Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Germany. Show all posts

Friday, April 15, 2011

Medien- und Informationskompetenz

Bibliothek & Information Deutschland produced (in February 2011) a (German-language) brochure of recommendations, to contribute to the thinking of a German parliamentary Committee of Enquiry. The title is: Medien- und Informationskompetenz – immer mit Bibliotheken und Informationseinrichtungen! Empfehlungen von Bibliothek & Information Deutschland (BID) für die Enquete-Kommission "Internet und digitale Gesellschaft" des Deutschen Bundestages. [Media and Information Literacy: from library and information services! Recommendations from Bibliothek & Information Deutschland to the parliamentary Committee of Inquiry into the Internet and digital society]. Published by: Bibliothek & Information Deutschland (BID) Bundesvereinigung Deutscher Bibliotheks- und Informationsverbände e.V. http://www.bideutschland.de/download/file/BID_Positionspapier_Medien-%20und%20Informationskompetenz_Enquete_Internet.pdf
The document advocates the value and key role of libraries, pointing out the extent to which libraries are already supporting information literacy, digital literacy and e-learning. It makes recommendations at the national, federal and regional level, for formal and adult education, and it gives examples from practice.
If you can speak German you may also be interested in the Commission's website. For example, there is a project group on media literacy (the consultation phase of the group has finished). http://www.bundestag.de/internetenquete/index.jsp
Photo by Sheila Webber: March 2011

Thursday, September 09, 2010

Slavic Information Literacy tutorial at #CKVI

Today's morning keynote at the Creating Knowledge VI conference was from Erda Lapp (Bochum University Library), on Piloting a National Online Tutorial in Slavic Information Literacy: The LOTSE-Slavic Studies Project at Bochum University Library, Germany.
Erda said that there was a well developed programme of subject-specific information skills, in particular searching skills. This includes lab sessions and roadshows (taking a laptop and materials round and about e.g. to cafeteria, to promote what they do). Through various activities they feel they have made information literacy a core competence on campus.
Specifically, Erda was talking about LOTSE, a German-language information literacy tutorial. She was taling about LOTSE for Slavic studies. The tutorial can be found here: http://www.slavistik-portal.de/en/online-tutorium.html. It is a module within a larger Slavistics portal http://www.slavistik.de. In turn this is part of a set of subject portals http://www.vascoda.de/.
There is actually a menu on the left side, which takes you to LOTSE tutorials in other subjects (e.g. history, business). They each have a diagram at the start which displays all the options, and the menu on the left highlights the key areas (e.g. Finding articles, keeping up to date).
Bochum have used it in various ways. They have a credit-bearing course on searching and accessing Slavic Studies information, which is particularly targeted at first year undergraduates, but is also taken by students at other levels. It is taught by the library jointly with academics. As part of the class, students have to present about a search strategy and hand in the powerpoint. They have taken the work of Carol Kuhlthau as a basis for their approach for the class. LOTSE is used at various points, and Erda described the process that the students go through to develop their search topic, carry it out, and present their results. For example LOTSE has advice on identifying your search topics, including some mindmapping tools (this can be found in the Toolbox area of LOTSE). One of the other things that Erda highlighted were the Tutorials (e.g. one on the deep web) that students are directed to at appropriate points.
Feedback has been that LOTSE gives an excellent overview and supports all steps in the research process, and can be explored at your own pace. The negatives were that the amount of information could be overwhelming and that it was a bit difficult to navigate. Its development will continue, and an advantage is that it is freely available on the web.
In the questions afterwards Erda said that LOTSE was not necessarily used so much in the other subject areas (e.g. engineering, history): it did seem to make a difference that students had a specific motivation and framework for using LOTSE in Slavic Studies (i.e. the class).

