literacy at
University of Rwanda
and BTH
Information literacy - teaching in
practice
What is the task ahead
during these two days?
• Lectures by Kent about the
background and initiative to
integrate Information Literacy (IL)
into the curricula at BTH.
• The CDIO initiative
• Learning objectives explained
Continued
• The (global) problem of IL
integration.
• Learning objectives as a way to
describe learning content
• Learning objectives as a tool for
assessment and examination
Continued
• Recommendations for the teaching of
IL
• The learning objectives of IL training
explained
• Teaching examples of IL training
(perhaps)
The training
•
•
•
•

Presentation - Kent
Group work - you
Discussions – you and me
Individual work or collaborative –
longer process as preparation for
follow up in March
Objective
• The overall goal with this workshop is
to produce a program for IL training
at department level. This program
could e.g. be communicated with a
brochure describing the IL training
program.
Exercises
• The exercises will take form of group
discussions. These discussions could
preferably be summarized in written
form. The names of the group
members should also be attached. An
oral summary after the exercise will
also be done.
Part II
IL in our setting
• Rwandan problems of integration of
IL training is not a local problem –it’s
global
• Libraries seem often to be parted
from subject specific teaching
• Old fashion teaching methods
support this partition
Continued
• PBL (problem based learning) force
students to use the library
information sources
• The Faculty of health at BTH use
this methods. They also demand them
to work evidence based and use
scientific material
Hindering factors
• Academic pride – don´t come here and think you
are anything
• Don´t know what services there are and possible
to expect from the library
• Don´t know what a librarian do, can do and know
• Has an old fashion view of the library
• Doesn´t want to disturb
• Doesn´t come in mind
• Work overload
IL training at BTH
• 3700 full time students, coming down
to 2700 within 3 years
• 8 librarians with 10- 25 years of
experience
• Continues cut downs of staff due to
government policies
Continued
• Priorities according to what we see
as important – teaching IL priority
number 1
• All librarians have a teaching duty
• Total amount of teaching was 2012
1407 hours, which equals a mean of
10% of a librarians year work
Continued
• My personal teaching amount is about
20%
• The trend has been an increased
teaching volume year by year
• Not unreasonable to think that the
teaching volume could be 25% of a
librarians year work
Thoughts about the
future
• IL more integrated into the curricula
as a generic skill
• Librarians working together with
academic staff or as such
• Librarians more subject oriented
• Double diplomas?
Exercise I
• Form three groups and discuss:
• What IL training do you do at your
department?
• Who performs it?
• What are the plans for the future?
• What are the obstacles and problems
Part III: The integration
of IL at BTH
• Emphasis on generic skills at BTH and
Sweden/Europe (methods for
learning, writing, reading,
communicating and IL
• A CDIO (conceive, design, implement,
operate) process started to develop
these skills within engineering
IL at BTH
• Quite often ad hoc and intermittent
• Disruptions – dependent on
agreements with benevolent teachers
• Standing alone – not always knit into
the subject
• Not systematic with clear learning
objectives and examinations
What did we do
• Studied examples from other universities
and especially the Borås model and the
Southeast IL model
• Started to formulate the criteria's for IL
and teaching examples
• Contacted the BTH Board of Education
and presented a plan for IL training
Continued
• Received a commission from BTH
Quality Assurance Council to review
the IL training and generic skills
together with educational program
directors. And suggest actions.
• The review is not concluded at this
date
Legislation
• Higher Education Act. 1 chapter 8§
states that: the students, in their

field of study, are requested to
develop an ability to "seek and
evaluate scientific knowledge " and
"follow the knowledge development."
Degree objectives
• For Bachelor degree: the student

