Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
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Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path
Literacy in a digital education world and peripheral issues.
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Scooped by Elizabeth E Charles
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Dismantling the Evaluation Framework – In the Library with the Lead Pipe

Dismantling the Evaluation Framework – In the Library with the Lead Pipe | Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path | Scoop.it
For almost 20 years, instruction librarians have relied on variations of two models, the CRAAP Test and SIFT, to teach students how to evaluate printed and web-based materials. Dramatic changes to the information ecosystem, however, present new challenges amid a flood of misinformation where algorithms lie beneath the surface of popular and library platforms collecting clicks and shaping content. When applied to increasingly connected networks, these existing evaluation heuristics have limited value. Drawing on our combined experience at community colleges and universities in the U.S. and Canada, and with Project Information Literacy (PIL), a national research institute studying college students’ information practices for the past decade, this paper presents a new evaluative approach for teaching students to see information as the agent, rather than themselves. Opportunities and strategies are identified for evaluating the veracity of sources, first as students, leveraging the expertise they bring with them into the classroom, and then as lifelong learners in search of information they can trust and rely on.
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Scooped by Elizabeth E Charles
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Mike Caulfield Smart Talk Truth is in the Network

Mike Caulfield Smart Talk Truth is in the Network | Information and digital literacy in education via the digital path | Scoop.it

Mike Caulfield’s Twitter profile states he is “radically rethinking how information literacy is taught.” He has had a lot of experience doing just that since he first designed educational games, created educational wikis, and co-founded a 5,000-member online community, Blue Hampshire. He took his interests in civic media to positions as an instructional designer at Keene State College and as the director for the OpenCourseWare Consortium at MIT before becoming a national figure in promoting a practical and effective approach to digital literacy. 

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So what’s different with our approach? Well, our four moves—which we now refer to by the acronym SIFT—move students from a recognition heuristic to networked reputation heuristics, and from thinking about to doing. The moves are:

  • (S)top.
  • (I)nvestigate the source.
  • (F)ind better coverage.
  • (T)race claims, quotes, and media to the original context.
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