Improving Students Web Use and Information Literacy

Improving Students  Web Use and Information Literacy
Author: James E. Herring
Publsiher: Facet Publishing
Total Pages: 161
Release: 2011
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781856047432

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Offers advice, strategies, and tips to help school library personnel evaluate, use, teach, and develop Internet resources more effectively.

The Facet Information Literacy Collection

The Facet Information Literacy Collection
Author: Helen Blanchett,Chris Powis,Jo Webb,Phil Bradley,Jane Devine,Francine Egger-Sider,James E. Herring,Thomas P. Mackey,Trudi E. Jacobson,Joan R. Kaplowitz
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 1984
Release: 2015-08-31
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 1783300876

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The Facet Information Literacy Collection contains everything librarians and educators need to know to develop and deliver effective programmes to support information literacy, web use and internet searching. The Collection includes eight books from the world’s leading information literacy experts and practitioners. The books included are; 1) A Guide to Teaching Information Literacy: 101 tips by Helen Blanchett, Chris Powis and Jo Webb; 2) Expert Internet Searching, 4th edition by Phil Bradley; 3) Going Beyond Google Again: Strategies for using and teaching the invisible web by Jane Devine and Francine Egger-Sider; 4) Improving Students' Web Use and Information Literacy: A guide for teachers and teacher librarians by James E Herring; 5) Information Literacy Beyond Library 2.0, edited by Peter Godwin and Jo Parker; 6) Metaliteracy: Reinventing information literacy to empower learners by Thomas P Mackey and Trudi E Jacobson; 7) Rethinking Information Literacy: A practical framework for supporting learning, edited by Jane Secker and Emma Coonan; and 8) Transforming Information Literacy Using Learner-centered Teaching by Joan R Kaplowitz.

Information Literacy Separating Fact from Fiction

Information Literacy  Separating Fact from Fiction
Author: Sara Armstrong,Pamela Brunskill
Publsiher: Teacher Created Materials
Total Pages: 202
Release: 2017-09-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 9781425817565

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People today live in a world of information overload. Each day, information is shared from countless sources through numerous devices. Learning how to handle this onslaught of information has become a vital task for everyone. By the time they reach upper elementary school, most students are using smart phones, tablets and computers to access social media, video websites, online forums, wikis, blogs, and interactive digital games. Students need guidance on how to analyze online information sources, critically think about the content, and apply it to their decision-making. This essential professional resource includes everything that teachers need to help students achieve digital literacy, and includes activities and easy-to-use templates to support teachers as they teach the key skills of analyzing and understanding online information. This book consists of three sections: Finding Information, Analyzing Information, and Using Information. The topics covered include: an introduction to information literacy; search techniques and strategies; asking and answering good questions; thinking visually; organizing information; online civic reasoning; analyzing online sources; using technology to teach; project-based learning with technology. With the amount of online information sources increasing exponentially, this book will equip teachers with the tools they need to help their students become global citizens and 21st century thinkers.

NetSavvy

NetSavvy
Author: Ian Jukes,Anita Dosaj,Bruce Macdonald
Publsiher: Corwin Press
Total Pages: 164
Release: 2000-05-19
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0761975659

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This easy-to-follow guide can help students and teachers ' even the most technology-resistant ' learn to solve problems from sources like Internet sites, news groups, chat rooms, e-mail, and other Internet resources. Topics include: Creating your own lesson plans using sample lesson planners Applying frameworks for grade-level objectives and skills Dealing with information-technology overload Solving any information challenge with six critical steps Helping students harness the web with simple tips An important resource for today's classroom, Net Savvy can help educators become leaders rather than followers in the new high-tech, high-speed, digital era.

Designing Online Information Literacy Games Students Want to Play

Designing Online Information Literacy Games Students Want to Play
Author: Karen Markey,Chris Leeder,Soo Young Rieh
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 303
Release: 2014-03-12
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780810891432

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Designing Online Information Literacy Games Students Want to Play sets the record straight with regard to the promise of games for motivating and teaching students in educational environments. The authors draw on their experience designing the BiblioBouts information literacy game, deploying it in dozens of college classrooms across the country, and evaluating its effectiveness for teaching students how to conduct library research. The multi-modal evaluation of BiblioBouts involved qualitative and quantitative data collection methods and analyses. Drawing on the evaluation, the authors describe how students played this particular information literacy game and make recommendations for the design of future information literacy games. You’ll learn how the game’s design evolved in response to student input and how students played the game including their attitudes about playing games to develop information literacy skills and concepts specifically and playing educational games generally. The authors describe how students benefited as a result of playing the game. Drawing from their own first-hand experience, research, and networking, the authors feature best practices that educators and game designers in LIS specifically and other educational fields generally need to know so that they build classroom games that students want to play. Best practices topics covered include pre-game instruction, rewards, feedback, the ability to review/change actions, ideal timing, and more. The final section of the book covers important concepts for future information literacy game design.

Achieving Information Literacy

Achieving Information Literacy
Author: Marlene Asselin,Jennifer Lynne Branch,Dianne Oberg,Canadian School Library Association,Association for Teacher-Librarianship in Canada
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 90
Release: 2003
Genre: Information literacy
ISBN: 0888023014

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The Internet and Information Skills

The Internet and Information Skills
Author: James E. Herring
Publsiher: Facet Publishing
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2004
Genre: Computers
ISBN: UOM:39015058279103

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Internet access is now the norm in primary and secondary schools. This text provides teachers and school librarians with the ability to effectively exploit the internet as both a learning and teaching resource; to improve their skills in accessing relevant parts of the internet to improving their teaching.

Information Literacy Beyond Library 2 0

Information Literacy Beyond Library 2 0
Author: Peter Godwin,Jo Parker
Publsiher: Facet Publishing
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2012-03-23
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9781856047623

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This book offers practical strategies for all library and information practitioners and policy makers with responsibility for developing and delivering information literacy programmes to their users. This new book picks up where the best-selling Information Literacy meets Library 2.0 left off. In the last three years the information environment has changed dramatically, becoming increasingly dominated by the social and the mobile. This new book asks where we are now, what is the same and what has changed, and, most crucially, how do we as information professionals respond to the new information literacy and become a central part of the revolution itself? The book is divided into three distinct sections. Part 1 explores the most recent trends in technology, consumption and literacy, while Part 2 is a resource bank of international case studies that demonstrate the key trends and their effect on information literacy and offer innovative ideas to put into practice. Part 3 assesses the impact of these changes on librarians and what skills and knowledge they must acquire to evolve alongside their users. Some of the key topics covered are: • the evolution of ‘online’ into the social web as mainstream • the use of social media tools in information literacy • the impact of mobile devices on information literacy delivery • shifting literacies, such as metaliteracy, transliteracy and media literacy, and their effect on information literacy. Readership: This is essential reading for all library and information practitioners and policy makers with responsibility for developing and delivering information literacy programmes to their users. It will also be of great interest to students of library and information studies particularly for modules relating to literacy, information behaviour and digital technologies.