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Introduction

  • Page ID
    261442
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    This Open Educational Resource has been designed to support students at Truman College, one of the City Colleges of Chicago, in the credit course LIS105: Information Literacy Basics. Like other community colleges, City Colleges serve students from communities across the city, who are primarily from minority backgrounds, and many of whom are first-generation college students, immigrants, or returning or older students.

    Information literacy is foundational not just for library research and academic work, but also for everyday interactions with information “in the wild.” Because the cost of textbooks is so often prohibitive for our students, I have chosen to put course content into a free-to-access resource.

    LIS105: Information Literacy Basics is meant to support students in developing and growing their information literacy skills, from recognizing a need for information, to their abilities to locate, evaluate, and effectively and ethically use that information from all types of resources, in order to foster their success as students, citizens, and life-long learners. More specifically, the basic student learning objectives for the course are to:

    1. Identify keywords, synonyms, and related terms describing the information they seek
    2. Design search strategies using these terms, and apply Boolean operators to refine their searches
    3. Find and access information through a variety of means, including library subscription databases, print, web, and other resources
    4. Critically evaluate information sources
    5. Recognize the ethical and legal importance and procedures for using quotes, references, and citations

    The modules in this text follow a detailed course outline for LIS105 student learning and classroom activities, and cover much more than the basic student learning objectives listed above. Additional student learning outcomes for this text are:

    1. Understand when and how to evaluate, use, and create information in everyday life as well as in an academic setting
    2. Recognize the complex nature of the current information landscape, and the importance of demonstrating ethical and responsible information behavior within it
    3. Have awareness of bias and other barriers to information reception and use, and to apply the information literacy gained to be responsible citizens and lifelong learners

    Each module is divided into 3 sections: readings, classroom activities, and assignments related to the main topic of each module.

    This open educational resource was compiled, reworked, and/or written and illustrated by Sara Klein and is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

    Acknowledgements

    I am deeply grateful for all of the input and support I have received during the process of creating this resource, especially from Eileen López who contributed to content in modules 4,8, and 10, to Dan Killelea, who contributed to module 11, to Katie Ediger, for her valuable suggestions, which have been incorporated throughout the text, and to my children.

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