The UK government plans to lower the voting age to 16 (you can already vote in Scottish and Welsh parliamentary and local elections at 16 if you are qualified to vote in Scotland/ Wales) so there is interest in how this younger cohort of voters might engage with information relevant to voting decisions.
Earlier in the year a report was published by Internet Matters and Full Fact. Internet matters is a not-for-profit that works "collaboratively with our partners to support our joint vision of a safer, happier connected world for children and young people" (partners include Tiktok, Amazon Kids, Sky). Full Fact is the fact checking organisation.
The report uses "November 2025 data from Internet Matters Pulse ... based on a survey of 573 children aged 13-17 and 801 parents of children aged 13-17 based in the UK") and also previous Internet Matters research.
The report identifies that this age group encounters political information online, their confidence that they can evaluate it is in the 50%s and when asked about their peers' confidence, that is rated even lower. A small majority are concerened about the veracity of what politicians say and about the impact on misinformation on election results. A large majority of young people think that schools, parents / carers, Government, and social media companies all have responsibility to support them in being more informed voters (they were not asked whether they felt they had a responsibility to develop themselves). The report makes recommendations for various stakeholders, including about media and digital literacy. Sadly, librarians/ libraries are not mentioned.
Internet Matters. (2026, February 8). Preparing young voters in a complex, attention-driven information environment. https://www.internetmatters.org/hub/research/preparing-young-people-to-vote-in-a-complex-attention-driven-environment/
Photo by Sheila Webber: spring branches, April 2026
Information Literacy Weblog
Curating information literacy stories from around the world since 2005 - - - Stories identified, chosen and written by humans!
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
Preparing young voters in today’s online information environment
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Webinar: Deepfakes and AI-generated media The deepfake threat and how media literacy can help to address it
It will "give participants a practical grounding in the deepfake threat: what these tools can do now, how they differ from cruder forms of manipulation, and why the pace of change matters. We'll walk through real-world examples of how deepfakes are fuelling political, journalistic and health misinformation, share visual cues and verification techniques you can use and teach, and make the case for why media literacy is the frontline defence. ... The session will be presented by Ashmita Rajmohan, founder of the Deep Truth Project, a charity dedicated to deepfake and synthetic media literacy education in the UK."
Register at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/deepfakes-and-ai-generated-media-what-everyone-needs-to-know-tickets-1985914701331
Call for papers: Information Literacy in a Disrupted Information Ecosystem
"This session explores how information literacy initiatives are adapting to these changes. We welcome contributions that examine how libraries respond to AI-generated content, algorithmic mediation, and the evolving nature of information trust, including approaches that help users better understand how AI systems shape the information they encounter. ... We invite submissions in the form of research papers, case studies, best practices, and conceptual papers."
Full information at https://2026.ifla.org/information-literacy-in-a-disrupted-information-ecosystem-ai-misinformation-and-trust/
Photo by Sheila Webber: camellias, March 2026
Monday, April 13, 2026
Library and Skills Centre Teachmeet
There is a call for contributions for an in-person teachmeet at Sheffield Hallam University (Sheffield, UK) Library and Skills Centre Teachmeet on 4 June 2026 9.30 - 16.00 BST. The deadline is 17 April, 16.00. Presentations will be 10 mins each, with time after each presentation for questions.
"This free regional event will involve the sharing of ideas, experience, and innovative teaching practice through presentations, activities and discussions. The Teachmeet is aimed at higher and further education library staff and academic study skills practitioners working in the North and the Midlands [of England]." More details at https://www.tickettailor.com/events/academiclibrariesnorth/2113039
Photo by Sheila Webber: Sheffield Botanic Garcdens, March 2026
Saturday, April 11, 2026
Improving the digital competencies of literacy educators
The UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning (UIL) has launched a self-paced online course Improving the digital competencies of literacy educators. You have to register as a member of the UIL Learning Hub (free) in order to access. The estimated duration is 2 and a half hours.
