63 results on '"Information literacy"'
Search Results
2. Exploring the Role of Information Literacy Instruction in Student Co-Creation of Community-Based Research Products
- Author
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Robyn Hall
- Abstract
Supported by institutional commitments to community engagement, undergraduate students at universities across North America are participating in community-based research projects. These experiential learning activities allow students to collaborate with community partners to address issues in their communities, often resulting in co-creating research products that seek to have a real-world impact. This article reports on ways that academic librarians can support students engaged in these activities, informed by interview data gathered from university administrators and faculty members from across Canada with expertise in conducting and overseeing students' participation in research connected to university--community partnerships. This growing area of scholarly activity in higher education provides instruction librarians with unique opportunities to teach students valuable information literacy skills tied to knowledge equity, representing a threshold concept that recognizes students' abilities to create new knowledge that strives to be accessible, inclusive, and done in an ethical manner that serves community interests.
- Published
- 2023
3. The Information Literacy Class as Theatrical Performance: A Qualitative Study of Academic Librarians' Understanding of Their Teacher Identity
- Author
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Mark Aaron Polger
- Abstract
This qualitative study examines how academic librarians understand, conceptualize, and describe their teacher identity. The role of the academic librarian has greatly changed due to the advent of information technology. Traditionally, they were generalists, who were responsible for selecting and maintaining library collections. Academic librarian roles have evolved into web developers, information literacy (IL) instructors, emerging technology innovators, marketing and outreach coordinators, open education resources (OER) advocates, and scholarly communication experts. This research investigates the academic librarian as teacher phenomenon, how they describe their professional identity as teachers, the skills, knowledge, and competencies they teach, and their beliefs of how they are perceived by faculty. The author conducted interviews with six participants via Zoom. Using in vivo and descriptive coding, the author analyzed the interview data and three broad themes emerged: philosophy, identity, and perception. This study contributes to the literature of the importance of IL as a key facet of academic librarians' professional identity, their instructional role on campus, the increase in their teaching responsibilities, and how they describe their professional identity as teachers. Further, this research contributes to academic librarians' teaching practices and may inform LIS program administrators to update their curriculum and offer more courses on instruction, pedagogy, and learning theories. The study also illustrates a disconnect between academic librarians' lack of instructional preparedness and an increased demand for teaching among academic librarians.
- Published
- 2024
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4. 'In the Greater Context of the Field': What Undergraduate Reflections on the Research Process Tell us about Information Literacy
- Author
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Madelaine Vanderwerff, Sara Sharun, and Christopher Thomas
- Abstract
This study examines undergraduates' research practices, as described in reflective essays submitted in applications to a library research award. Thematic analysis of 24 student award essays identified three strong themes in student reflections about their research experiences. Students experienced research as a social process, made meaning closely tied to disciplinary ways of knowing and practicing, and underwent a transformative process from beginner to apprentice researchers. Through a discussion of these themes, the authors highlight implications for information literacy instruction and suggest this instruction be closely connected to disciplinary practices.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Effect of Information Literacy Training on Graduate Students' Ability to Use Library Resources
- Author
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Zhao, Shuzhen, Luo, Rong, Sabina, Christine, and Pillon, Karen
- Abstract
This study assessed the influence of information literacy training on graduate students' self-rated ability to search using academic databases and the internet to find information, as well as their objective information literacy skills through a survey in 2017 at the University of Windsor. After controlling for a comprehensive set of covariates, there was not a statistically significant difference in self-rated searching ability between students with training and those without any training. However, the trained students' average objective assessment scores in the five dimensions of information literacy were significantly higher than those of students without any training at the significant level [alpha]=0.05.
- Published
- 2023
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6. Three Shots Are Better than One: Establishing and Evaluating the English Library Instruction Pilot
- Author
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Amy McLay Paterson, Benjamin Mitchell, Stirling Prentice, and Elizabeth Rennie
- Abstract
In an attempt to expand Information Literacy (IL) instruction beyond the one-shot, the Thompson Rivers University (TRU) Library established the English Library Instruction Pilot (ELIP) in 2023- 2024. Students involved in the project participated in a series of three tutorials. The outcomes of the tutorials were aligned to both their Introduction to Academic Writing (English 1100) class and the "ACRL Framework for Information Literacy." In experimenting with the new model, we asked the following questions: (1) did the ELIP programme help students succeed in their associated English 1100 courses?; (2) does more integrated instruction aid in relationship-building between the library and the TRU community?; and (3) how can we improve our instruction practices to better meet student needs? This paper discusses the formation of the programme, the results from our evaluation of it, and reflects on future directions and improvements. Through an examination of student assignments, a faculty feedback survey, and reflective journaling of librarian instructors, we conclude that the programme helped students complete the outcomes of their associated English 1100 class. It also contributed to relationship-building between the library and the university community and helped significantly improve existing teaching practices and materials in the library. The ELIP programme is unique in its departure from both the one-shot and credit course IL models, and we hope that our reflections will encourage other librarians to reflect and experiment with their instructional spaces.
- Published
- 2024
7. A Faculty Workshop on Developing Students as Discipline-Situated Researchers
- Author
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William Badke, Elizabeth Kreiter, and Qinqin Zhang
- Abstract
The reference librarians of Trinity Western University have a strong mission-driven commitment to teach information literacy, but there is a significant contrast between the amount of instruction they can provide and the demanding task of developing all students as skilled researchers. The growing teach-the-teacher model suggested an option to enlist faculty in providing a larger portion of information literacy instruction themselves. With strong support from academic administration, three librarians devised an initial faculty workshop as part of the university's faculty professional development series, followed by four detailed weekly sessions. They based their activities on several factors: first, faculty members would need to be invited into a shared concern about student research; second, the librarians would not call for significant disruption of current curricula and teaching practices; and third, the workshops would focus on one basic idea--turning the assigned research project into a vehicle for developing students as researchers--rather than overwhelming faculty with multiple options. Faculty responded positively to the workshop series, and there are initial signs that faculty members are embracing the promoted concepts.
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- 2024
8. Exploring the Role of Information Literacy Instruction in Student Co-Creation of Community-Based Research Products.
- Author
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Hall, Robyn
- Subjects
COMMUNITY-based participatory research ,STUDENT engagement ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,INFORMATION literacy ,ACADEMIC librarians ,COLLEGE administrators ,STUDENT participation - Abstract
Supported by institutional commitments to community engagement, undergraduate students at universities across North America are participating in community-based research projects. These experiential learning activities allow students to collaborate with community partners to address issues in their communities, often resulting in co-creating research products that seek to have a real-world impact. This article reports on ways that academic librarians can support students engaged in these activities, informed by interview data gathered from university administrators and faculty members from across Canada with expertise in conducting and overseeing students' participation in research connected to university--community partnerships. This growing area of scholarly activity in higher education provides instruction librarians with unique opportunities to teach students valuable information literacy skills tied to knowledge equity, representing a threshold concept that recognizes students' abilities to create new knowledge that strives to be accessible, inclusive, and done in an ethical manner that serves community interests. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. "In the Greater Context of the Field": What Undergraduate Reflections on the Research Process Tell us about Information Literacy.
- Author
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Vanderwerff, Madelaine
- Subjects
QUALITATIVE research ,ACADEMIC libraries ,UNDERGRADUATES ,LIBRARIANS ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,LEARNING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,THEMATIC analysis ,EXPERIENCE ,STUDENTS ,INFORMATION literacy ,MEDICAL research ,AWARDS ,STUDENT attitudes ,WRITTEN communication - Abstract
This study examines undergraduates' research practices, as described in reflective essays submitted in applications to a library research award. Thematic analysis of 24 student award essays identified three strong themes in student reflections about their research experiences. Students experienced research as a social process, made meaning closely tied to disciplinary ways of knowing and practicing, and underwent a transformative process from beginner to apprentice researchers. Through a discussion of these themes, the authors highlight implications for information literacy instruction and suggest this instruction be closely connected to disciplinary practices. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Scaffolding Information Literacy Learning for Undergraduate Nursing Students: A Mixed-Method Exploration of Student IL Self-Efficacy.
