Updating search results...

Search Resources

3 Results

View
Selected filters:
A Copyright-Friendly Toolkit
Rating
0.0 stars

A true digital citizen understands how to ethically use the works of others to build his or her own creative products—music, art, video, stories, presentations--and share them with the world.

Just as you’d want others to respect your originality, others expect the same of you when it comes to reusing and remixing their intellectual property. As you create and publish media yourself, please be conscious of how you use the work of others.

Here are some guidelines, categories, and tools to consider that will help you as you create, contribute to, and enrich our shared culture!

Subject:
Library and Information Science
Material Type:
Lesson
Author:
Joyce Valenza
Date Added:
11/15/2023
“First years' information literacy backpacks: What's already packed or not packed?”
Only Sharing Permitted
CC BY-NC-ND
Rating
0.0 stars

Article Abstract: This survey-based research explores whether first-year college students who have had previous interactions with
library instruction, services, and resources at the high school level are better prepared to undertake information
literacy challenges and are better equipped to adapt to the rigors of academic research. In this collaborative
project, academic librarians across six colleges in New Jersey surveyed first-year students regarding their
research preparation and their experiences in high school and in their first year of college. Additionally, the team
surveyed a group of vetted, certified high school librarians in New Jersey regarding their resources and
instructional practices and followed members of their senior class to college Based on student survey responses
relating to their high school experiences, the team was able to identify, study, and compare three groups of first-
year students: novice researchers, non-novice researchers, and a subset of non-novices from the high schools with
vetted librarians. These were labeled alumni non-novices. The team found that students with prior high school
research experiences (non-novices), especially those followed from schools identified as having certified li-
brarians (alumni non-novices), felt more prepared for academic research and performed at a higher level relating
to their understanding and use of research tools and strategies. The results point to equity concerns and suggest
that students require differentiated attention at the college level.

Subject:
Library and Information Science
Material Type:
Reference Material
Author:
Brenda Boyer
Cara Berg
Ewa Dziedzic-Elliott
Gihan Mohamad
Heather Dalal
Joan Dalrymple
Leslin H. Charles
Megan Dempsey
Rebecca Bushby
Joyce Kasman Valenza
Date Added:
10/27/2023
The newly reimagined Empire State Information Fluency Continuum — @joycevalenza NeverEndingSearch
Restricted Use
Copyright Restricted
Rating
0.0 stars

Joyce Valenza highlights the work New York State has done with library curriculum and includes many helpful links.

Subject:
Library and Information Science
Material Type:
Curriculum Map
Reference Material
Author:
Joyce Valenza
Margaret Lincoln
Mary Reilley-clark
Todd Hillmer
Date Added:
10/30/2019