The course is described at https://www.uil.unesco.org/en/articles/uil-launches-new-multilingual-course-boost-digital-skills-literacy-educators?hub=90
The registration page for the English language version https://learninghub.uil.unesco.org/enrol/index.php?id=78
Photo by Sheila Webber: cherry blossom, March 2026
Friday, April 10, 2026
New articles: Collaboration; Rebooting; Post-COVID working
- Adopting the Reboot Mindset: The Library Instruction Reboot Revisited by Anne C. Behler
- Interdisciplinary Collaboration and Library Instruction: A Case for Lesson Study by Alexander Deeke, John Kotnarowski, Kirsten M. Feist, Jin Pennell
- Remote Work Policies in Academic Libraries Before, During, and Immediately After the Height of the COVID-19 Pandemic by Shanti Freundlich, Sarah K. McCord, Sarah Callanan, Natalie Hutchinson, Erica Cataldi-Roberts, Richard Kaplan
Go to https://muse.jhu.edu/issue/56654
Photo by Sheila Webber: blossom, March 2026
Thursday, April 09, 2026
10 Thoughts On “AI”
An interesting (I think) take on AI and its use in creative work, from the author John Scalzi. As he says, he can "write better than “AI” can or ever will, and I can do it with far less energy draw. I don’t need to destroy a watershed to write a novel. I can write a novel with Coke Zero and snacks." He also, e.g., makes useful comments about marketing, and the way AI is actually packed into almost everything already.
Scalzi, J. (2026, February 14). 10 Thoughts On “AI,” February 2026 Edition. https://whatever.scalzi.com/2026/02/14/10-thoughts-on-ai-february-2026-edition/
Photo by Sheila Webber: camellia, March 2026
Wednesday, April 08, 2026
Recent articles: AI literacy; Coding
The latest issue of open access College & Research Libraries (volume 87 issue 2) includes:
- Survey on Undergraduate Student Use of Generative AI: Implications for Information Literacy in Academic Libraries by Megan Margino Marchese, Andrew Marchese
- Generative AI and Libraries: Claiming Our Place in the Center of a Shared Future by Terese Scheiderich
- Python for All: A Library Workshop for Bridging AI Literacy and Coding Skills
Kristen L. Scotti, Lencia McKee
Go to https://crl.acrl.org/index.php/crl/issue/view/1693/showToc
Photo by Sheila Webber: daffodil, March 2026
Tuesday, April 07, 2026
Webinar: Attention in LIS
There is a webinar organised by the ACRL Contemplative Pedagogy Interest Group on 29 April 2026 at 14.00 US Eastern time, 19.00 BST: Attention in LIS
(Library and Information Science). The speaker is Hugh Samson (Ph.D. student in the Faculty of Information and Media Studies at Western University in Canada).
"This talk examines the concept of attention as an emerging concern in LIS. It proceeds through three guiding questions. First, What is attention? The talk briefly surveys accounts in which attention is understood as a selective orientation of consciousness and a mechanism that structures perception and cognition. Second, Why does it matter? In contemporary information environments characterised by abundance, attention functions as a limiting condition that shapes what information becomes visible, credible, and sustained. Finally, How might LIS examine it? The talk outlines possible lines of inquiry focusing on attentional infrastructures, literacies, and practices."
Register at https://ala-events.zoom.us/meeting/register/4tzumZcIT_eaMa_O_nktgg#/registration
Photo by Sheila Webber: cherry trees, Sheffield, March 2026
Monday, April 06, 2026
Tickets for - Critical Approaches to Libraries Conference 2026 #CALC26
There are still tickets available for the Critical Approaches to Libraries Conference 2026, taking place online 12-14 May 2026, at the very reasonable price of £15.
Presentations include:
- Disinformation, platform governance, and critical information literacy: lessons from the Croatian Wikipedia case (Dijana Å obota).
- Honoring students' lived experiences through instruction: how a shift in pedagogical practice can impact student outcomes (Dr Heather F. Ball).
- Why are some ideas easy to believe on little evidence? (Dr Anna Stone).
