Purdue University's Institute for Information Literacy has organised a webinar, Evidence-based Mindsets in an Era of Information Confusion: An Information Literacy Approach on 12 September 2025 at 13.00 US Central time (which is 19.00 in the UK, BST). The speaker is Professor William Badke. Thi is part of the Institute's Information and Democracy: Education, Access, Libraries, and Society (ID:EALS) series.
"One of the most significant crises in today’s world is information confusion, the inability of many people, including our students, to determine what information is trustworthy and what is not. This has led to wild conspiracy theories, information silos, a distrust of scholarship, and a general sense that we have lost our moorings and no longer can see the shore.
"Professor Badke's work with information authority and his interactions with students in 40 years of information literacy credit courses has given him an understanding of the issues and a possible path forward. While he does not claim to have unassailable answers, Professor Badke’s talk will provide some direction to attendees that takes us away from facile answers like “Use a checklist” or “Only access scholarly sources" in order to address the challenges we face in today’s information environment."
Registration at https://purdue-edu.zoom.us/meeting/register/Gj9V4ifiT7OPHEGimAcwfQ#/registration
More about the Institute and the ID:EALS series: https://lib.purdue.edu/IILP
Information Literacy Weblog
Curating information literacy stories from around the world since 2005 - - - Stories identified, chosen and written by humans!
Thursday, August 14, 2025
Webinar: Evidence-based Mindsets in an Era of Information Confusion: An Information Literacy Approach
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
#ECIL2025 programme available
- chairing and presenting on a panel, Developing an international research agenda for Information Literacy, with Professor John Budd, Bill Johnston, Dr Karen Kaufmann, and Professor Clarence Maybee.
- presenting a paper, AI + Age-Friendly Media and Information Literacy: Gerontechnology, with Bill Johnston
- and am honoured to be invited to give feedback in the doctoral forum
Other University of Sheffield Information School presentations are:
- The opening keynote from Dr Andrew Cox: The Dimensions of AI Literacy
- Co-producing research priorities for Health Literacy with marginalised communities: Dr Pamela McKinney, Dr Laura Sbaffi, Dr Andrew Cox, Professor Peter Bath
- Female engineering students’ information experiences: Preliminary findings from a PhD study: Laura Woods
The programme is here: https://www.conftool.org/ecil2025/index.php?page=browseSessions
Information about registrationis here: https://ecil2025.ilconf.org/registration/
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
Qualitative research videos
Dr Helen Kara has a very useful Youtube stream with short, clearly-expressed videos about various aspects of qualitative research methods ("Research principles, methods and ethics") e.g. What Is Grounded Theory (in under 2 minutes!) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Rybz_AjXc8 and Why Informed Consent is a Myth https://youtu.be/dEKBDyMhrHA?feature=shared. There are also some videos from the International Creative Research Methods Conference.
The stream is here https://www.youtube.com/@HelenKaraWriter
Photo by Sheila Webber: pink roses, July 2025
Monday, August 11, 2025
Global Media and Information Literacy Week 2025 – Feature Conference
Global Media and Information Literacy Week 2025's Feature Conference is
Minds Over AI - MIL in Digital Spaces hosted by UNESCO and the Republic of Colombia 23-24 October 2025 (Bogota time, 5 hours behind GMT) in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia.
The conference is free and you can register to attend in person or online.
It will "focus on the intersections of media and information literacy (MIL) and artificial intelligence (AI), exploring how AI is reshaping the information landscape and how MIL is crucial to empower individuals to critically engage with AI-driven content."
Go to https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/global-media-and-information-literacy-week-2025-feature-conference
Saturday, August 09, 2025
Scholarly Horizons
Go to https://scholarlyhorizons.co.za/Photo by Sheila Webber: plant, July 2025
Thursday, August 07, 2025
Call for submissions: Project on Open and Evolving Metaliteracies (POEM)
Carnegie Mellon University Libraries' Project on Open and Evolving Metaliteracies (POEM) is seeking contributions: "engaging classroom activities, thoughtfully designed assignments, and interactive exercises that help high school and college students develop critical thinking habits as they increase their digital fluency and the ethical awareness needed to advocate for more just and equitable digital futures." Deadline is 17 September 2025.
POEM aims to be a "dynamic collection of teaching resources that addresses crucial digital literacy challenges across three interconnected domains: understanding AI and algorithmic systems, working with data critically and ethically, and navigating media and disinformation."
It will bring "together practical classroom materials created by experts and educators who understand the urgency of teaching these topics in our rapidly evolving information landscape."
Contributions are welcome from educators, librarians, researchers, and creators working with high school or college learners. The formats can be: Lesson plans, syllabi, video tutorials, interactive exercises, podcasts, games, quizzes, assessments, etc. They can be in English or Spanish and will be peer reviewed.