should know to " demonstrate the
ability to search, collect, evaluate
and critically interpret relevant
information in an approach to a
problem."
Interpretation
• The legislation compels the
universities to integrate IL into the
curricula as we interpret it
• The responsibility lies on the
university management and
departments
• IL not only a matter for the library
Academic implication
• The generic skills and IL must be
written into course plans and
accordingly examined
• The library can offer support and
training in IL as a way to reach the
objectives. But is not responsible
Excise II
• Discuss what your strategy could be
to convince the university
management that IL training is
necessary for the quality of the
students results
• Are there comparable legislation in
Rwanda – find out
The proposal to Board of
Education at BTH
• Summary: Students need to become information
literate, a general ability that should be a
mandatory part of the education.
• Information literacy (IL) is best learned in
integration with other subject specific teaching.
• The library offers tailored program instructions
that can be developed together with the program
coordinator at the Departments
Scope
• The aim should be that all program
students will receive training in IL.
Also students taking independent
courses should be subject to the
same teaching whenever relevant.
Subject extension
• Teaching should be integrated with the subject
studies. For student motivation, it is important
that teaching is perceived as relevant and related
to the subject studies. This means that it is the
course content and requirements governing the
content and goals of education in information
literacy. Teaching that is integrated with subject
studies will also support the topic learning.
Right time
• It´s of great importance that the teaching of IL
occurs when it is most relevant with regards to
the subject studies. It is usually when students
have a task that requires information retrieval,
for instance when associated with project work or
thesis writing. It is also important that the
training is not done too early or too late in the
work process.
Progression
• Teaching should be done incrementally during the
education time and closely follow the progression
of the courses and the knowledge development of
the student. Progression in IL teaching means
that the teaching content and objectives vary
during training sessions and is tightly connected
to the progression within the subject studies.
Objectives in Education
and Curriculum
• Expected learning outcomes for IL should
be included in the curricula documents
whenever the need for these skills is
present. This is to ensure that the skills
actually are developed during the
education. This also favors the continuity
in the cooperation between the library and
the program education
Example of course plan
• Scientific methods
Examination
• It´s of vital importance that the expected
learning outcomes of IL are examined. The
design of the course content and the tasks
the students are obligated to fulfill,
largely determine what the student learn
and accordingly make them more
motivated. It is desirable that the
examination of these skills is integrated
into the courses
Exercise III
• Discuss the relevance of these
recommendations. Is there anything
you would add or that you find
questionable? Could the
recommendations be applicable to
Rwandan conditions?
Five goals for IL
• The overall expected learning

outcome is that students should have
developed the ability to search,
evaluate and use information for
effective independent learning in
both studies and in working life.
Students are expected
to:
• 1. justify the choice of relevant information sources to
meet various information needs, and to assess the reliability
of different sources
2. formulate queries, construct a search strategy, master
various search tools and reflect on the outcomes of
information retrieval
3. know the different ways of acquisition and access to both
paper and electronic documents
4. be able to use information in accordance with the
copyright rules
5. discuss and actively participate in the scientific
information flow
Goal 1 - to justify the choice of relevant
information sources to meet various
information needs, and to assess the
reliability of different sources.
•

- know the different types of publications that are important in
their own field of science - regarding features , reliability,
underlying examination (e.g. peer reviewing) and timing of
publication
- is familiar with and can identify the difference between primary
and secondary sources and know when it is appropriate to use one
or the other. (Important to take into account the views in
different topics )
- knows how different types of information is used in the research
process – for systematic literature search , as background
information, for theory and method development etc.
- can interpret the information about documents which are given in
databases , catalogs and bibliographies
- know the importance of citation level within their subject area
- has a critical approach towards sources
Goal 2 - to formulate queries, construct a
search strategy, master various search
tools and reflect on the outcomes of
information retrieval
•