You can purchase tickets here https://opencollective.com/calc/events/calc-conference-ae7f7475
Saturday, April 04, 2026
LILAC Learning Sets #LILAC26
The main idea is that you join a group of about 5 people, randomly selected (by choosing a sweet of a particular colour on the day!). I had picked an orange sweet, so I've become a member of Outrageous Orange (one of the group's first task's was to choose a name). It turned out that 3 of the other members were engineering librarians, and one had been an engineering librarian in the past - serendipity! I can only claim connection with having supervised Dr Evi Tramantza's PhD, which was on engineering students' information literacy and also Laura Woods is investigating female engineering students' information exoerience for her PhD. We will be keeping in touch with each other over the next year to exchange experience, including through quarterly meetings organised by the LILAC organisers (led by Laura Woods). If it's OK with the rest of the group, I will keep you updated on how it goes.
Photo by Sheila Webber: cherry blossom in Sheffield, March 2026
Thursday, April 02, 2026
Information Literacy award winners #LILAC26
The winners the Information Literacy Award 2026 (sponsored by the Information Literacy Group and the UCL Department of Information Studies) were announced during the LILAC conference on Monday. They were Siobhan Corrin and Katie Roper from Lancashire Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust & Lancashire and South Cumbria NHS Foundation Trust. They had been nominated for the Lancashire Health Hub: a collaborative approach to reliable health information.
Information about all the nominees is here https://www.lilacconference.com/awards/information-literacy-award
They are pictured with the judges: Dr Konstantina Martzoukou, Elizabeth Newell and Emma Brown.
Wednesday, April 01, 2026
Information Literacy in a time of polycrisis and cherry blossom: Sheila Webber keynote #Lilac2026
This is Pam liveblogging Sheila Webber's keynote on day 2 of the LILAC conference in Sheffield. Sheila's slides are uploaded here https://drive.google.com/file/d/1-3COpggFid2YoBGeWm-5dPBqhz6vINE-/view?usp=drive_link (and will also be available on the LILAC website). The title of the presentation was Reflecting on Information Literacy in a time of polycrisis and cherry blossom
Sheila began her keynote by distributing some information literacy definitions created by students on the information literacy module as one of the opening activities. Delegates are invited to keep these definitions as a souvenir of the session. Sheila chose the title because we are living in a time of crisis, and because she loves this time of year and finds joy in cherry blossoms. Sheila is convinced that information literacy is a "thing", and is an important standalone subject discipline. `the essence of information literacy is information, it really matters! The Institute of Information Scientists was an association that merged with CILIP: Sheila had been active in that association and also published an article discussing the nature of information science as a discipline, during which she uncovered definitions of information.
Sheila shared definitions from Bertie Brookes and Marcia Bates: "the pattern of organisation of matter and energy". Marcia Bates developed a typology of information: genetic information, experienced information, enacted information, expressed information and exocomatic information (i.e. information outside our bodies). Sheila showed some images of Ballerat in Australia, where a whole suite of information was produced to improve signage to prevent violence to staff. However, some people might experience all this information as overwhelming. Sheila then showed some images of the Wave (the location of the conference) and talked us through the information that is available to people as they enter the building, and how that differs for different people. We took part in a Wooclap activity where Sheila asked us to share the information that we have from the room we are currently in. There were a lot of people who thought the room was really cold! Sheila made the point that these physical experiences can affect learning. There is a huge amount of information in every space.
Sheila shared 3 examples of visual images of cherry blossom, and the way in which images are created affects how we engage with them. One was a picture of real cherry blossom from Sheffield, one was an AI picture created in midjourney and one was a picture of Sheila Yoshikawa in Second Life standing in front of a cherry tree. Sheila invited us to think about the information that is evoked by the different pictures. It's imporant for educators to think about what information means to them as well as to their learners.
Sheila introduced 7 ways of looking at information literacy: IL is contextual, it's a word/phrase, it exists in definitions, it is a discipline, it exists in frameworks or models drawn up by expert groups, it is models discovered through research and information literacy is also a practice. Sheila presented the definition of Il that she developed with Bill Johnston: "the adoption of appropriate information behaviour to identify, through whatever channel or medium, information well fitted to information needs, leading to wise and ethical use of information in society." "Appropriate" means appropriate to the context or need; it isn't a value judgement. There is a huge variety of ways in which we acquire information, and, and informatin seeking is prompted by a range of needs. Sheila showed a video of an installation in Second Life where she included a range of quotes from research participants and others to illustrate what information literacy means to them. The quotations from Dr Shahd Salha's research were particularly powerful and revealed the spiritual aspect to information literacy.