- Author
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Croxen, Hanneke, Nelson, Jody, McKendrick-Calder, Lisa, and Wanhua Su
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PSYCHOLOGY of college students ,SOCIAL constructionism ,SELF-efficacy ,T-test (Statistics) ,JOURNAL writing ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,CONTENT analysis ,TEACHING methods ,CONFIDENCE ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,THEMATIC analysis ,INFORMATION literacy ,ABILITY ,LEARNING strategies ,DATA analysis software ,INDIVIDUAL development ,NURSING students ,TIME ,TRAINING ,EDUCATION - Published
- 2024
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11. Amplifying Value: Assessment of Asynchronous Embedded Library Instruction and the Influence of Faculty Endorsements.
- Author
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Keenan, Caitlin and Meredith, Will
- Subjects
T-test (Statistics) ,LIBRARY science ,HEALTH occupations students ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,LEARNING ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,INFORMATION literacy ,ONLINE education ,TEACHER-student relationships ,SENTIMENT analysis ,STAKEHOLDER analysis - Abstract
"Embedded" librarian programs can take many different forms. At Royal Roads University, librarians embed asynchronously in research-intensive courses via a hosted online forum. Over three to five days, the embedded librarian presents a series of posts on key information literacy topics and invites students' questions and comments. This research project undertook to investigate both the general effectiveness of this embedding approach (in terms of student learning and engagement) and the relationship that may exist between instructors' promotion of the forum and student engagement and/or learning. Quantitative data on student learning and engagement was collected through a pretest/post-test and qualitative data was collected from instructor comments within the LMS course shell. The results of this study indicate that embedding is moderately effective at increasing student knowledge, and that robust instructor encouragement of student participation correlates positively with both student engagement and student learning. We conclude that embedding is an effective information literacy instruction method that can be made more effective through increased relationship-building with faculty and program staff. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. A qualitative study of social sciences faculty research workflows.
- Author
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Ince, Sharon, Hoadley, Christopher, and Kirschner, Paul A.
- Subjects
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INFORMATION literacy , *SOCIAL scientists , *QUALITATIVE research , *SCHOLARLY communication , *INFORMATION resources management - Abstract
Purpose: This paper is a qualitative study of how social sciences faculty construct their research workflows with the help of technological tools. The purpose of this study is to examine faculty scholarly workflows and how both tools and practices support the research process. This paper could inform academic libraries on how to support scholars throughout the research process. Design/methodology/approach: This is a qualitative study case study of ten faculty members from six research universities from the United States and Canada. Semi-structured interviews were conducted and recorded. Atlas.ti was used to code and analyze the transcripts; each participant was a separate case. Descriptive coding was used to identify digital tools used for collaboration; process and descriptive coding was utilized to examine practices in scholarly workflows. Findings: Through case study analysis the results of this study include the role of technology in faculty research workflows. Each workflow was grouped into four categories: information literacy, information management, knowledge management, and scholarly communication. The findings included scholars creating simple workflows for efficiency and collaboration and utilizing workarounds. Research limitations/implications: The study did not observe faculty in the process of doing research and, thus, only reports on what the researchers say that they do. Originality/value: The research is unique in that there is almost no research on how social scientists conduct their research workflows and the affordances/impasses of this process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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13. Mapping the relationship between genres and tasks: A study of undergraduate engineers.
- Author
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Dodson, Samuel, Sinnamon, Luanne, and Kopak, Rick
- Subjects
SCHOOL environment ,CURRICULUM ,TASK performance ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,UNDERGRADUATES ,ENGINEERING ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,TEACHING methods ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PROFESSIONS ,INFORMATION literacy ,RESEARCH ,DATA analysis software ,ACCESS to information ,INFORMATION-seeking behavior - Abstract
This paper presents a study that explores the genres, tasks, and the relationship between them in the context of undergraduate engineering education. We build upon previous research on the information behaviors of engineers, by focusing on undergraduates' self‐reported information use in order to understand how they interact with genres and perform tasks. We compiled and validated genre and task repertoires using an online questionnaire with 103 undergraduates. To analyze the responses, we employed exploratory data analysis techniques, including correspondence analysis and cluster analysis. We interpreted three latent dimensions of the genre–task relationship: disciplinary versus education (Dimension 1); classroom versus independent coursework (Dimension 2); and conceptual versus procedural knowledge (Dimension 3). The distinction between the educational function of genres and tasks that support teaching and learning and those that support the socialization of students into the discipline and profession accounted for the majority of the variance in the dataset. The use of genres across tasks revealed that respondents prefer proximal and accessible information, and that personal and less formal genres are central to the learning experience. Findings provide insights into how undergraduates navigate complex information environments and interact with genres and tasks in their coursework. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Informing Algorithmic Literacy through User Folk Theories
- Author
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Michael Ridley
- Abstract
As part of a broader information literacy agenda, academic libraries are interested in advancing algorithmic literacy. Folk theories of algorithmic decision-making systems, such as recommender systems, can provide insights into designing and delivering enhanced algorithmic literacy initiatives. Users of the Spotify music recommendation systems were surveyed and interviewed to elicit their folk theories about how music recommendations are made. Seven folk theories emerged from this study and are grouped into four themes: agency, context, trust, and feelings. These four themes are used to illustrate how folk theories can inform algorithmic literacy programming and curricula.
- Published
- 2024
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15. Argument Visualization with DMaps: Cases from Postsecondary Learning
- Author
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John Nesbit, Qing Liu, Joan Sharp, Diana Cukierman, Holly Hendrigan, Daniel Chang, Bahareh Shahabi, Qingyan Deng, and Azar Pakdaman Savoji
- Abstract
The Dialectical Map (DMap) is an open-source, web-based argument visualization tool developed and used at a Canadian University to scaffold argument construction. To illustrate the ways that argument mapping can be used in undergraduate courses, this article presents five cases selected from courses in biology, psychology, computing science, and English as a foreign language offered at three post-secondary institutions. Each case explains how argument mapping with DMaps (DMapping) was implemented and assessed in a course. Students responded to a questionnaire that gathered their attitudes toward DMapping as a learning activity. In each course, students were also interviewed about their DMapping experiences. The interview and questionnaire data indicated that students believed DMapping was an effective way to meet the knowledge objectives of their course and to learn about argumentation. The authors explain how DMap assignments added value to their courses by helping students think critically about course topics while developing their argumentation ability and information literacy. Finally, we summarize the lessons learned across the cases and discuss ways of maximizing the benefits of argument mapping activities for postsecondary learning.
- Published
- 2024
16. Instruction Increases Canadian Students' Preference for and Use of Lateral Reading Strategies to Fact-Check Online Information
- Author
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Jessica E. Brodsky, Patricia J. Brooks, Dimitri Pavlounis, and Jessica Leigh Johnston
- Abstract
Canadian middle and high school students (N = 2,278) completed a "CTRL-F" curriculum teaching them how to evaluate online information by reading laterally to investigate sources, check claims, and trace information to original contexts. A subset of CTRL-F students (N = 316) were in classes with teacher-matched control groups (N = 287). Some CTRL-F students (N = 994) completed a delayed posttest. At pretest, students indicated preference for some lateral reading strategies, but preference rarely translated into use. Following instruction, CTRL-F students showed greater preference for and use of lateral reading than controls and greater alignment between preference and use. The curriculum's impact varied by demographic factors but not by differences in implementation. Gains were maintained from posttest to delayed posttest. Direct instruction and practice in lateral reading appear to strengthen connections between students' preferences and utilization of these strategies to evaluate online content relevant to academic and personal life.