There is an article: Lapp, E. and Platte, M. (2009) "Piloting a National Online Tutorial in Slavic Information Literacy: The LOTSE-Slavic Studies Project at Bochum University Library, Germany." Slavic & East European Information Resources, 10, (2 & 3), 257 - 266. There is also a freely available paper on the subject here.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

E-portfolios for information literacy

Thanks to Thomas Hapke, who identified (on his blog) a full text online Masters dissertation (in German):
Schmall, S. (2009) E-Portfolios als Element von Personal Learning Environments. Potentiale des E-Learning 2.0 im Kontext der Vermittlung von Informationskompetenz [E-portfolios as a part of personal learning environments: potential for E-learning 2.0 in the context of learning information literacy]. Koln: Fachhochschule Koln.
http://opus.bibl.fh-koeln.de/volltexte/2009/244/ From a quick scan of the abstract it looks an interesting work, which is identifying the value of e-portfolios in terms of developing skills in creating and communicating, and (if available to other students) peer-to-peer learning. Considering specifically the concept of "Rechercheportfolio 2.0" (search portfolios) the author considers "Welche Standards und Qualitätsmerkmale E-Rechercheportfolios aufweisen müssten, um als effektives Mittel zur Vermittlung von Informationskompetenz geeignet zu sein" [What standards and quality indicators e-search portfolios must adhere to, in order to be effective means for learning information literacy].
This is particularly interesting to me since I'm marking e-portfolios at the moment, and will be involved in another set this coming semester ... By the way, I couldn't quite decide how to translate "Vermittlung" here - I considered "teaching", "learning", "developing" and "facilitating" ("mediating" is definitely too passive), comments from German speakers welcome!
Photo by Sheila Webber: Partriach's Ponds (where the opening scene of "The Master and Margerita" takes place), Moscow, December 2009

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Young People and Emerging Digital Services

A recent publication, presenting a survey of about 5,000 young people from 4 countries (France, UK, Spain and Germany), is:
Lusoli, W., & Miltgen, C. (2009). Young People and Emerging Digital Services. An Exploratory Survey on Motivations, Perceptions and Acceptance of Risks (JRC Scientific and Technical Reports; EUR 23765 EN). Sevilla: EC JRC IPTS. http://ipts.jrc.ec.europa.eu/publications/pub.cfm?id=2119
It surveys attitudes and behaviours with electronic identification systems. They found that young people were aware and concerned about risks, although they have low awareness of data protection laws and varying understanding of different kinds of technology, and it also identifies young peopel as "Web 2.0 experts". However, there were different attitudes and behaviours in different groups by country/ gender.
Photo by Sheila Webber, Euphorbia, March 2009

Saturday, March 21, 2009

German IL study

An item mentioned on Thomas Hapke's blog recently is a report (in German) from academics at the University of Augsburg
Heinze, N., Fink, J., Wolf, S. (2009). Informationskompetenz und wissenschaftliches Arbeiten: Studienergebnisse und Empfehlungen zur wissenschaftlichen Recherche im Hochschulstudium. Augsburg: Universität Augsburg,
Medienpädagogik. (Arbeitsbericht; 21) (Information literacy and academic work: results and attitudes towards research in academic studies)
http://www.imb-uni-augsburg.de/files/Arbeitsbericht_21.pdf

Photo by Sheila Webber: Western Park, Sheffield, March 2009.

Thursday, February 05, 2009

Information Literacy: what next

From Thomas Hapke's blog post at http://blog.hapke.de/?p=243 he links to a number of items including his own powerpoint on Slideshare (in German) Informationskompetenz: wie weiter (Information Literacy: what next). He identifies the most important things to reflect on as regards information literacy as: Curiosity and doubt; Reflection and learning about information (e.g. social and ethical implications of its use); Intellectual property and privacy issues. He links Information Literacy, Web 2.0 and e-learning as being intertwined and complimentary. There are some intersting references at the end of the powerpoint (again, mostly in German)

Photo by Sheila Webber: Iced frond, Feb 2009

Monday, January 26, 2009

Information Literacy at the cross-road of Education and Information Policies in Europe

A new book: Basili, C. (Ed) (2008) Information Literacy at the cross-road of Education and Information Policies in Europe. Rome: CNR. (ISBN: 978-88-8080-096-5)
Chapters are: Information and education policies in Europe: key factors: influencing information literacy academic policies in Europe (Basili); Theorems of Information Literacy (Basili); Development of information-related Competencies in European ODL Institutions (Virkus); Information literacy programmes in higher education in the Czech Republic: The path of theory and practice (Landová et al); France: the courage to say "Documentation" (Reggiani); Information literacy activities in Germany between the Bologna process and the web 2.0 (Hapke); Joined Planning and Development - Customized Solutions: the North-Rhine-Westphalian Network on Information literacy (Nilges); Information literacy as National Assets: Individual and Cooperative Activities (Katsirikou); Information literacy education of pupils and students in Poland - diagnosis of the educational situation (Cisek et al); Information literacy and Romanian Higher Education System (Rapeanu); The European Area of Higher Education (EAHE), Information literacy and Learning & Research Resource Centers: a triangle of excellence for the development of library services in Spanish universities (Cuevas Cerveró & Vives i Gràcia); Information literacy from the learner's perspective: a UK study (Andretta)
Main information is here: http://www.cnr.it/sitocnr/Iservizi/Pubblicazioni/
Catalogopubblicazioni/Catalogo.html?voce=13&id=612