Sheila spoke about the relationship between AI, media & Information and digital literacy. She encouraged us to resist views of information that tidy librarians and information literacy into a little box. There are indicators of this kind of academic writing, for example, a citation to Shannon & Weaver (1964) and ignoring all the subsequent work that has been published in information science journals and books.
There may be a disjunct between your conception of IL and that of your employer, so it is worth reflecting regularly on your own conception of IL. Sheila made a brief plug for the forthcoming information literacy as a discipline. She introduced the roots of the development of her own conceptions of information literacy, including learning from all the PhD students she has supervised. Sheila spoke about the conference that took place in the late 1990s in Australia, that brought together researchers to address IL and lifelong learning.
Then she talked about the knowledge base of IL. There are various groups who contribute to IL research, some are full time e.g. academics, but there are a huge number of part-time researchers who are also practitioners, other disciplinary specialists, and national institutes and policy organisations. It's important to draw on all these researchers and this evidence base when thinking about IL. There is stronger growth if you are connected with your roots and, this helps us deal with the polycrises that we are faced with. The doomsday clock expresses how close we are the "midnight" (the end of the world) due to what we are doing to ourselves. The current social media landscape allows us to ignore war, as it doesn't feel real, and fits around other kinds of social media. Ways you can address this include developing a curriculum for an information literate lifecourse and helping others to do the same. In this way, Information Literacy can be seen as a discipline to enable life.
Closing session #LILAC26
Exploring Indigenous-Informed Pedagogy in Academic Library Instruction #LILAC26
The penultimate session I'm attending (though there will be some currently-part-finished blogs that will go up later today or tomorrow) at the LILAC information literacy conference is Collective Conversations: Exploring Indigenous-Informed Pedagogy in Academic Library Instruction presented by Adair Harper (Simon Fraser University, Canada). The abstract is here
They started by introducing themselves, reflecting on their positionality and history, and acknowledging the traditional holders of the land on which Simon Fraser University stands, theese people's knowledge systems, and the impact of colonisation on education/ library practices.
They went on to identify key aspects of the Canadian contect, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the Indigenous Matters Committee of the Canadian Federation of Library Associations (which had a report about responding to the TRC's calls to action) and the Simon Fraser University Aboriginal Reconciliation & Conciliation report. There is a Decolonising the Library Working Group in the university, formed in 2018, and a very small Indigenous Initiatives Team which is also developing the Indigenous Curriculum resource centre.
They went on to identify other decolonising initiatives from the library, including the WG for information literacy and instruction explicitly addressing decolonisation.
In summer 2025 they had reading circles reading a chapter form the book Wayi Wah, then in autumn/winter 2025-6 they started to apply First Peoples Principles of Learning and involve more people in implementing them, developing curriculum with the principles of indigenous learning, addressing biases cause by using colonialist approaches to education.
They started by all looking at teaching materials for a class Foundations for Academic Literacy (FAL), so they could discuss and compare ideas. This module aims to introduce undergraduates to academic research. The librarians worked through this by each focusing on some of the materials and bearing specific principles in mind. This is still progress, so these were reflections on what has emerged so far. They found that focusing on one principle at a time was helpful in avoiding overwhelm. The process also helped in understanding and incorporating the principles into their own practice. The people doing this work (librarians and library assistants) have different roles in learning and teaching.
Key principles that are emerging as areas of focus are "Learning involves patience and time" and "Learning is holistic, reflexive, reflective, experiential, and relational (focused on connectedness, on reciprocal relationships, and a sense of place)". There is a desire to bring more experiential and conversation-based learning into the classroom; to recognise learners' and teachers' experiences & knowledge; be an "imperfect friend" rather than a "perfect stranger".
They have been revising the teaching material for the FAL module, will have workshops in the summer for colleagues, pilot material and then run the updated module next academic year, and also aim as write a chapter.