- Published
- 2023
17. Learning and Teaching about Scholarly Communication: Findings from Graduate Students and Mentors
- Author
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Christie Hurrell, Susan Beatty, James E. Murphy, Dana Cramer, Jennifer Lee, and Caitlin McClurg
- Abstract
Graduate students are increasingly expected to publish peer-reviewed scholarship during the course of their studies, yet predictable mentoring and education on academic publishing is not available to all graduate students. Although academic librarians are well positioned to offer such instruction, their efforts are not always informed by comprehensive investigations of what, and how, graduate students need to learn. This study used focus groups with graduate students and faculty mentors to explore strengths and gaps in current mentoring and learning practices, while also discovering and uncovering suggestions and opportunities for further development in education about scholarly publishing. Thematic analysis of the data revealed that current training and mentorship meet some, but not all, of students' needs and preferences. Future library instruction should employ a blended and compassionate approach to teaching about this complex topic, and this study offers a way forward as librarians-as-partners in scholarly communication.
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- 2024
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18. Digital learning preferences of Arabic-speaking older immigrants in Canada: A qualitative case study.
- Author
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Au, Alesia, Siddiqi, Hesham, Sayadi, Ghada, Zhao, Tianqi, Kleib, Manal, Tong, Hongmei, and Salma, Jordana
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,DIGITAL technology ,LANGUAGE & languages ,RESEARCH funding ,QUALITATIVE research ,DIVERSITY & inclusion policies ,FOCUS groups ,KURDS ,INTERVIEWING ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,TRANSPORTATION ,ARABS ,COMMUNICATION ,INFORMATION literacy ,RESEARCH methodology ,LEARNING strategies ,CASE studies ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIAL support ,COVID-19 pandemic ,ACCESS to information ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the importance of digital inclusion for equitable and healthy aging. Older immigrants experience unique needs and challenges in using information and communication technologies compared to other older adults. Despite the proliferation of digital learning programs for older adults, there is minimal evidence of digital literacy learning needs and strategies relevant to older immigrants. The aim of this study is to explore learning approaches and digital engagement amongst Arabic-speaking older immigrants. This community-based qualitative descriptive study used co-designed group digital learning sessions. Two organizations supporting local ethnocultural communities in a municipality in Alberta, Canada recruited 31 older immigrants who spoke Arabic, Farsi, and Kurdish. Data collection included semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and observations of digital learning sessions. A total of seventeen learning sessions were completed with nineteen participants each attending five to six sessions. Findings highlight the iterative nature of the program sessions, the importance of catering to participants' interests, the relevance of peer support, and language, sensory and digital variability barriers to learning. Digital literacy programs for immigrant older adults should adjust for language learning needs, maintain a flexible approach, tailor lessons to individual needs, foster social support, and address external factors such as limited digital access and transportation barriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Barriers and Beliefs: A Comparative Case Study of How University Educators Understand the Datafication of Higher Education Systems
- Author
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Stewart, Bonnie, Miklas, Erica, Szcyrek, Samantha, and Le, Thu
- Abstract
In recent decades, higher education institutions around the world have come to depend on complex digital infrastructures. In addition to registration, financial, and other operations platforms, digital classroom tools with built-in learning analytics capacities underpin many course delivery options. Taken together, these intersecting digital systems collect vast amounts of data from students, staff, and faculty. Educators' work environments--and knowledge about their work environments--have been shifted by this rise in pervasive datafication. In this paper, we overview the ways faculty in a variety of institutional status positions and geographic locales understand this shift and make sense of the datafied infrastructures of their institutions. We present findings from a comparative case study (CCS) of university educators in six countries, examining participants' knowledge, practices, experiences, and perspectives in relation to datafication, while tracing patterns across contexts. We draw on individual, systemic, and historical axes of comparison to demonstrate that in spite of structural barriers to educator data literacy, professionals teaching in higher education do have strong and informed ethical and pedagogical perspectives on datafication that warrant greater attention. Our study suggests a distinction between the understandings educators have of data processes, or technical specifics of datafication on campuses, and their understanding of big picture data paradigms and ethical implications. Educators were found to be far more knowledgeable and comfortable in paradigm discussions than they were in process ones, partly due to structural barriers that limit their involvement at the process level.
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- 2023
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20. 2023 EDUCAUSE Horizon Action Plan: Data Governance
- Author
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EDUCAUSE, Robert, Jenay, and Reinitz, Betsy
- Abstract
More data are collected, analyzed, and stored now than at any other time in history. Data processes play a foundational role in just about every professional discipline, and data stakeholders all over the world are grappling with modernizing and optimizing data governance policies and practices. In this rapidly evolving landscape, what challenges will higher education face? A panel of higher education data and analytics experts from a range of institutions in the United States and Canada met to tackle these questions, focusing on their hopes for the state of higher education in 10 years. Using a 10-year horizon provides the data and analytics community an opportunity to consider significant advancements in society, technology, politics, the economy, and the environment, without looking so far into the future that any projections become unrealistic. Building on the trends, technologies, and practices described in the "2022 EDUCAUSE Horizon Report: Data and Analytics Edition," (ED626554) the panel crafted its vision of the future along with practical action items the data and analytics community can employ to make this future a reality. [For the "2023 EDUCAUSE Horizon Report: Teaching and Learning Edition," see ED630133.]
- Published
- 2023
21. Maternal Experience with Online Information on Parenting and Infant Care: Qualitative Findings from Quebec, Canada.
- Author
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Loignon, Christine, Gottin, Thomas, Rahem, Narimene, Lafrenière, Darquise, Turcotte, Emmanuelle, El Sherif, Reem, Lagarde, François, Doray, Geneviève, and Pluye, Pierre
- Subjects
EVALUATION of medical care ,ATTITUDES of mothers ,INFANT care ,CONFIDENCE ,MEDICINE information services ,INTERNET ,RESEARCH methodology ,PSYCHOLOGY of mothers ,SOCIAL networks ,INTERVIEWING ,PARENTING ,INFORMATION literacy ,QUALITATIVE research ,HEALTH literacy ,SELF-efficacy ,HEALTH information services ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,QUALITY of life ,SOCIAL classes ,THEMATIC analysis ,HEALTH self-care - Abstract
Use of online health information is positively associated with citizen knowledge, empowerment, self-care, health outcomes, and quality of life. However, little is known about how mothers with incomes below the poverty threshold and with education levels of high school or less use and interact with the Internet as a key source of lay knowledge and skills for infant care and childrearing. Our objective in this study was to understand mothers' perceptions of their experience in using online information for these purposes. To obtain a rich and nuanced understanding of their experience, we used a qualitative study approach based on 40 individual semi-structured interviews with mothers. Adopting Freidson's concept of "lay referral system" to grasp mothers' experience with online parenting information, we found that they relied on this information source extensively. Our findings showed that Internet-based information and online interactions were part of their lay referral system and modified to some extent how they interacted with their lay consultants (family and friends). Three major themes emerged in relation to how the Internet functioned as a component of the mothers' lay referral systems: (1) strategic use of the Internet for better parenting; (2) critical stance towards the Internet; and (3) strengthening of autonomy, skills, and self-confidence. Mothers with spouses and an active social network were more likely to use online information to complement information obtained from their entourage or from professionals than were mothers with a less active social network or who were more socially isolated. Highlights: Mothers with incomes below the poverty threshold and with low educational attainment made extensive use of Internet-based information for child care and parenting. Mothers applied critical judgment to use online information strategically. For some mothers, information obtained or shared on the Internet replace conversations with family members or professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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22. Canadian nursing and genomics: An engagement initiative.
