This collection brings together scholarship and pedagogy from multiple perspectives and disciplines, offering nuanced and complex perspectives on Information Literacy in the second decade of the twenty-first century. Taking as a starting point the concerns that prompted the Association of Research Libraries (ACRL) to review the Information Literacy Standards for Higher Education and develop the Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education (2015), the chapters in this collection consider six frameworks that place students in the role of both consumer and producer of information within today's collaborative information environments. Contributors respond directly or indirectly to the work of the ACRL, providing a bridge between past/current knowledge and the future and advancing the notion that faculty, librarians, administrators, and external stakeholders share responsibility and accountability for the teaching, learning, and research of Information Literacy.
This collection brings together scholarship and pedagogy from multiple perspectives and disciplines, offering nuanced and complex perspectives on Information Literacy in the second decade of the twenty-first century. Taking as a starting point the concerns that prompted the Association of Research Libraries (ACRL) to review the Information Literacy Standards for Higher Education and develop the Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education (2015), the chapters in this collection consider six frameworks that place students in the role of both consumer and producer of information within today's collaborative information environments. Contributors respond directly or indirectly to the work of the ACRL, providing a bridge between past/current knowledge and the future and advancing the notion that faculty, librarians, administrators, and external stakeholders share responsibility and accountability for the teaching, learning, and research of Information Literacy.
Barbara J. D'Angelo is Clinical Associate Professor of
Technical Communication at Arizona State University and Graduate
Advisor for the MS in Technical Communication Program. She formerly
served as Director of Assessment and Curriculum for the
undergraduate technical communication degree program and
coordinated a multi-section professional writing course for nurses.
She has presented and published on topics related to information
literacy, technical communication, writing assessment, and
curriculum development at the Conference on College Composition and
Communication, the Association for Business Communication annual
convention, and the International Writing Across the Disciplines
conference among others. She is the recipient of the 2011 Francis
W. Weeks Award of Merit from the Association for Business
Communication.
Sandra Jamieson is Professor of English and Director of
Writing Across the Curriculum at Drew University, where she teaches
first-year writing and writing studies and pedagogy courses at the
undergraduate and graduate level. She is one of three principal
researchers in the Citation Project, a multi-site quantitative and
qualitative study of student source-use practices. Her publications
include the co-edited collection Coming of Age: The Advanced
Writing Curriculum (with Shamoon, Howard, and Schwegler—winner
of the Council of Writing Program Administrators Best Book of the
Year Award, 2000-2001) and The Bedford Guide to Writing in the
Disciplines: An Instructor's Desk Reference (with Rebecca
Moore Howard). She has published articles and chapters on
information literacy, research, plagiarism, reading, the writing
major, writing across the curriculum, the vertical writing
curriculum, textbooks, and multicultural education.
Barry Maid is Professor and Founding Head of the Technical
Communication Program at Arizona State University. He was head of
that program for ten years. Previously, he was Chair of English at
the University of Arkansas at Little Rock where he helped lead the
creation of the Department of Rhetoric and Writing. He is the
author of numerous articles and chapters primarily focusing on
technology, independent writing programs, and program
administration including assessment. He and Barbara D'Angelo have
written multiple articles on information literacy and writing. In
addition, he is a co-author, with Duane Roen and Greg Glau,
of The McGraw-Hill Guide: Writing for College, Writing for
Life.
Janice R. Walker is Professor of Writing and Linguistics and
Chair of the Institutional Review Board (IRB) at Georgia Southern
University. She has published journal articles, book chapters, and
books about online research, documentation, intellectual property,
and information literacy, including The Columbia Guide to
Online Style (with Todd Taylor); Bookmarks: A Guide to
Writing and Research (with John Ruszkiewicz and Michael A.
Pemberton); and TNT: Texts and Technology (with Ollie O.
Oviedo). She is founder and coordinator of the Graduate Research
Network at the annual Computers and Writing Conference and
co-coordinator for the Georgia Conference on Information Literacy
hosted annually by Georgia Southern University. Her current
research includes serving as the Principal Investigator for the
LILAC Project (Learning Information Literacy across the
Curriculum), a multi-institutional study of students' online
information-seeking behaviors.
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