Photo by Sheila Webber: in Sheffield Botanical Gardens, March 2026
"All mushrooms are edible but some only once": rethinking information literacy in leisure contexts through hobbyist mycology, Laura Williams. #Lilac26
Laura Williams is a PhD student in the School of Information Journalism and Communication, but this presentation was not about her PhD topic; instead, this was a topic of personal interest to her. Laura created a Zine as a way to cope with semester 1 library teaching, and this stimulated the presentation today. This is a conceptual paper, that isn't based on research other than reading lots of literatyre about mushroom hobbyists, and Laura's growing interest in mushroom foraging. This is an information-rich hobby: enthusiasts learn about mushrooms, they spot mushrooms and photograph them, go to mushroom social events. Is hobbyist mycology a risky hobby? Yes even the most experienced mycologiest need to continually update their knowledge of mushrooms to avoid dangerous encounters. Laura reviewed the current literature on hobbyist mycology to identify the information aspects to this. Laura dtaws on Lloyd's work to define Il as a socially enacted practice, and Hicks' book on risk in information literacy. Risk-informed information practice focuses on everyday information literacy, but Laura wants to apply these ideas to a leisure context, as much information science literature about leisure hobbies focuses on the joy of the hobby and sharing information.
There hasn't been much research on fungi from an information perspective. There is a growing body of literature on multispecies information literacy, and fungi are mentioned as a fascinating area to look at as they are neither animals or plants. There is a body of literature on risky leisure practices, but information literacy isn't mentioned often or drawn on, even though information is a theme explored in the research. Risk is conceptualised as a balance between potential harm and the desired benefits. Information literacy: the mushroom itself is a source of information (drawing on Bates ideas of what is information). Laura has identified 6 ways that information literacy is enacted to manage risk
Rules of thumb: quick and personal rules to assist decision-making, e.g. "never munch on a hunch". But the problem with these is that they take time to develop and are difficult to share with others, and can be affected by complacency.
Folkways: folk knowledge of mycology and folk practices such as hunting and foraging. The common names of mushrooms are linked to folklore. Some folk knowledge fuels mycophobia and can perpetuate misinformation.
Documentary sources are a critical information source; they contain authoritative information. However, documented knowledge can become outdated. In the UK, mushroom guides might identify a mushroom as poisonous, but a guide in another country might say that a mushroom isn't dangerous as long as it's prepared in the right way.
The body & sensory information. This is incredibly important. Foraging is a physical practice that forces the forager to use all their sensory information: touch, taste and smell are very important. Sensory information must be used alongside other forms of knowledge. Mushroom books contain vivid descriptions of the sensory impact of mushrooms.
Participating in communities: there is a long history of fungi groups, on and offline e.g. facebook groups. Some are only for the scientific identification of mushrooms, others are about foraging and eating mushrooms. There is always the potential that these groups can share poor-quality information. Groups have very specific rule that many photos of a mushroom must be shared in order to invite others to identify a mushroom.
Technologies: AI and social media are affecting the information landscape of mushrooms, e.g. AI image tools to identify mushrooms. AI tools can't engage in sensory information, so they tend to be very bad at identifying mushrooms. Content creators are active on social media to share mycology.
Each of these 6 dimensions could be explored further to investigate aspects of risk in mycology, and could be a rich site of information literacy research.
Matteo Bergamini keynote #LILAC26
He started by describing the work of SOUK which "provides impartial political and media literacy training and campaigns focused on democratic engagement and combatting disinformation online". He then talked about the labels used: misinformation (false information shared by mistake, which can lead from e.g. not knowing that "verified" accounts may have just bought that verification), disinformation (false information shared deliberately, using the example of information shared in the Southport riots), malinformation (distorting actual information for harmful purposes e.g. taking it out of context) and false information (e.g. AI generated text, images, videos).
Bergamini showed us some images of people and asked us to guess which are real and which AI, the results of which showed that often it was really difficult to tell. He went on to talk about how algorithms are designed to keep us engaged, therefore feeding us what we might like, to keep hold on us, often showing increasingly emotive and extreme material, leading to desensitisation and seeing such material as normal. Social media can thus become a shield against ideas and feelings which are different to oour own. Bergamini talked about how this process is exploited by religeous extremism and incel/manosphere ideologies, feeding on people's insecurities and reinforcing negativity. This includes fascination with extreme violence, which formerly wasn't seen as a form of ideology. He also highlighted that the number of children who were arrested for terrorism-related incidents was increasing in the UK (20% in 2024 and 4% in 2019). Bergamini said that there is not mass radicalisation, but radicalisation can happen very quickly: it used to happen over months, but now it might happen within 24 hours, so the the time period for potentially intervening is much shorter.