- Author
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Carlsson, Lindsay and Limoges, Jacqueline
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BREAST tumor diagnosis ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,ONCOLOGY nursing ,SEQUENCE analysis ,NURSING schools ,LEADERSHIP ,FAMILY medicine ,MEDICAL technology ,EARLY detection of cancer ,NURSING practice ,INFORMATION literacy ,LABOR supply ,GENOMICS ,NURSES ,GENETIC counseling ,CANCER patient medical care ,FAMILY history (Medicine) - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Oncology Nursing Journal is the property of Pappin Communications and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
23. A comparative systematic scan of COVID-19 health literacy information sources for Canadian university students.
- Author
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Mahmood, Sana, Lobendino Flores, John Vincent, Di Ruggiero, Erica, Ardiles, Paola, Elhagehassan, Hussein, and Purewal, Simran
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INFORMATION literacy ,HEALTH literacy ,COLLEGE students ,INFORMATION resources ,STUDENT health - Abstract
Introduction: With the rapid spread of online coronavirus-related health information, it is important to ensure that this information is reliable and effectively communicated. This study observes the dissemination of COVID-19 health literacy information by Canadian postsecondary institutions aimed at university students as compared to provincial and federal government COVID-19 guidelines. Methods: We conducted a systematic scan of web pages from Canadian provincial and federal governments and from selected Canadian universities to identify how health information is presented to university students. We used our previously implemented health literacy survey with Canadian postsecondary students as a sampling frame to determine which academic institutions to include. We then used specific search terms to identify relevant web pages using Google and integrated search functions on government websites, and compared the information available on pandemic measures categorized by university response strategies, sources of expertise and branding approaches. Results: Our scan of Canadian government and university web pages found that universities similarly created one main page for COVID-19 updates and information and linked to public sector agencies as a main resource, and mainly differed in their provincial and local sources for obtaining information. They also differed in their strategies for communicating and displaying this information to their respective students. Conclusion: The universities in our sample outlined similar policies for their students, aligning with Canadian government public health recommendations and their respective provincial or regional health authorities. Maintaining the accuracy of these information sources is important to ensure student health literacy and counter misinformation about COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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24. Comparative Assessment of the Mountainous River Basin in Kyrgyz-Kazakh Region of Central Asia with River Basins in Australia, Canada and USA.
- Author
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Kurishbaev, Akylbek, Amanzholova, Raushan, Adenova, Dinara, Sagin, Janay, Burlibayeva, Diana, Sarsekova, Dani, Alikhanov, Kuantar, Serikkanov, Abay, and King, Rebecca
- Subjects
WATERSHEDS ,CLIMATE change ,WATER shortages ,METEOROLOGICAL precipitation - Abstract
Central Asia is among the most heavily affected regions worldwide by climate change and water shortages. Impacts include changes in precipitation patterns, more frequent temperature extremes and increased aridity causing a negative impact on agricultural production, food availability, and environmental security. To combat this threat, it is important to enhance information literacy among all water users. This can be done through awareness campaigns, blended learning by providing the proper Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) programs and utilizing all available facilities. This will address relevant issues, such as miscommunication, complexities of transboundary water sharing issues, overexploitation of water resources, and poor flood-drought mitigation techniques. Proper and user-friendly lifelong blended learning for scientific information dissemination focusing water issues can provide stronger support to increase awareness among water users and decision policy makers. Worldwide, especially in North America and Australia, information literacy campaigns have proven successful. This strategy can be replicated in the Mountainous Kyrgyz-Kazakh Chu-Talas transboundary river basin. The issues concerning the Mountainous KyrgyzKazakh Chu-Talas transboundary river basin is elaborated and compared with Australian, Canadian, and US river basin management programs. The foresight analysis is presented, as to what would be a rationale to improve water resources more sustainably in Central Asia. Methodologies, programs, technologies, communities-based river basin committees, snow-water collection with agroforestry, and basin-based water market opportunities were analyzed to assess potential applications in Central Asia region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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25. "They act like we are going to heaven": pre-arrival information experiences, information crafting and settlement of immigrants in Canada.
- Author
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Shuva, Nafiz Zaman
- Subjects
INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,IMMIGRANTS ,HEAVEN ,INFORMATION resources ,SEMI-structured interviews ,HELP-seeking behavior - Abstract
Purpose: Although there is a growing body of work on immigrants' information behavior, little is known about the pre-arrival information experiences of immigrants who consult formal information sources such as immigration agents. Drawn from a larger study on the information behavior of immigrants, this paper mainly reports the semi-structured interview findings on the pre-arrival information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants who used formal information sources with discussion on how that affected their post-arrival settlement into Canada. Design/methodology/approach: The study used a mixed method approach with semi-structured interviews (n = 60) and surveys (n = 205) with participants who arrived in Canada between the years of 1971 and 2017. Data were collected from May 2017 to February 2018. Findings: Although the overall scope of the original study is much larger, this paper features findings on the pre-arrival information experiences derived mainly from an analysis of interview data. This study provides insights into the pre-arrival information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants consulting formal information sources such as immigration firms, individual immigration consultants and more formal government agencies. The author introduces a new concept of "information crafting" by exploring the negative consequences of selective information sharing by immigration consultants/agents in newcomers' settlements in Canada, primarily positive information about life in Canada, sometimes with exaggeration and falsification. The interview participants shared story after the story of the settlement challenges they faced after arriving in Canada and how the expectations they built through the information received from immigration consultants and government agencies did not match after arrival. This study emphasizes the importance of providing comprehensive information about life in Canada to potential newcomers so that they can make informed decisions even before they apply. Originality/value: The findings of this study have theoretical and practical implications for policy and research. This study provides insights into the complicated culturally situated pre-arrival information experiences of Bangladeshi immigrants. Moreover, the study findings encourage researchers in various disciplines, including psychology, migration studies and geography, to delve more deeply into newcomers' information experiences using an informational lens to examine the information newcomers receive from diverse sources and their effects on their post-arrival settlement in a new country. The study challenges the general assumptions that formal information sources are always reputable, useful, and comprehensive, and it provides some future directions for research that seeks to understand the culturally situated information behavior of diverse immigrant groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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26. The protective power of dissent? A longitudinal study on cognitive and socio-emotional determinants of COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy among young people in Canada.
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Miconi, Diana, Levinsson, Anna, Kafi, Mohammed Abdullah Heel, Ngov, Cindy, Santavicca, Tara, and Rousseau, Cécile
- Subjects
MEDICAL protocols ,IMMUNIZATION ,COGNITIVE testing ,SOCIAL determinants of health ,HEALTH attitudes ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,RESEARCH funding ,VACCINATION ,COVID-19 vaccines ,EMOTIONS ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,SOCIAL theory ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,LONGITUDINAL method ,VACCINE hesitancy ,TRUST ,SOCIAL support ,COVID-19 - Abstract
COVID-19 has elicited polarized reactions to public health measures, fueling anti-vaccination movements worldwide which indicate that vaccine hesitancy represents a common expression of dissent. We investigate changes in cognitive (i.e., trust in government, conspiracy beliefs, vaccine attitudes, and other COVID-19-related factors) and socio-emotional factors (i.e., psychological distress and social support) over time, and examine if these factors are associated with COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. A sample of Canadian young adults (N = 2,695; 18 to 40 years old) responded to an online survey in May/June 2021 (after the first vaccination campaign) and then in November 2021 (after vaccine mandates were introduced). Based on survey answers, participants were categorized as "not hesitant", "hesitant", and "do not intend to get vaccinated" at each time point. Results from generalized estimating equation models indicate that vaccination hesitancy decreased over time. The importance attributed to specific COVID-19-related factors (e.g., research and science about COVID-19 vaccines, opinions of friends and family) decreased whereas psychological distress increased over time. Cognitive and socio-emotional factors were associated with vaccine hesitancy, with participants who did not intend to get vaccinated reporting the lowest psychological distress scores. We argue that dissent may be an empowering way for young people to restore a sense of personal agency via the opposition to a system perceived as illegitimate and/or unfair. These results raise important questions about potential collateral effects of top-down government and public health interventions in times of crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Contested imaginaries: workfinding information practices of STEM-trained immigrant women in Canada.
