french military victories? jonathan douglas museums, libraries & archives council

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French Military Victories? Jonathan Douglas Museums, Libraries & Archives Council

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French Military Victories?

Jonathan Douglas

Museums, Libraries & Archives Council

“Good School Libraries Making a Difference to Learning”

www.ofsted.gov.uk

“High-level colloquium on information literacy and lifelong learning” Alexandria 2005

www.ifla.org/III/wsis/High-Level-Colloquium.pdf

• It is time to move from “Information for All” to “Information Literacy for All.”

• Information literacy abilities are essential for social inclusion in today’s information-driven world.

• Information literacy and lifelong learning are of the same essence.

• Information literacy is not a technology issue but a learning issue.

• Information Literacy is more than a library or education issue. It is crucial to issues of economic development, health, citizenship and quality of life.

• Information literacy is part of a continuum of literacies that includes oralcy.

• Information literacy is context specific to particular cultures and societies.

• Inspectors observed a great deal of teaching of information literacy (IL) skills. The best schools had introduced imaginative and effective programmes that attempted to develop skills progressively from year to year and across the curriculum.

• often unsatisfactory and not underpinned sufficiently by whole-school agreement on what was to be taught at each stage. In general, there were too few opportunities for pupils to carry out research or work independently to prepare them for further education or the workplace

• The survey found many weaknesses overall in pupils’ understanding and use of information and research skills. This limited their achievement in reading and, more generally, in learning across subjects.

Information literacy

• …is inseparable from learning

• …is a lifelong literacy

• …is a positive statement of the values of society

Information Literacy and Learning

Information literacy is knowing when and why you need information, where to find it, and how to

evaluate, use and communicate it in an ethical manner.

What do we mean by learning?

“Learning is a process of active engagement with experience. It iswhat people do when they want to make sense of the world. It mayinvolve the development or deepening of skills, knowledge,understanding, awareness, values, ideas and feelings, or an increasein the capacity to reflect. Effective learning leads to change,development and the desire to learn more.”

MLA definition adapted from Campaign for Learning

• Knowledge,• Skills,• understanding, • awareness, • values, • Ideas and feelings, • or an increase in

the capacity to reflect

Learning &information literacy

continuum

Informal Formal

The continuum in libraries

• 79% ranked libraries in their top 3 learning

locations• 45% of adult learners interviewed mentioned

libraries in their re-engagement with

learning • Courses held in

libraries had a learner retention rate of 71%

The continuums interact to produce a lifelong activity by

• Creating the skills

• Creating the habit

• Creating the dynamic

• Creating the culture

“There are ways of teaching the elders, teachers and the children to become information literate about the HIV-AIDS issue. It is a difficult

model, because everyone recognises the urgency, and yet

the dynamics have not been worked out thoroughly--except in

the case of improving the children’s understanding of who they are and fostering the feeling of belonging to someone whose

own parents have died. “

Information literacy

and the disposition to learn

Information literacy is context specific to particular cultures and societies

.

Lutheranism and Libraries: 1989

Society 1Authority devolved to the

lowest possible level

Citizens equipped with information and skills and freedoms

Dispersed government

Popular engagement with government

Society 2

Central authority

Choices made for citizens

Hierarchical patterns of government

Popular disengagement with government

Outcome for society

cohesion and active communities

Where we are

“…IL lessons were not planned carefully enough and not informed by any whole school policy or scheme, leading to repetition, for instance, reminders about the organisation of the Dewey classification system…”

Where do we sit?

4 priority areas

• Education and Learning

• Health and Human Services

• Business and Economic Development

• Governance and Citizenship

Our role to push further: Going with the flow

• Miliband’s reforms of local democracy

• NHS patient choice agenda

• Adult basic skills work and the LSCs

• Active citizenship

• Asylum seekers and refugees

• QCA and curriculum reform

2007