Bergamini presented the solution as being media literacy - the ability to use, understand and create. [Obviously I would say you could also mention information literacy at this point!] He identified the cross curricular initiative in Finland for media literacy, which does seem to have an impact. In France he highlighted a programme with 30 coordination centres for media literacy and also the Welsh digital competency framework. He also mentioned the curriculum review in England which does include requirements for media literacy education (though, I would add, sadly not as a subject in itself and also Bergamini mentioned the lack of specific resources for teacher training so far).
Then he highlighted the Dismiss initiative and the other work of SOUK itself. He explained the ideas of prebunking (aiming to prevent spread of harmful information before the event) and debunking (work after the event - e,g, fact checking). SOUK focuses on prebunking, in particular technique-based prebunking (looking on the different techniques that are used for spread of disinformation etc.) An example of teaching with prebunking is showing a video with someone giving health misinformation and then discussing the techniques that are being used in the video. SOUK has resources to support educators on its website https://www.shoutoutuk.org/ including a podcast and lesson plans.
One question from the audience was about whether SOUK had material to work with adults as well as young people, and the answer was yes. Another issue that came up in the questions was developing scepticism without people becoming cynical and distrusting everything. Things that got discussed including examining the different actors producing the information, also working on this continously, it isn't a one off thing. One useful tip about spotting fake AI was looking at the context of AI generated material rather than looking for "tells" that it was fake (e.g. not how realistic is this picture of a person, but rather how likely is it that they would be doing this in this setting). Another question was about having positive examples as well as negative ones [I was thinking here that highlighting information creators who were open about how they checked and reflected on their practice would be useful].
Photo by Sheila Webber: cherry blossom behind Sheffield train station tram stop, March 2026
Co-constructing knowledge justice: faculty and student partnerships that transform library instruction, Heather Campbell, Lea Sansom and Ashley McKeown.
Pam McKinney here live-blogging from the final day of the LILAC conference in Sheffield. The presenters from Canada have blended roles that involve teaching and library roles. There is a lot of focus on decolonial practice in Canada, and the presenters wanted to enact knowledge justice in their information literacy programme. We are all equal, and have equal capacity to be knowers, but sometimes certain people are privileged as "knowers", and knowledge justice seeks to embed equality. They were unsure about how to do this in their teaching, so this panel is about exploring how they managed to find their way. There are 25 people in the partnership, but only 3 people are presenting. The first question they explored was why collaboration is necessary to address knowledge justice. Lea said that there has to be ways of recognising multiple ways of knowing, so collaboration is essential to bring different perspectives and different ways of knowing in the team. Everyone brings something to the team. They have all had moments of imposter syndrome, but the group can provide support and reinforce that everyone has something to contribute. Ashley spoke about how knowledge justice is very much grounded in indigenous knowledge systems, and expressed a feeling of loneliness and thought she had very different ways of approaching her nursing course. Collaboration was important to keep on her journey, and support her interaction with students who come from indigenous communities and become nurses. The collaborative approaoch supported the whole group to decolonise their teaching and decolonise their minds. Its importa t to trust in the collective, go to communities of practice and read important texts. Knowledge justice has felt overwhelming, but it must be done. The trick was to find collaborators from outside their own white identities.
What does collaboration focus on knowledge justice look like? Lea spoke about collaborating with instructors and other librarians. She is focused on relationship building in her new institution and is bringing the knowledge justice perspective with her. Heather spoke about the timeline of the partnership, and the points at which she's worked with students and the points at which they've worked with faculty. There are different types of collaboration that they have engaged with, including faculty administrative staff, and the centre for teaching and learning. She is leading decolonising initiatives that come through the teaching development team. They did some experimentation in Ashley's class and created some open educational resources. Ashley spoke about the approaoch to partnership and collaboration that is strength-based, so that collectively they can identify work that corresponds to people's strengths. Teaching knowledge justice to students has led to conversations between students and faculty that have led to a gradual dissemination of the knowledge justice in the university. It is important that individual academics decolonise their teaching, but this doesn't lead to systemic change.