- Author
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Caidi, Nadia, Muzaffar, Saadia, and Kalbfleisch, Elizabeth
- Subjects
WOMEN immigrants ,EMPLOYER attitudes ,LABOR market ,SKILLED labor ,EMPLOYEE selection ,CANADIAN provinces - Abstract
Purpose: This pan-Canadian study examines the information practices of STEM-trained immigrant women to Canada as they navigate workfinding and workplace integration. Our study focuses on a population of highly skilled immigrant women from across Canada and uses an information practice lens to examine their lived experiences of migration and labour market integration. As highly trained STEM professionals in pursuit of employment, our participants have specific needs and challenges, and as we explore these, we consider the intersection of their information practices with government policies, settlement services and the hiring practices of STEM employers. Design/methodology/approach: We conducted a qualitative study using in-depth interviews with 74 immigrant women across 13 Canadian provinces and territories to understand the nature of their engagement with employment-seeking in STEM sectors. This article reports the findings related to the settlement and information experiences of the immigrant women as they navigate new information landscapes. Findings: As immigrants, as women and as STEM professionals, the experiences of the 74 participants reflect both marginality and privilege. The reality of their intersectional identities is that these women may not be well-served by broader settlement resources targeting newcomers, but neither are the specific conventions of networking and job-seeking in the STEM sectors in Canada fully apparent or accessible to them. The findings also point to the broader systemic and contextual factors that participants have to navigate and that shape in a major way their workfinding journeys. Originality/value: The findings of this pan-Canadian study have theoretical and practical implications for policy and research. Through interviews with these STEM professionals, we highlight the barriers and challenges of an under-studied category of migrants (the highly skilled and "desirable" type of immigrants). We provide a critical discussion of their settlement experiences and expose the idiosyncrasies of a system that claims to value skilled talent while structurally making it very difficult to deliver on its promises to recruit and retain highly qualified personnel. Our findings point to specific aspects of these skilled professionals' experiences, as well as the broader systemic and contextual factors that shape their workfinding journey. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Impact of Library Instruction Tutorial Format on Student Preference and Performance in First-Year Chemistry
- Author
-
Tara Stieglitz and Lindsey Whitson
- Abstract
This research study investigates the effects of library instruction tutorial format (written versus video) on student preference and performance in chemistry education. The authors assessed the format of tutorials used to provide library instruction in an introductory chemistry course by observing 27 student participants as they took in instructions in either a video or a written format and then completed two chemistry information tasks. While participants expressed strong preferences for particular formats, neither the video tutorials nor the written instructions significantly improved task completion speed or performance. Rather, the authors determined that student preference alone is enough to justify the continued production of multiple versions of instructions for the same assignment.
- Published
- 2023
29. "So, We Decided to Make a Film": Arts-Based Knowledge Translation and/in Information Research.
- Author
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Kalbfleisch, Elizabeth, Muzaffar, Saadia, and Caidi, Nadia
- Subjects
FILMMAKING ,WOMEN immigrants ,ANIMATED films ,INFORMATION professionals ,RESEARCH personnel ,INFORMATION science - Abstract
Researchers in information science and related fields have traditionally focused on published research and syntheses of research findings. While these mechanisms are crucial for knowledge dissemination, we advocate for more innovative knowledge translation and mobilization efforts. To illustrate this, we present a unique case study on the employment-seeking practices of immigrant women in STEM in Canada. This study stands out for its groundbreaking arts-based knowledge deliverables, including an animated film, a novel approach that was instrumental in our knowledge dissemination and translation efforts. We delve into the study, the rationale behind these deliverables, and the significance of this approach for information science professionals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Learning and Teaching about Scholarly Communication: Findings from Graduate Students and Mentors.
- Author
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Hurrell, Christie, Beatty, Susan, Murphy, James E., Cramer, Dana, Lee, Jennifer, and McClurg, Caitlin
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL roles ,STATISTICS ,TEACHER-student relationships ,TEACHING methods ,FOCUS groups ,CONFIDENCE ,SCHOLARLY communication ,ACADEMIC libraries ,HEALTH occupations students ,TIME ,MENTORING ,COLLEGE teacher attitudes ,CURRICULUM ,LEARNING strategies ,COMPASSION ,EDUCATORS ,UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,MASTERS programs (Higher education) ,DOCTORAL programs ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,RESEARCH funding ,STUDENT attitudes ,THEMATIC analysis ,NEEDS assessment ,INFORMATION needs ,WRITTEN communication - Abstract
Graduate students are increasingly expected to publish peer-reviewed scholarship during the course of their studies, yet predictable mentoring and education on academic publishing is not available to all graduate students. Although academic librarians are well positioned to offer such instruction, their efforts are not always informed by comprehensive investigations of what, and how, graduate students need to learn. This study used focus groups with graduate students and faculty mentors to explore strengths and gaps in current mentoring and learning practices, while also discovering and uncovering suggestions and opportunities for further development in education about scholarly publishing. Thematic analysis of the data revealed that current training and mentorship meet some, but not all, of students' needs and preferences. Future library instruction should employ a blended and compassionate approach to teaching about this complex topic, and this study offers a way forward as librarians-as-partners in scholarly communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Applying Librarian-Created Evaluation Tools to Determine Quality and Credibility of Open Access Library Science Journals.
- Author
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Albro, Maggie, Serrao, Jessica L., Vidas, Christopher D., McElfresh, Jenessa M., Sheffield, K. Megan, and Palmer, Megan
- Subjects
EXPERIMENTAL design ,PROFESSIONAL peer review ,LIBRARY science ,RESEARCH methodology ,SERIAL publications ,QUANTITATIVE research ,CITATION analysis ,PREDATORY publishing ,OPEN access publishing ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,LIBRARIANS - Abstract
This article explores the application of journal quality and credibility evaluation tools to library science publications. The researchers investigate quality and credibility attributes of forty-eight peer-reviewed library science journals with open access components using two evaluative tools developed and published by librarians. The results identify common positive and negative attributes of library science journals, compare the results of the two evaluation tools, and discuss their ease of use and limitations. Overall, the results show that while library science journals do not fall prey to the same concerning characteristics that librarians use to caution other researchers, there are several areas in which publishers can improve the quality and credibility of their journals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Application of Artificial Intelligence for Reference Services in Academic Libraries: A Global Overview through a Systematic Review of Literature.