- Can assess where it is appropriate to seek information for a particular
task (databases, library catalogues , the web, contacts etc.)
- Able to formulate queries based on the research questions that they are
working with, by picking out information-bearing words and be able to find
alternative keywords, both controlled vocabulary and uncontrolled
keywords and keywords of their own.
- Have knowledge about where and in what form the information is
published, both scientific and non-scientific.
- Have knowledge about different search strategies and know at what
stage of the search process a search strategy is suitable.
- Is familiar with and know how to use their keywords with search tools
such as Boolean operators , truncation, masking , and know that search
tools are used differently within different databases.
- Can determine the outcome if a search is reasonable and revise it based
on the outcome
Goal 3 - know the different ways of
acquisition and access to both paper and
electronic documents
• - Examines the scope of the information retrieval systems,
content and organization.
- Selects effective methods to get the information needed
from the information retrieval systems.
- Uses various search systems to get information in
different forms.
- Uses various classification systems to locate documents
within the library
- Uses electronic or personal services that are available to
gain access to the information needed (e.g. interlibrary
loans, research units, public information sources , experts
and practitioners).
Goal 4 - be able to use
information in accordance with
the copyright rules
• - Understand what copyright and proper use of copyrighted
material implicates.
- Comply with legislation, institutional praxis and good
custom regarding the use of information sources e.g.
obtaining, storing and disseminating text, data, images and
sounds in a lawful manner.
- Understand what plagiarism is and not presenting the work
of others as their own without reference to the information
sources used and with the use of an appropriate reference
style.
Goal 5 - discuss and actively
participate in the scientific
information flow
•

- Know how research is conducted with communication of ideas and
results , publications, conferencing systems, the peer-review
process and Open Access Publishing.
- Know the quality criteria’s of published research and rankings of
scientific journals.
- Know how and where a work of their own could be published.
- Know what literature- and systematic reviews are and the
contexts in which these methods are used.
- To assess the characteristics of scientific publishing in contrast
to popular science information
- Know how systematic surveillance of the scientific information is
managed
To do before the follow
up in Kigali, March 2014
• See document from me Karlskrona
2013-11-25, for details
• Find out about a subject area within
a department
• Write a suggestion of a teaching
program
• Integrate learning objectives
Final

