Post on 30-Dec-2015
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Elizabeth Lee, Brenda Reed, & Cory LavertyFaculty of Education, Queen’s University
Information literacy, teacher-candidates and the
school library:
Research oninformation literacy in a
B.Ed. program
Why do this study?• Teacher candidates have limited skills in:
• Finding journals articles• Searching the web• Finding teaching resources• Teaching from textbooks• Finding fiction by subject
• Little research on the information literacy skills of pre-service teachers.• Study of Canadian teacher education programs Asselin & Doiron (2000)
found minimal inclusion of information literacy in B. Ed programs.
Current Context
• Ontario Ministry of Education documents include inquiry objectives throughout the K-12 curriculum:
Research – 913 expectationsQuestion – 634 expectationsProjects – 234 expectations
Information – 1745 expectations
(from Staging Research by R. Dodgson and J. LaForty)www.accessola2.com/ superconference2005/fri/docs/719/staging.ppt
• Ministry of Education curriculum guidelines are given to every teacher candidate during their B.Ed. Year.
There is a need to place these expectations within the context of the Information Studies K-12 curriculum and show how they fit into the research model defined by the Ontario School Library Association.
Relate
Explore
Identify
Define
Locate
Gather
Select
Collaborate
A n a l y seEv a l u a te
T e s t
So r t
S y n th e si z e
Revise
Present
Reflect
Transfer
The Research The Research ProcessProcess
STAGE 1 : PREPARING FOR RESEARCH
DefineExploreIdentify
Relate
STAGE 2 :
ACCESSING RESOURCES
LocateSelect
GatherCollaborate
STAGE 3 :
PROCESSING INFORMATION
Analyse/EvaluateTestSort
Synthesize
STAGE 4 :
TRANSFERRING LEARNING
RevisePresentReflect
Transfer
Adapted from Staging Research by R. Dodgson and J. LaForty
Think Literacy Initiative• In the past, the library connection was overlooked as a
contributor to reading development.• Now the Ontario Ministry of Education supports this
approach and teaching reading must be integrated across the curriculum and all subjects.
• Motivation to read is linked to high-interest materials & authentic research topics.
• Librarians are experts in bringing these resources into the classroom.
Think Literacy documents 7-12:
http://curriculum.org/thinkliteracy/library.html#subjects
Purpose of the Study
Purpose of the study was to investigate the teacher-candidates’:
• Conceptual knowledge of information literacy.• Utilization of information literacy skills for their own learning.• Incorporation of information literacy into their practicum.• Collaboration with teacher-librarians. • Perceptions of how equipped they are to teach information
literacy to their future pupils.
Method
An anonymous exit survey distributed in Prof. 190 and 191 classes, April 2005. N = 522
Number of P/J participants: 272Number of IS/Tech participants: 250
Data analysis included:– calculating percentages– coding open-ended questions and categorizing them by common
themes.
Key Findings
1. Concept of information literacy not understood.
Q: What is your understanding of “information literacy”?
Quotations
What is your understanding of information literacy? Library resources "Being able to search for articles and use resources effectively""The ability to navigate through library catalogues and search engines to locate desired material" Other "Another form of teaching students" Language/literacy"It's being able to read and understand at a certain level"
Key Findings2. Information literacy concepts are not dealt with in the program.
Q: Was information literacy dealt with in your courses?
Key Findings3. Teacher candidates are not prepared to teach information literacy skills.
Q: How prepared are you to teach information literacy skills?
Key Findings4. Use of the school library involves limited information literacy instruction.
Q: What were your uses of the school library?
Key Findings5. Teacher-librarian not called on for teaching collaboration.
Q: How could a teacher-librarian help you implement the curriculum?
QuotationsIf you had an opportunity to work with a teacher librarian on any practica, what purpose was it for? Teaching"Introduce to research assignments, team taught how to properly cite works/books used for project." Help"To identify new items that the library has collected""Find video sets" Other"Literacy test organization""Helped with book fair""Photocopy help"
Key Findings6. Teacher-candidates prefer web resources overall.
Q: Resources used to complete B.Ed. assignments?
From Education Library From Home
Key Findings7. Teacher-candidates would like to learn more about information literacy skills.
Q: What other skills would you like to learn?
Key Findings8. Teacher-candidates did not acquire the skills they think they need for continuing professional development.
Q: Did you acquire new skills in the B.Ed. Program that would help you with your professional development as a teacher?Yes: 35% No: 66%
9. Teacher-candidates did not feel they had opportunities to develop their research skills.Q: Did you have the opportunity to develop your research skills while in the B.Ed. program?
Yes: 47% No: 53%
Library Response to the Study1. INSPIRED Teaching@Your Library
INovative Student Participation In Research and EDucation
Five-part series: Best Classroom ResourcesAssignments Already?Be a Subject Expert (social studies, language arts, math, science, history, geography, English,
health, phys ed, arts)When YOU Teach ResearchOut-Google Your Students
Sept. - Nov. 2005: 1469 students; 66 classes; 52 teaching hours
Library Response to the Study
2. Liaison with Teacher-Librarians
Meetings with local teacher-librarians to discuss promotion of library and librarian’s role:- exchange information about literacy initiatives and resources- orientation for teacher-candidates - support for new teachers
Professional development opportunities for TLs:- discuss information literacy challenges in schools- share strategies for teaching IL skills: existing tools and learning objects, web searching,
plagiarism, designing authentic assignments, best googling practices, collecting graphic novels
Library Response to the Study
3. Alternate Practicum
Promote link to school libraries and other organizations where resource-based learning can be studied:
- Toronto Public Library- Native resource centre- Archives in Winnipeg- Museum of Civilization- Local high schools- Resources for special needs- Exploration of resources for our Education Library (international novel study, bullying
resource kits)
How can we help?
Small group questions:
1. If there were only one thing that a Faculty of Education could do to support your work, what would it be?
2. What do you do now to encourage teachers you work with to
develop their information literacy skills and to partner with you in implementing the curriculum, advocacy ideas that worked well?
Other Ideas
• Assess incoming library skill level of students before and after instruction. Create a profile for students across a specific grade. Give this feedback to teacher, at school meetings, and include it in the library report to the Principal.
• Provide an orientation for new staff and teacher candidates.• Ask teachers to include a research journal as part of project work and
assign marks for its completion along with list of references • Offer sessions to teachers such as those available under the
Advocacy and Presentation sections at the website:http://library.queensu.ca/webedu/guides/tl/
Supporting Website
http://library.queensu.ca/webedu/guides/tl/
Supporting Website
http://library.queensu.ca/webedu/guides/tl/
Supporting Website
http://library.queensu.ca/webedu/guides/tl/
Supporting Website
http://library.queensu.ca/webedu/guides/tl/
Supporting Website
http://library.queensu.ca/webedu/guides/tl/