What has only be posisble due to collaboration? Teaching and learning librarians have to be invited into sessions by faculty. So the only way that they can enact a knowledge justice approach is in negotiation with faculty. So it's about identifying particular aspects of the content or particular assessments that suit a knowledge justice. Heather tries to make sure that she goes to university committees to spread a knowledge justice approach and tries to support meaningful change. Students who have experienced knowledge justice in the curriculum are able to go into the workplace to spread this approach, but they need support for this as new professionals. It's challenging because as a librarian doing Information literacy teaching, they only impact a small number of people, but raising awareness of knowledge justice can have lasting and profound effects on those people. They spoke about the need to record the meetings they go to and the other teaching activities as "library instruction" even though the audience and the mode is really different.
Publish and Prosper: Self-Reflection and Survey Results from a Research Program for Librarians #LILAC26
First blog of the 3rd day from me (Sheila) of LILAC information literacy conference is Publish and Prosper: Self-Reflection and Survey Results from a Research Program for Librarians presented by Helen Power, Rhiannon Jones and Ethel Gamache (Canada). The abstract is here
They explained that they tried a prototype in 2023 using Belcher's Writing your journal article. Then they wanted to find out what the impact of the programme, so they decided to do some research, getting ethics approval. Therefore they ran the programme again, making use of a research accelerator programme that was designed to support librarians doing research (6 weeks online of 1.5 hour session), also supported by CAPAL so it could give a certificate (if you attended 5 out of 6 sessions). It was based on works by Belcher & on Cresswell, adapted for Canadian librarians - this included language, where to publish etc. This was run in summer 2025. There were 35 librarians taking part. There was a Discord, aiming to help create a community of practice.
The first sesssion was introduction, the 2nd on designing research (talking about picking a topic you know, different kinds of research approach, ethics etc.), the 3rd about working on writing, the 4th on developing evidence and interpretation (it was mentioned Belcher here was useful here, also they discussed knowledge justice), the 5th on strengthening our structure, and 6th on preparing for publishing (including dealing with responding to reviewers). They mentioned that on Zoom they used breakouts, whiteboard activities (e.g. where would you publish this title?) etc. Looking at the participants' profiles, on average research wasn't an expected part of their job, had taken a research methods course and published (but it varied).
The presenters then introduced the ACRL Framework for IL in Higher Education and their definition of Information Literacy (I've covered this framework a lot in this blog so I won't describe it here!). Then they they pulled out the elements of the Framework which they found particularly useful for this programme (e.g. that research is iterative, that questions lead to more questions but you also need to know when to stop) and gave examples of how they were used in the programme. As examples (they showed all 6 weeks but I can't type that fast!) they used Information Creation as Process and Scholarship as a conversation (including giving and receiving feedback) in week one. In week 3 the learning outcomes were: discussing approaches to writing literature reviews and articulating claims for significance ("so what?"), and the ACRL Frames were authority is constructed and contextual and searching as strategic exploration. In week 4 the learning outcomes were differentiating between different kinds of article structure and also optimising different strategies for editing documents for comprehensiveness and clarity - the ACRL Frames used here were on Information creation as a process and Searching as strategic exploration. I'll also mention that in week 6 they covered wellness and emotions, when looking at the reasons why papers get rejected, and there was a discussion about predatory journals and how to spot them.
There research of the programme consisted a pre programme survey, mid point survey, immediate post session survey and 6 month follow up. Also they qualitatively analysed the chat and activities (if people did not want to be included in this analysis they were excluded).
In terms of which session was most helpful, this was spread across sessions 2-5, and what emerged was it was the session most useful at the point of individual need. In terms of least helpful, it was again mostly related to the stage they were at in their research/ writing. In terms of the participants' reported skill levels, this showed improvement through the programme and in fact it was strongest in the 6 month follow up. