Not a Blank Slate: Information Literacy Misconceptions in First-Year Experience Courses

Information literacy is the primary instructional focus of many librarians. With the development of a core set of information literacy threshold concepts, librarians often strive to impart these concepts to undergraduate students during their years of study. However, when students come to school, th...

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Main Authors: Michelle Keba, Elizabeth Fairall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Communications in Information Literacy 2020-01-01
Series:Communications in Information Literacy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/34482
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spelling doaj-e29caec901134affaf48754f07fc17d42020-12-22T20:47:20ZengCommunications in Information LiteracyCommunications in Information Literacy1933-59542020-01-0114210.15760/comminfolit.2020.14.2.5Not a Blank Slate: Information Literacy Misconceptions in First-Year Experience CoursesMichelle Keba0Elizabeth Fairall1Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, Florida Atlantic UniversityWarren Library, Palm Beach Atlantic UniversityInformation literacy is the primary instructional focus of many librarians. With the development of a core set of information literacy threshold concepts, librarians often strive to impart these concepts to undergraduate students during their years of study. However, when students come to school, they are not blank slates. They arrive with preconceived ideas or misconceptions which can impede this process. In this article, the authors report on the results of focus groups held with first-year students at a private, liberal arts university. During the focus groups, participants were asked to share their perceptions of the misconceptions identified by Hinchliffe et al. (2018) in their information literacy misconception inventory. This study adds support for some of the misconceptions included in the Hinchliffe et al. inventory. However, it was not able to add support to all of them. In some cases, participants indicated conflicting results; in others their responses opposed the misconception.https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/34482misconceptionsfirst-year studentsinformation literacy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michelle Keba
Elizabeth Fairall
spellingShingle Michelle Keba
Elizabeth Fairall
Not a Blank Slate: Information Literacy Misconceptions in First-Year Experience Courses
Communications in Information Literacy
misconceptions
first-year students
information literacy
author_facet Michelle Keba
Elizabeth Fairall
author_sort Michelle Keba
title Not a Blank Slate: Information Literacy Misconceptions in First-Year Experience Courses
title_short Not a Blank Slate: Information Literacy Misconceptions in First-Year Experience Courses
title_full Not a Blank Slate: Information Literacy Misconceptions in First-Year Experience Courses
title_fullStr Not a Blank Slate: Information Literacy Misconceptions in First-Year Experience Courses
title_full_unstemmed Not a Blank Slate: Information Literacy Misconceptions in First-Year Experience Courses
title_sort not a blank slate: information literacy misconceptions in first-year experience courses
publisher Communications in Information Literacy
series Communications in Information Literacy
issn 1933-5954
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Information literacy is the primary instructional focus of many librarians. With the development of a core set of information literacy threshold concepts, librarians often strive to impart these concepts to undergraduate students during their years of study. However, when students come to school, they are not blank slates. They arrive with preconceived ideas or misconceptions which can impede this process. In this article, the authors report on the results of focus groups held with first-year students at a private, liberal arts university. During the focus groups, participants were asked to share their perceptions of the misconceptions identified by Hinchliffe et al. (2018) in their information literacy misconception inventory. This study adds support for some of the misconceptions included in the Hinchliffe et al. inventory. However, it was not able to add support to all of them. In some cases, participants indicated conflicting results; in others their responses opposed the misconception.
topic misconceptions
first-year students
information literacy
url https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/34482
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