The price is 20 Euro and the order page is here:
http://www.cnr.it/sitocnr/Iservizi/Pubblicazioni/
Catalogopubblicazioni/ComeAcquistare.html
(unfortunately it is payment by bank transfer)

Friday, July 11, 2008

Proceedings of KWIL conference

The full text proceedings of the Konstanz Workshop on Information Literacy are now available free for download in pdf format. I did some blog reports on this when I spoke at the event last year. The list of papers is below.
Kohl-Frey, O. and Schmid-Ruhe, B. (Eds.) (2008) Advanced Users: Information Literacy and Customized Services: Konstanz Workshop on Information Literacy. Konstanz: University of Konstanz. (Bibliothek Aktuell; Sonderheft 17) http://www.ub.uni-konstanz.de/kops/volltexte/2008/5905/

Patricia Davitt Maughan: From Theory to Practice: Insights into Faculty Learning from the Mellon Library/Faculty Fellowship for Undergraduate Research
Susie Andretta: Everybody Can Be an ‘Advanced’ Learner with Information
Literacy

Thomas Hapke: Between Dewey and Dewey – Information Literacy in Germany between a Librarians’ and a More Holistic View
Alexis Smith Macklin, F. Bartow Culp: Reaching Graduate Students: A Community of Practice for Teaching ICT Literacy
Lydia Bauer et al.: Collaborative Design of Ontologies: Theory, Opportunities and
Convenient Applications

Carol Leibiger, Will Schweinle: The South Dakota Information Literacy Exam: A Tool for Small and Medium-sized Universities to Document and Assess Information Literacy of Undergraduate and Graduate Students
Susanne Mühlbacher, Rainer Hammwöhner, Christian Wolff: Workplace Information Literacy in the Scientific Field – an Empirical Analysis Using the Semantic Differential Approach
Oliver Kohl-Frey: Information Literacy for Graduate and Postgraduate Students: Experiences from the University of Konstanz
Mary Harrison, Rosie Jones: Two Roads, a Single Destination: Supporting the Information Literacy Skills Needs of Advanced Users at the Manchester Metropolitan University (MMU)
Hannah Rempel: Information Literacy at the Point of Need – Literature Review Workshops
Debbi Boden: Gaining a PILOT’s Licence: Supporting Researchers at Imperial College London through the Postdoctoral Information Literacy Online Tutorial
Nicole Krüger: EconDesk – Getting the Content of Need at the Point of Need
Sheila Webber: Information Literacy Education for Masters Students: the Search/Teach Exercise

Photo by Sheila Webber: Great Keppel Island, Australia, June 2008

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

KWIL presentations

The presentations from the Konstanz Workshop on Information Literacy are available in pdf form (scroll down the page for the link), and there are some photos. Go to
http://www.ub.uni-konstanz.de/bibliothek/projekte/
informationskompetenz/kwil.html
For German speakers, Thomas Hapke also blogged about it, including about his own paper, http://blog.hapke.de/?p=180.

Photo by Sheila Webber: a happy moment after hot chocolate in St Gallen on the Friday afternoon (not a part of the formal programme), Thomas is pictured on the right.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Learning library papers (in German)

From Thomas Hapke's blog I see that presentations from Die lernende Bibliothek 2007 ("The learning library") conference are available. This took place in September at the University of Innsbruck. Thomas particularly highlights Susanne Rockenbach's paper "Neugier! Und Zweifel! Informationskompetenz anders!" (Curiosity! and dispair! Information Literacy with a difference") http://www.uibk.ac.at/
ub/lernendebibliothek/tp.html
(in German)
Photo by Sheila Webber: Autumn leaves, October 2007.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

