Information literacy program assessment: one small college takes the big plunge

Author:

Flaspohler Molly R.

Abstract

Managing a library instruction program at a small liberal‐arts college has many challenges. Programs at such institutions often have limited financial resources and are maintained under difficult staffing conditions. This study examines the effectiveness of an instruction program offered at a four‐year liberal‐arts college with fewer than 3,000 students. The research was designed to assess the effectiveness of the current program and measure it against a pilot group of students exposed to enhanced information literacy opportunities based on the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education. Working with five faculty members, information literacy goals were clearly articulated and implemented into nine sections of first‐year writing and speaking courses. Bibliographic analysis, an information literacy questionnaire, and an in‐class writing exercise were used to determine whether students in the pilot groups performed better than students receiving the program’s customary library training.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Library and Information Sciences

Reference24 articles.

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2. Association of College and Research Libraries (2000), Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education, available at: www.ala.org/acrl/ilcomstan.html

3. Barclay, D. (1993), “Evaluating library instruction: doing the best you can with what you have”, RQ, Vol. 33 No. 2, pp. 195‐202.

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5. Caravello, P., Hershman, J., Borah, E. and Mitchell, E. (1999), UCLA Library’s Information Competencies Survey [Internet], UCLA Libraries, University of California, available at: www.bol.ucla.edu/∼jherschm/project/

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