- Author
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Tella, Adeyinka
- Subjects
ACADEMIC libraries ,LIBRARY reference services ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,NATURAL language processing ,INTELLIGENCE service ,AUTODIDACTICISM ,PROBLEM-based learning - Abstract
This study examines through a systematic review, the reference services rendered in academic libraries using artificial intelligence (AI) and by collecting data through environmental scanning. The objective of this systematic literature review is to provide a synthesis of empirical studies exploring the application of artificial intelligence for reference services in academic libraries. Data were collected from Web of Science, Scopus, and LISA databases. Following the rigorous/established selection process, a total of thirty five articles were finally selected, reviewed and analyzed. Thirty five papers were identified, analyzed and summarized on the subject relating to the application of AI and the methods which are most often used. The findings demonstrate that university libraries in Canada and China are leading in the deployment of AI for reference services. The AI techniques used mostly in the scanned university libraries are self-directed learning and natural language processing techniques; while the challenges of using AI for reference services are the problem of quality intelligence, linguistic style, privacy, a threat to intellectual freedom, bias, and cost; inadequate experts, poor network, poor training and lack of innovation, and limited knowledge about the technology. The study indicates university libraries take into account implementing AI for reference services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Social Work Student Experiences of Completing Internships in Canada During COVID-19: Application of a Remote Learning Plan.
- Author
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Arundel, M.K., Morrison, Sarah, Mantulak, Andrew, and Csiernik, Rick
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIAL work students ,INTERNSHIP programs ,DISTANCE education ,SARS disease ,ONLINE education - Abstract
On March 11, 2020, the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic as a result of the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus, a severe acute respiratory syndrome. Public health authorities throughout Canada were emphasizing early detection, physical distancing, hand washing, sheltering in place through household and self-isolation, and the closing of schools and businesses. For universities it meant the cancelation of classes and an immediate move to virtual or online learning to finish semesters, some of which were within weeks of completion, others that were just beginning. For the School of Social Work at King's University College, London, Ontario, Canada, the restrictions and limitations imposed by the pandemic had far reaching implications that went beyond a disruption in classroom instruction and also meant terminating or suspending field practicums. Rather than having student learning succumb to the virus, the School of Social Work instituted a creative solution that involved the students developing Remote Learning Plans with the support of their Field Instructors and Faculty Consultants who would serve to minimize the disruption to the students' learning. This study explores the student experience in moving to remote learning plans – specifically what challenges, changes, and opportunities for growth it provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Reiterating Visibility: Canadian Librarians' Experiences of Racial Microaggressions via Findings from a Minority Librarians Network Redux Survey.
- Author
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Yanli Li, Kumaran, Maha, Cho, Allan, Ly, Valentina, Fernando, Suzanne, and Miller, Michael David
- Subjects
MICROAGGRESSIONS ,GENDER identity ,LIBRARIANS ,LIBRARIANS' attitudes ,EVIDENCE gaps ,FISHER exact test ,RACE ,ACADEMIC librarians ,ETHNIC groups - Abstract
Based on the data from the Visible Minority Librarians of Canada 2021 Redux Survey, this study examines experiences of racial microaggressions among visible minority librarians in Canada. This research fills the gap in the library and information science (LIS) literature regarding racial microaggressions in librarianship in the Canadian context. Of the 148 respondents, 69% (n=102) experienced at least one stated racial microaggression. The result of a Kruskal-Wallis H test revealed a significant association between years of experience as a librarian and a librarian's overall experiences with microaggressions. A post hoc test based on Bonferroni correction was run, which indicated that librarians with less than five years of work experience encountered microaggressions less frequently compared to those with 11-15 years of experience. For the ten stated types of racial microaggressions, the most frequently reported type was "I was told that people of all racial groups face the same barriers in employment or promotion," and the least frequently reported type was "A colleague claimed that he/she felt threatened because of my race." Fisher's exact tests were further performed to examine how the respondents differed in their experiences of each microaggression. The test results revealed that the librarians with different personal attributes (ethnicity, disability status, gender identity, language used) and employment attributes (librarian experience, management position, library type) had significantly different encounters with eight forms of microaggression. Professional library associations and libraries must strengthen education about racial microaggressions and offer support to visible minority librarians when they are confronted with microaggressive behaviours. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Academic health sciences libraries' outreach and engagement with North American Indigenous communities: a scoping review.
- Author
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Cruise, Allison, Ellsworth-Kopkowski, Alexis, Villezcas, A. Nydia, Eldredge, Jonathan, and Rethlefsen, Melissa L.
- Subjects
PROFESSIONAL practice ,NATIVE Americans ,COMPUTER software ,MEDICAL libraries ,PATIENT participation ,MINORITIES ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,ALASKA Natives ,COLLEGE teachers ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,SELF-efficacy ,ACCESS to information ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,HEALTH ,INFORMATION resources ,STUDENTS ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL citations ,RESEARCH funding ,LITERATURE reviews ,MEDLINE ,DATA analysis software ,GREY literature ,ERIC (Information retrieval system) ,WORLD Wide Web - Abstract
Objective: We sought to identify trends and themes in how academic health sciences libraries in the United States, Canada, and Mexico have supported engagement and outreach with Native Americans, Alaska Natives, First Nations, and Indigenous peoples, in or from those same countries. We also sought to learn and share effective practices for libraries engaging with these communities. Methods: We conducted a scoping review utilizing Arksey and O'Malley's framework for scoping reviews and followed principles from JBI Manual for Evidence Synthesis. We searched seven bibliographic databases, E-LIS (Eprints in Library and Information Science repository), and multiple sources of grey literature. Results were screened using Covidence and Google Sheets. We reported our review according to the PRISMA and PRISMA-S guidelines. We determined types of interventions used by academic health sciences libraries in engagement with our included populations, the level of public participation reached by these interventions, what partnerships were established, and what practices emerged. Results: Database searching returned 2,020 unique results. Additional searching resulted in 211 further unique results. Full text screening of relevant articles found 65 reports meeting criteria for inclusion. Data extraction was conducted on these programs to identify partners, intervention type, and evaluation method. The programs were categorized using the IAP2 Spectrum of Public Participation. Conclusion: Our scoping review found that many programs were health information trainings and did not move beyond informing the public with little further involvement. The need for sustained funding, greater community participation and more publishing on engagement and outreach are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Integration of 21st-Century Skills in Science: A Case Study of Canada and the USA.
- Author
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Amadi, Chioma Stella
- Subjects
CANADA-United States relations ,EDUCATIONAL outcomes ,SCHOOL librarians - Abstract
This comparative study examines the extent to which the 21st-century skills are integrated into the 4th and 8th-grade public school science curriculum in Canada in relation to that of the United States of America (USA) by analyzing the 4th and 8th grade Common Framework of Science Learning Outcomes of Canada and the 4th and 8th grade Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) of the United States in relation to the 21st-century skills as listed by the Applied Educational System (AES). The results predicted a huge economic decline of the United States in the nearest future in contrast to that of Canada if an intervention is not instituted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Questioning the role of information poverty in immigrant employment acquisition: empirical evidence from African immigrants in Canada.
- Author
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Mabi, Millicent N., O'Brien, Heather L., and Nathan, Lisa P.