The call is here https://docs.google.com/document/d/1O3QFnaawxoy8plCZfxxylShzr9a86yNVkGHyc6IW2Fs/edit?tab=t.0
Photo by Sheila Webber: beauty on the pavement, July 2025
Wednesday, August 06, 2025
DISINFO
The EU DISINFO Lab has a newsletter, with the latest issue being 15 July 2025. It lists news, resources, initiatives etc. to do with disinformation. They also point to their conference, #DISINFO2025, which will take place 15-16 October 2025 in Ljubljana, Slovenia.
The newsletter is at https://www.disinfo.eu/disinfo-update-15-07-2025/
Photo by Sheila Webber: ice plant, July 2025
Tuesday, August 05, 2025
Impact of Google AI summaries
An article from Pew Research Center summarising results from one of their reports: they captured (with permission) search histories from 900 people, to see what the pattern was when there was an AI-generated summary from a search. Basically, "For searches that resulted in an AI-generated summary, users very rarely clicked on the sources cited". Also "Google users are more likely to end their browsing session entirely after visiting a search page with an AI summary than on pages without a summary". This is the article:
Chapekis, A. & Lieb, A. (2025, July 22). Google users are less likely to click on links when an AI summary appears in the results. https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/07/22/google-users-are-less-likely-to-click-on-links-when-an-ai-summary-appears-in-the-results/
This is the original (May 2025) report: What Web Browsing Data Tells Us About How AI Appears Online https://www.pewresearch.org/data-labs/2025/05/23/what-web-browsing-data-tells-us-about-how-ai-appears-online/ (the full methodology is on the third page)
This is the article that gave me the link to the Pew report: it has useful discussion of how this lack of click-through is affecting news/information sites (there are a lot of ads on the page btw):
Uren, C. (2025, August 3). Google AI summary feature deals blow to link clicks and website traffic. Euro News. https://www.euronews.com/next/2025/08/03/google-ai-summary-feature-deals-blow-link-clicks-and-website-traffic
Photo by Sheila Webber: front door, July 2025
Monday, August 04, 2025
Generative AI and imagining alternative futures
A useful and thoughtful read about generative AI and libraries from Andrea Baer:
Baer, A. (2025, July 15). Investigating the “feeling rules” of generative AI and imagining alternative futures. In the Library with the Lead Pipe.
https://www.inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2025/ai-feeling-rules/
Photo by Sheila Webber: Californian poppies, Botanic gardens, July 2025
Sunday, August 03, 2025
One-day Conference: Inclusive digital literacy for all: bridging communities for a United Future
A satellite meeting of the World Library and Information Conference (WLIC) is Inclusive digital literacy for all: bridging communities for a United Future, taking place on 15 August 2025 in person at the L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University Scientific Library, Astana city, Kazakhstan. The speakers are:
- Zoltán Sándor Kovács Digital security awaraness and public libraries in the 21st century
- Dr Neeza Singh Role of Public Libraries in Transforming Communities through Digital Literacy in India
- Naomy Mwaurah Towards an Inclusive Digital Literacy Framework
- Dr Sharon Yang Teaching Digital Literacy
- Dr Leili Seifi From Palm to Platform: Addressing the Digital Literacy Needs of Rural Date Farmers in Sistan and Baluchistan
More details at https://lib.enu.kz/en/events/1407
Photo by Sheila Webber: Rhododendron, May 2025
Saturday, August 02, 2025
MIL campaign in Ukraine
A report from UNESCO on media and information literacy (MIL) campaigns in Ukraine, which also encompass Critical Thinking Evenings: https://ukraine.un.org/en/291548-unescos-campaigns-media-and-information-literacy-empower-millions-ukraine-think-critically
Photo by Sheila Webber: Blackheath Pond edge, August 2025
Thursday, July 31, 2025
Rethinking Wikipedia from a Library Perspective
Photo by Sheila Webber: Cosmos, July 2025
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
Webinar: using blogs and podcasts to disseminate research to diverse audiences
It is organised by the UKeig (UK electronic information Group) and run by the expert Andy Tattersall
"We will explore how to write engaging blog posts, including the benefits of employing AI in a useful and meaningful way, without giving up your own voice. Delegates will also learn the basics of how to create, record and host their own podcast. The course will also cover the intersection between the two formats and how they can work together to enhance your research communication activities."
Delegates will: "Learn how to write engaging blog articles; Discover the benefits of using AI to create draft versions of media articles and lay summaries and how to avoid common mistakes using these technologies; Learn the basics of creating and producing your first podcast and how to host it online for free or little cost."
Costs (including presentation slides and documentation) are: UKeiG/CILIP members £35 + VAT; Non-members £65 + VAT
More details and registration at https://www.cilip.org.uk/events/EventDetails.aspx?id=1981460&group=201314
Photo by Sheila Webber: life is a bowl of cherries: some of the few from my tree that I could reach, and which hadn't rotted or been nibbled by birds or the local squirrel.