IL in Germany

Thomas Hapke blogs about an issue of BIT online (German language publication) which has a number of articles about information literacy: Wilfried Sühl-Strohmenger talks about goals and curricula of classes in soem German universities; Luzian Weisel talsk about the need to develop information literacy in schools and in cooperation with public libraries, and Gabriela Blum compares initiatives in Germany and the USA. The issue is only available to subscribers at http://www.b-i-t-online.de/ but the editorial is freely online:

Fuhlrott, R. (2007) "Informationskompetenz und Soziale Software - oder Auswirkungen des Sputnikschocks von vor 50 Jahren" [Information literacy and social software: or the fallout from the sputnik shock from 50 years ago] BIT online. (3) http://www.b-i-t-online.de/heft/2007-03-edit.htm

Sunday, August 12, 2007

German book on "teaching library"

From Thomas Hapke's blog (link on the right) I see that there has been a new book published about the "teaching library", in German, namely:
Krauß-Leichert, U. (Ed.) Teaching Library: eine Kernaufgabe für Bibliotheken. Frankfurt am Main: Lang, 2007. I'll translate the title as Teaching Library: a key responsibility for libraries.
The book contains chapters on: introducing the concept; identifying current developments; looking at the library's role in an e-learning context (this chapter is by Thomas himself); standards and models of information literacy; planning for teaching and incorprating library instruction in the curriculum; learning to teach; IL at the university of Konstanz; thoughts about pedagogy. (NB as I said, this is German-language: If you want to order it I recommend ww.amazon.de)
Photo by Sheila Webber: Spanish sandals in the sun in Sheffield, Aug 2007.

Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Visitors from University of Konstanz

Oliver and Bernd
On Monday I had a visit from two German researchers, Oliver Kohl-Frey (Information Literacy Coordinator, left) and Bernd Schmid-Ruhe (Project Manager, right) (they are pictured on West Street, just by the Department, about to catch a taxi). They are involved in an interesting series of projects at the University of Konstanz (see photo of brochures below). The first one was looking at information literacy education for undergraduates. The second one, that they are involved in at the moment, is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft and focuses on those above the undergraduate level.
It is called Informationskompetenz II (or "Information Literacy 2"), with the subtitle Joint Project on Comparative Research in Information Literacy for advanced students and staff. They were asking for my views on various aspects of information literacy. I must still be dazed from last week - I felt afterwards I hadn't asked them enough about their project.

However, there is a lot of information about the project (note: in German) at http://www.ub.uni-konstanz.de/bibliothek/projekte/informationskompetenz.html. It includes material for several modules, available under a creative commons licence, namely:
Info about Konstanz
Module 1: Die Welt der wissenschaftlichen Information (the world of scholarly information)
Module 2: Suchstrategie und erste Recherchen (search strategies and first searches)
Module 3-5: Bibliographien und Datenbanken I-III (bibliographies and databases)
Module 6: Internet
Module 7: Literaturverwaltung und eigenes Publizieren (managing your information, and publishing your own work)
Plus there is a section with information that is relevant across several modules, and documents that give overviews of all the material (e.g. an outline that identifies learning outcomes, materials and activities over all the modules).

Thursday, January 11, 2007

IL in German academic libraries

A resource I'd missed on the German information literacy site http://www.informationskompetenz.de/ is a full text Masters dissertation.
Hütte, M. (2006) Zur Vermittlung von Informationskompetenz an Hochschulbibliotheken: Entwicklung, Status quo, und Perspektiven. [Facilitating information literacy in academic libraries: development, status quo and perspectives.] Köln: Fakultät für Informations- und Kommunikationswissenschaften, Fachhochschule Köln. Linked from http://www.informationskompetenz.de/aufsaetze-vortraege.htm

The dissertation is in German, but the English abstract reads: "The present Master’s Thesis deals with information literacy in academic libraries. Following the description of theoretic principles, development and current state of discussion in the US are compared to the situation in Germany, drawing on important surveys, strategic papers and models. The main distinctions between both countries are the different historic initial conditions and the varying general frameworks. The current practice of information literacy in university libraries and libraries of universities of applied sciences in the state of Northrhine- Westphalia is explored within the empiric part by website analysis. It shows that manifold activities to enhance information literacy can be identified, whereas the usability of the websites can be improved. The final part oft the survey outlines possibilities for further improvement of general information literacy in Germany."

Photo by Sheila Webber: Beethoven House in Heiligenstadt, Vienna, Austria, December 2006.