- Subjects
AFRICANS ,FOREIGN workers ,PRECARIOUS employment ,POVERTY ,ACCESS to information - Abstract
Purpose: Skilled, well-educated African immigrants arrive in Canada with aspirations for more opportunities and a better life, but too often end up with few employment options and precarious jobs. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the experiences of African immigrants attempting to locate suitable, well-compensated employment in Canada. More specifically, this paper reveals how long-standing information poverty frameworks from the field of information behavior are inadequate for understanding intersectional and broader socio-cultural forces influence access to information and employment precarity among African immigrants. Design/methodology/approach: Data were collected through semi-structured interviews with twenty-five African immigrants in Metro Vancouver. Qualitative content analysis was used to explore participants' employment information seeking and perceptions of information availability using Britz's information poverty framework. Findings: Participants encountered a range of difficulties when seeking information related to employment, including content, process and identity-related challenges, in alignment with Britz's framework. However, the framework did not fully encompass their information seeking experiences. Limited access to relevant information impacted participants' ability to make timely career decisions, and there was evidence of information inequity resulting from a mismatch between information provision and participants' multifaceted identities. Originality/value: This research applied Britz's information poverty approaches and provided a map of participants' responses to information seeking challenges. Participants did not fit into the category of information poor as defined by Britz. The findings suggest that the discourse on information poverty would benefit from considerations of the diverse backgrounds of information seekers and the incorporation of cultural dimensions to understandings of information access, information poverty and technology use for information seeking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A commentary on Brazilian perspectives of lessons learned during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
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Zanchetta, Margareth Santos, Lucchese, Stephanie Pedrotti, Blotta, Mavi Galante Mancera Molinari, Fracazzo, Vanessa, Pereira, Maria Odete, Rodrigues Panta, Cláudio da Fonseca, Moreira Torres, Cecília, and Moura de Paula, Clarissa
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,PERCEPTUAL motor learning ,TEAM learning approach in education ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,BLOOM'S taxonomy ,COGNITION - Abstract
Background: While the pandemic brought many challenges and disruption to an individual's life, it also presented individuals with the opportunity to develop coping strategies and seek changes in their lives. Brazilians experiencing that moment disclosed the uniqueness of learned lessons. Methods: A commentary written by the interviewers and transcription team of 93 interviews conducted with Brazilians living in Canada and their relatives living in Brazil, identified trends in the experiential learning acquired during the pandemic. The Bloom's taxonomy framed the review of team's insights about learned lessons and newest skills and organization of evidence within the domains of cognitive, affective, and psychomotor learning. Results: Overall, there was a significant number and diversity of evidence about new learning and successful strategies that the participants implemented that promoted opportunities for learning. Identified evidence was in the affective (n=26), psychomotor (n=11) and cognitive (n=8) domains. Learning occurred in the affective domain which contributed to new self-perception, expanded awareness, new life priorities, renewed humanistic thoughts, increased valorization of time, life, and interpersonal relations. Conclusions: The findings of the lessons learnt from Brazilian participants are significant and highlight the unique perspectives of the positive benefits that resulted from a negative experience due to the pandemic. The significance of this interesting set of evidence indicates that in a near future the multidisciplinary community of scientists may definitively recalibrate the research focus and further explore how individuals learn and react during a pandemic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. 핀란드, 캐나다, 호주 유아교육과정의 디지털 미디어 리터러시 요소 탐색.
- Author
-
강은진, 김아미, and 이지운
- Subjects
DIGITAL literacy ,COMPUTER literacy ,EARLY childhood education ,MEDIA literacy ,EMERGENT literacy - Abstract
Objectives: Digital media literacy has been recognized internationally as an important competence. The 2022 Revised Curriculum for elementary and secondary education reflects digital media literacy as an essential competency for democratic citizenship. While the global trend suggests early childhood as the time for commencing digital media literacy education, the related elements are not specifically contained in the Korean national early childhood curriculum (Nuri Curriculum). The purpose of the current study is to propose a direction for revision of the Nuri Curriculum by comparatively analyzing the educational expectations, structures, and contents related to digital media literacy in early childhood curricula in Finland, Canada(Ontario), and Australia. Methods: Finland, Canada, and Australia implement lifetime media literacy education and systematically include media literacy in national level early childhood curricula. Educational expectations, structures, and contents related to digital and media literacy were analyzed according to media literacy and related skills and elements. Results: First, the educational expectations from international early childhood education curricula reflects digital and media literacy competency. Second, the international curricula suggest active online safety in ways such as participating in a safe, media-friendly environment. Finally, the international curricula encourage active development of digital literacy by suggesting diverse ways of using media. Conclusion: For digital media literacy development in early childhood, the elements of digital media literacy should be more specifically contained in the national level curriculum. Considering the change in the 2022 Revised Curriculum and global trend, it is necessary to reflect competencies in digital media literacy comprehensively in the Nuri Curriculum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Intellectual freedom: Waving and wavering across three national contexts.
- Author
-
Oltmann, Shannon M, Samek, Toni, and Cooke, Louise
- Subjects
INTELLECTUAL freedom ,PROFESSIONAL ethics ,SOCIAL responsibility ,JUSTICE ,ANTI-racism - Abstract
The 1999 IFLA Statement on Libraries and Intellectual Freedom makes no explicit distinction between personal and professional ethics, though there are implicit indications that there may be divergence between professional and personal considerations. Across three national contexts (the USA, Canada, and the UK), we explore the gaps between professional and personal ethics, as well as how these gaps have been potentially exploited, addressed, or resolved. There have been waves of debate about intellectual freedom and social responsibility across these three national contexts. In the contemporary age, we see clashes around conceptions of neoliberalism, neutrality, expressive freedom, justice, diversity, equity, inclusion, and anti-racism. The divergence of opinion comes from both the left and the right. The gap between library rhetoric and how it is practiced on the ground in different contexts is visibly shifting and under increased scrutiny, certainly in the USA, Canada, and the UK. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Faculty promotion evaluation and gender equity in business schools.
- Author
-
Dandalt, Ed and Brutus, Stephane
- Subjects
GENDER inequality ,BUSINESS schools ,EMPLOYEE promotions ,COLLECTIVE labor agreements - Abstract
This article aims to address the fairness of promotion evaluation (appointments to the rank of full professor) process in Canadian business schools as perceived by tenured business female faculty. Our analysis is underscored by two studies with two different data collection methods (survey data analysis, policy content analysis) and driven by procedural justice as the main theoretical lens. The first study addresses the perspective of our survey participants (N =198) by revealing that they believe the process of promotion evaluations is fair. Intrigued by this result, we undertook a second study to review the language of faculty collective agreements in these schools to explain partially why our participants believe in the fairness of promotion evaluations. The language of these faculty collective agreements suggests that the above result makes sense considering that they regulate promotion evaluations and decisions. However, this does not mean that the process of faculty promotions is free of gender discrimination as these faculty collective agreements have not addressed all the antecedents and predictors of gender inequity per se. The findings of this article are relevant because the issue of the underrepresentation of female faculty as related to promotion in senior academic ranks in Canadian business schools is under-researched. The existing studies on faculty promotion evaluations are too general and have not specifically addressed the fairness of business schools' faculty promotion evaluation systems from the perspective of tenured business female faculty. Plus, the relevance of the findings of this article lies in the fact that contrary to most general studies on female faculty experience with promotion evaluations at Canadian universities and internationally, these findings suggest that such experience in Canadian business schools is not always associated with gender discrimination and negative perspectives among female faculty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Seeds and the city: a review of municipal home food gardening programs in Canada in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Music, Janet, Mullins, Lisa, Charlebois, Sylvain, Large, Charlotte, and Mayhew, Kydra
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,GARDENING ,GREENHOUSES ,COMMUNITY gardens - Abstract
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada, home food gardening articles have saturated popular media outlets. Home food gardening is more popular than ever, and community gardens and community greenhouses are at capacity with long waiting lists for plots. Several local governments across the country are also participating in the food gardening craze. This study compares 19 municipal urban home food gardening programs that ran in 2020. These municipalities provided program participants with free gardening supplies and instructions on how to grow food at home. This study reveals a complicated relationship among municipalities, food gardening programs and household and community food security. The study also determines that the social and emotional challenges brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic are somewhat alleviated through gardening. Ultimately, municipalities are limited in their policy capacities to adequately move the needle on food insecurity in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Mapping for Awareness of Indigenous Stories.
