Can you teach all of the people some of the time? The development and evaluation of information literacy programs at the University of Queensland Library
Information skills and computer literacy are now seen by many within the academic community as essential. They are key graduate attributes required by students for lifelong learning and leadership roles in business and industry, government and society. Trends in the higher education sector bringing a renewed focus to teaching and preparing students for a global knowledge economy are outlined.
This paper focuses upon the power of a teaching and learning policy framework which supports the integration of information literacy into the curriculum. The increasing ease with which collaborative partnerships are formed between academic planners, course coordinators and librarians is highlighted by case studies of successful programs. Challenges are identified and change strategies described.
History
Pagination
1 - 13
Location
Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
Open access
Yes
Start date
2000-10-24
End date
2000-10-26
Language
eng
Publication classification
E1.1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2000, ALIA
Title of proceedings
ALIA 2000 : Capitalising on knowledge, the information profession in the 21st century : Proceedings of the 2000 ALIA Biennial Conference