Murakoze chani

Information literacy at UR, workshop 1 2013

  • 1.
    Information literacy at Universityof Rwanda and BTH Information literacy - teaching in practice
  • 2.
    What is thetask ahead during these two days? • Lectures by Kent about the background and initiative to integrate Information Literacy (IL) into the curricula at BTH. • The CDIO initiative • Learning objectives explained
  • 3.
    Continued • The (global)problem of IL integration. • Learning objectives as a way to describe learning content • Learning objectives as a tool for assessment and examination
  • 4.
    Continued • Recommendations forthe teaching of IL • The learning objectives of IL training explained • Teaching examples of IL training (perhaps)
  • 5.
    The training • • • • Presentation -Kent Group work - you Discussions – you and me Individual work or collaborative – longer process as preparation for follow up in March
  • 6.
    Objective • The overallgoal with this workshop is to produce a program for IL training at department level. This program could e.g. be communicated with a brochure describing the IL training program.
  • 7.
    Exercises • The exerciseswill take form of group discussions. These discussions could preferably be summarized in written form. The names of the group members should also be attached. An oral summary after the exercise will also be done.
  • 8.
    Part II IL inour setting • Rwandan problems of integration of IL training is not a local problem –it’s global • Libraries seem often to be parted from subject specific teaching • Old fashion teaching methods support this partition
  • 9.
    Continued • PBL (problembased learning) force students to use the library information sources • The Faculty of health at BTH use this methods. They also demand them to work evidence based and use scientific material
  • 10.
    Hindering factors • Academicpride – don´t come here and think you are anything • Don´t know what services there are and possible to expect from the library • Don´t know what a librarian do, can do and know • Has an old fashion view of the library • Doesn´t want to disturb • Doesn´t come in mind • Work overload
  • 11.
    IL training atBTH • 3700 full time students, coming down to 2700 within 3 years • 8 librarians with 10- 25 years of experience • Continues cut downs of staff due to government policies
  • 12.
    Continued • Priorities accordingto what we see as important – teaching IL priority number 1 • All librarians have a teaching duty • Total amount of teaching was 2012 1407 hours, which equals a mean of 10% of a librarians year work
  • 13.
    Continued • My personalteaching amount is about 20% • The trend has been an increased teaching volume year by year • Not unreasonable to think that the teaching volume could be 25% of a librarians year work
  • 14.
    Thoughts about the future •IL more integrated into the curricula as a generic skill • Librarians working together with academic staff or as such • Librarians more subject oriented • Double diplomas?
  • 15.
    Exercise I • Formthree groups and discuss: • What IL training do you do at your department? • Who performs it? • What are the plans for the future? • What are the obstacles and problems
  • 16.
    Part III: Theintegration of IL at BTH • Emphasis on generic skills at BTH and Sweden/Europe (methods for learning, writing, reading, communicating and IL • A CDIO (conceive, design, implement, operate) process started to develop these skills within engineering
  • 17.
    IL at BTH •Quite often ad hoc and intermittent • Disruptions – dependent on agreements with benevolent teachers • Standing alone – not always knit into the subject • Not systematic with clear learning objectives and examinations
  • 18.
    What did wedo • Studied examples from other universities and especially the Borås model and the Southeast IL model • Started to formulate the criteria's for IL and teaching examples • Contacted the BTH Board of Education and presented a plan for IL training
  • 19.
    Continued • Received acommission from BTH Quality Assurance Council to review the IL training and generic skills together with educational program directors. And suggest actions. • The review is not concluded at this date
  • 20.
    Legislation • Higher EducationAct. 1 chapter 8§ states that: the students, in their field of study, are requested to develop an ability to "seek and evaluate scientific knowledge " and "follow the knowledge development."
  • 21.
    Degree objectives • ForBachelor degree: the student should know to " demonstrate the ability to search, collect, evaluate and critically interpret relevant information in an approach to a problem."
  • 22.
    Interpretation • The legislationcompels the universities to integrate IL into the curricula as we interpret it • The responsibility lies on the university management and departments • IL not only a matter for the library
  • 23.
    Academic implication • Thegeneric skills and IL must be written into course plans and accordingly examined • The library can offer support and training in IL as a way to reach the objectives. But is not responsible
  • 24.
    Excise II • Discusswhat your strategy could be to convince the university management that IL training is necessary for the quality of the students results • Are there comparable legislation in Rwanda – find out
  • 25.
    The proposal toBoard of Education at BTH • Summary: Students need to become information literate, a general ability that should be a mandatory part of the education. • Information literacy (IL) is best learned in integration with other subject specific teaching. • The library offers tailored program instructions that can be developed together with the program coordinator at the Departments
  • 26.
    Scope • The aimshould be that all program students will receive training in IL. Also students taking independent courses should be subject to the same teaching whenever relevant.
  • 27.
    Subject extension • Teachingshould be integrated with the subject studies. For student motivation, it is important that teaching is perceived as relevant and related to the subject studies. This means that it is the course content and requirements governing the content and goals of education in information literacy. Teaching that is integrated with subject studies will also support the topic learning.
  • 28.