- Author
-
Pyne, Stephanie, Castron, Melissa, Parish, Annita, Farrell, Peter, and Johnston, Shawn
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHY ,GEOGRAPHY education ,EDUCATIONAL relevance ,EDUCATIONAL sociology ,BOARDING schools ,AWARENESS - Abstract
Joseph Kerski has identified five converging global trends—geo-awareness, geo-enablement, geotechnologies, citizen science, and storytelling—which contribute to the increased relevance of geography for education and society. While these trends are discussed by Kerski in the context of the proliferating significance of geography in teaching and education, they also provide a useful lens for considering the increasing ubiquity of critical approaches to cartography both in general and in the context of teaching and education, where mapping can include participatory collaborations with individuals from a variety of knowledge communities and extend to the mapping of experiences, emotions, and Indigenous perspectives. In this paper, we consider these trends and related ideas such as Kerski's "geoliteracy" and metaliteracy in light of some relatively current examples and in light of the evolution of research and teaching linked with a series of interrelated map-based projects and courses that take a multidimensional approach to teaching and learning about the Residential Schools Legacy in Canada. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Growing together: cultivating inquiry-based learning in social work education.
- Author
-
Archer-Kuhn, Beth, Lee, Yeonjung, Hewson, Jennifer, and Burns, Victoria
- Subjects
INQUIRY-based learning ,SOCIAL work education ,SOCIAL work teachers ,ADULTS ,HIGHER education - Abstract
Inquiry-based learning (IBL) is a student-centered teaching and learning approach that is student led and inquiry driven. While research has explored experiences of IBL from student perspectives, very little is known about instructor experiences in higher education, particularly in the field of social work. Drawing on four faculty experiences, this paper discusses similarities and challenges of planning and implementing IBL in an undergraduate social work seminar course at a large research-intensive university in Canada. This paper begins by providing an introduction to the state of knowledge regarding IBL in higher education; it then considers research on student experiences of IBL, highlighting the need for this study exploring faculty experiences. Three themes emerged from the data analysis: to include deepened learning experiences, adjusting to a new approach, and peer support and learnings. Implications for social work education includes the need for intentional instructor support for successful implementation of IBL. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. "So many things were new to us": identifying the settlement information practices of newcomers to Canada across the settlement process.
- Author
-
Allard, Danielle
- Subjects
INFORMATION resources ,INFORMATION needs ,SEMI-structured interviews ,INFORMATION processing - Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to identify and map the shifting relationship between the settlement process and the information practices of newcomers from the Philippines as they migrate and settle in Canada. Design/methodology/approach: This research employs two semi-structured in-depth interviews, each with 14 newcomers from the Philippines to Canada. Participants were selected because they had migrated to Winnipeg through the Manitoba Provincial Nominee Program within 1–4 years of the date of interview. Findings: Eight settlement information tables are identified that demonstrate participants' migration experiences, including participants' thoughts and feelings related to migration and settlement, their information questions and needs, the information resources they consult and the activities in which they engage. Originality/value: This paper argues that this phased model approach documents the shifting relationship between settlement processes and migrants' information needs, activities, resources and practices. Articulating study findings using this phased model approach can support information institutions, such as the settlement sector and libraries, to provide support to newcomer groups in a timely and targeted manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. "I actually got my first job through my ex-colleague": Employment-related information seeking behavior of Bangladeshi immigrants in Canada.
- Author
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Shuva, Nafiz Zaman
- Subjects
INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,CANADIAN federal government ,IMMIGRANTS ,VOCATIONAL guidance ,PROVINCIAL governments ,INFORMATION resources - Abstract
This study explores the employment-related information seeking behaviour of Bangladeshi immigrants in Canada. Using a mixed-methods approach, the study conducted semi-structured interviews with 60 Bangladeshi immigrants in Ontario, Canada, and obtained 205 survey responses. The study highlights the centrality of employment-related settlement among Bangladeshi immigrants in Ontario and reports many immigrants not being able to utilize their education and skills after arrival in Canada. The results show that Bangladeshi immigrants utilize various information sources for their employment in Canada, including friends and professional colleagues, online searchers, and settlement agencies. Although Bangladeshi immigrants utilized a large array of information sources for meeting their employment-related information needs, many interview participants emphasized that the employment-related benefits they received was because of their access to friends and professional colleagues in Canada. The survey results echoed the interview findings. The cross-tabulation results on post-arrival information sources and occupation status as well as first job information sources and occupational status in Canada show a significant association among the use of the information source "friends and professional colleagues in Canada" and immigrants' occupational status. The study highlights the benefits of professional colleagues among immigrants in employment-related settlement contexts. It also reports the challenges faced by many immigrant professionals related to employment-related settlement because of the lack of access to their professional friends and colleagues in Canada. The author urges the Federal Government of Canada, provincial governments, and settlement agencies working with newcomers to offer services that would connect highly skilled immigrants with their professional networks in Canada, in order to get proper guidance related to obtaining a professional job or alternative career. The author calls for further studies on employment-related information seeking by immigrants to better understand the role information plays in their settlement in a new country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Introduction.
- Author
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Block, Rick
- Subjects
HEALTH literacy ,ELECTRONIC journals ,SERIAL publications ,LIBRARIANS ,PRIVACY ,INFORMATION science ,PROFESSIONAL employee training ,MEDICAL ethics ,OPEN access publishing - Abstract
An introduction to articles in the issue is presented on topics including critical issues involving book bans affecting children and young adult literature, the complex and inseparable relationship between collection development in libraries and the interconnected factors of privacy, censorship and government influence, and a unique perspective on oral tradition as an information medium.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. CAML 2022 Conference Report.
- Author
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Bews, Eric
- Subjects
MUSIC libraries ,COVID-19 pandemic ,CANADIAN music ,ARCHIVES - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Psychometric Properties of Version 2 of the Canadian Nurse Informatics Competency Assessment Scale.
- Author
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Kleib M and Nagle LM
- Subjects
- Humans, Canada, Psychometrics, Cross-Sectional Studies, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Nursing Informatics
- Abstract
In 2020, we conducted a mixed methods study comprised of a cross-sectional survey in which we applied a modified version of the 21-item Canadian Nurse Informatics Competency Assessment Scale and one-on-one interviews to explore self-perceived nursing informatics competency and readiness for future digital health practice. A total of 221 senior-level students in BScN programs in western Canada participated. This article reports on results related to the factor structure and internal consistency reliability of the 26-item (version 2) of the Canadian Nurse Informatics Competency Assessment Scale. Exploratory principal component analysis with the varimax rotation revealed a four-component structure, explaining 55.10% of the variance. All items on the Canadian Nurse Informatics Competency Assessment Scale 2 had good loadings, except item 7, which did not load to any domain but was retained based on an evaluation of the α value and item relevance to nursing practice. A few items shifted to different domains. The overall reliability of the Canadian Nurse Informatics Competency Assessment Scale 2 was ( α = .916) and its subscales: information and knowledge management ( α = .814), professional and regulatory accountability ( α = .741), and use of information and communication technology ( α = .895). This study provided preliminary evidence for the factor structure and reliability of the Canadian Nurse Informatics Competency Assessment Scale 2 among nursing students. Further testing is recommended., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Book Reviews: Adult education and lifelong learning in Canada: Advancing a critical legacy by Brigham, S. M., McGray, R., & Jubas, K (Eds.).
- Author
-
de Oliveira Jayme, Bruno and Heringer, Rebeca
- Subjects
ADULT education ,LEARNING ,SCIENCE education ,GENDER nonconformity ,STUDENT attitudes ,TRANSFORMATIVE learning - Abstract
For the authors of each chapter, besides understanding AE a as strong community-based and community-driven process, AE is also critical, political, and action-oriented. I Adult Education and Lifelong Learning in Canada Advancing a Critical Legacy i evidences that the dialogical and dialectical nature of AE is not bound by space or time. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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