Advances in information technology and the growth in information have contributed to information overload. These developments have directly influenced the knowledge and range of skills required by the University community to access, evaluate, manage, analyse and communicate information.
Information Literacy contributes to the achievement of several of the University's Graduate Qualities.
An information literate person is able to
Information literate students are information smart. Are you information smart?
An information smart student
Become a savvy information consumer and an autonomous and capable learner - take a look at InfoGate
A partnership approach to developing Information Literacy- academics and librarians working together
Information literacy is another term for the ability to locate, evaluate, analyse and effectively utilise new knowledge.
Information literacy contributes to the achievement of several of the University's Graduate qualities, in particular operating effectively with and upon a body of knowledge, being aware of what is happening internationally, communicating effectively and being prepared for lifelong learning.
Integrating information literacy into the curricula can be a collaboration between academic staff, learning advisors, and librarians. The discipline expertise of the teaching staff can be combined with the librarian's knowledge and skills to improve the expertise of students in finding and using quality information effectively now and in the future.
The Library contributes to the development of information literate students by
Skills and concepts associated with information are best woven into the curriculum's content, structure, and sequence. The Australian and New Zealand Information Literacy Framework (PDF 406kb, opens in new window) provides a scaffold for incremental integration of information literacy into the curriculum. Academic librarians can work with program and course coordinators in conjunction with learning advisors to design appropriate information literacy activities and assessed learning outcomes within the curriculum, based on best practice criteria.
Links to best practice and information literacy standards
Criteria for designing assignments
In order to embed information literacy into courses, the necessary information resources should be available. This will enable successful and timely completion of the assignment or learning activity. Academic librarians can assist with this.
Examples of best practice in information literacy
If you find any links have changed or you have some additions or feedback please contact Irene Doskatsch