    Right time • It´sof great importance that the teaching of IL occurs when it is most relevant with regards to the subject studies. It is usually when students have a task that requires information retrieval, for instance when associated with project work or thesis writing. It is also important that the training is not done too early or too late in the work process.
  • 29.
    Progression • Teaching shouldbe done incrementally during the education time and closely follow the progression of the courses and the knowledge development of the student. Progression in IL teaching means that the teaching content and objectives vary during training sessions and is tightly connected to the progression within the subject studies.
  • 30.
    Objectives in Education andCurriculum • Expected learning outcomes for IL should be included in the curricula documents whenever the need for these skills is present. This is to ensure that the skills actually are developed during the education. This also favors the continuity in the cooperation between the library and the program education
  • 31.
    Example of courseplan • Scientific methods
  • 32.
    Examination • It´s ofvital importance that the expected learning outcomes of IL are examined. The design of the course content and the tasks the students are obligated to fulfill, largely determine what the student learn and accordingly make them more motivated. It is desirable that the examination of these skills is integrated into the courses
  • 33.
    Exercise III • Discussthe relevance of these recommendations. Is there anything you would add or that you find questionable? Could the recommendations be applicable to Rwandan conditions?
  • 34.
    Five goals forIL • The overall expected learning outcome is that students should have developed the ability to search, evaluate and use information for effective independent learning in both studies and in working life.
  • 35.
    Students are expected to: •1. justify the choice of relevant information sources to meet various information needs, and to assess the reliability of different sources 2. formulate queries, construct a search strategy, master various search tools and reflect on the outcomes of information retrieval 3. know the different ways of acquisition and access to both paper and electronic documents 4. be able to use information in accordance with the copyright rules 5. discuss and actively participate in the scientific information flow
  • 36.
    Goal 1 -to justify the choice of relevant information sources to meet various information needs, and to assess the reliability of different sources. • - know the different types of publications that are important in their own field of science - regarding features , reliability, underlying examination (e.g. peer reviewing) and timing of publication - is familiar with and can identify the difference between primary and secondary sources and know when it is appropriate to use one or the other. (Important to take into account the views in different topics ) - knows how different types of information is used in the research process – for systematic literature search , as background information, for theory and method development etc. - can interpret the information about documents which are given in databases , catalogs and bibliographies - know the importance of citation level within their subject area - has a critical approach towards sources
  • 37.
    Goal 2 -to formulate queries, construct a search strategy, master various search tools and reflect on the outcomes of information retrieval • - Can assess where it is appropriate to seek information for a particular task (databases, library catalogues , the web, contacts etc.) - Able to formulate queries based on the research questions that they are working with, by picking out information-bearing words and be able to find alternative keywords, both controlled vocabulary and uncontrolled keywords and keywords of their own. - Have knowledge about where and in what form the information is published, both scientific and non-scientific. - Have knowledge about different search strategies and know at what stage of the search process a search strategy is suitable. - Is familiar with and know how to use their keywords with search tools such as Boolean operators , truncation, masking , and know that search tools are used differently within different databases. - Can determine the outcome if a search is reasonable and revise it based on the outcome
  • 38.
    Goal 3 -know the different ways of acquisition and access to both paper and electronic documents • - Examines the scope of the information retrieval systems, content and organization. - Selects effective methods to get the information needed from the information retrieval systems. - Uses various search systems to get information in different forms. - Uses various classification systems to locate documents within the library - Uses electronic or personal services that are available to gain access to the information needed (e.g. interlibrary loans, research units, public information sources , experts and practitioners).
  • 39.
    Goal 4 -be able to use information in accordance with the copyright rules • - Understand what copyright and proper use of copyrighted material implicates. - Comply with legislation, institutional praxis and good custom regarding the use of information sources e.g. obtaining, storing and disseminating text, data, images and sounds in a lawful manner. - Understand what plagiarism is and not presenting the work of others as their own without reference to the information sources used and with the use of an appropriate reference style.
  • 40.
    Goal 5 -discuss and actively participate in the scientific information flow • - Know how research is conducted with communication of ideas and results , publications, conferencing systems, the peer-review process and Open Access Publishing. - Know the quality criteria’s of published research and rankings of scientific journals. - Know how and where a work of their own could be published. - Know what literature- and systematic reviews are and the contexts in which these methods are used. - To assess the characteristics of scientific publishing in contrast to popular science information - Know how systematic surveillance of the scientific information is managed
  • 41.
    To do beforethe follow up in Kigali, March 2014 • See document from me Karlskrona 2013-11-25, for details • Find out about a subject area within a department • Write a suggestion of a teaching program • Integrate learning objectives
  • 42.