What
is Information Literacy? And why should I care?
School research is a
training ground for real life.
Information literacy
skills are skills you will need through your life. We are always
seeking information. What car or stereo should I buy? Which
college should I choose? Which book should I read next? How can I
sell this idea to my boss? How can I convince the school board to
act on my proposal? Information helps us reach conclusions, make
our choices, and communicate more effectively. But the good stuff
is often buried in heaps of junk. We need to continue to improve
our searching, evaluating and communication skills in a changing
information environment.
Remember computer literacy
is not information literacy. For a comparison, read this article.
This
summary is loosely based on a model for information skills called
the Big6 by Michael Eisenberg and Robert Berkowitz. Please take
time to visit the Big6 Website.
So, how
should I approach research as an information literate student?
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1.
Defining your problem and asking the good questions
What is my thesis or
problem?
What information do I
need?
What do I already know?
What more do I need to
find out?
Remember: Try to
make the most out of any research problem. The better
your question, the more you will learn. For more
information about defining a problem and asking good
questions, read http://www.joycevalenza.com/questions.html and Dr. Jamie McKenzie's Questioning.org
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2.
Information seeking strategies?
- Where can
I find the information I need? Which are the
best possible sources? Which databases are
the best choices?
- Which
types of sources will best help me solve my
information problem? Which sources do I
already have?
- Do I need
help to find the resources or to make sure I
haven't overlooked any critical sources?
Follow these
links more information on searching and appropriate internet search tools and our catalog and licensed
databases.
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3.
Selecting and evaluating your resources
- How can I
search these sources effectively?
- After
reading, can I identify better keywords or
subject headings to refine my electronic
search?
- Do the
resources I found really answer my questions
or offer evidence to support my thesis?
- Have I
carefully examined my selected sources for
significant details and concepts?
- Have I
examined my sources for currency, relevance,
accuracy, credibility, appropriateness and
and bias?
- Can I
defend all of the resources I am considering
for inclusion in my works consulted page?
- Does the
scope, depth and quality of my research meet
my teacher's and my own expectations?
- How will
I credit my sources?
(For more
information about citing sources check out our online
MLA stylesheet. For more
information on evaluating your sources, take a look
at Evaluating Sources
of Information and How to Critically
Analyze Information Sources)
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4.
Organizing and restructuring information
- How much
of the information I collected is truly
relevant?
- Do I see
any patterns emerging in the information I
collected?
- How can I
organize this information so that it makes
sense to myself and others? Do I have a
strategy for notetaking?
- Can I
construct a visual tool or written outline to
help me structure my work?
- Have I
solved my information problem and answered
the related questions?
- Do I have
enough information?
(Check
out the Graphic Organizer
Index, NCREL's Graphic
Organizers, and SCORE's Graphic
Organizers for ideas on organizing the
information you collect.)
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5.
Communicating the results of your research
- Who is my
audience?
- How can I
most effectively share this information with
this audience?
- Which
would be the best format for communicating
the results of my information? PowerPoint?
video? essay? debate? speech? traditional
paper?
- What do I
need to do this presentation? Equipment?
Software?
- Have I
included everything I want to share?
- Have I
proofread, edited and truly finished my
project?
(Purdue's Online
Writing Lab has a variety of resources
that will help you create a finished product. Here's
a list of sites that will help improve your presentation
skills.)
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6.
Evaluating your work
The
product:
- Am I
proud of the product? Was it effective?
- Did I
meet the guidelines or follow the rubric for
the project?
- Am I sure
I did not plagiarize from any of my sources?
- Is the
best work I could have done?
The
process:
- Did I
explore the full scope of available resources
and select the best?
- Did I
approach the research process energetically?
- Did I
search electronic resources (the Web and
licensed databases) using effective,
efficient, strategic search strategies?
(Check the
research rubric before submitting
your final product.)
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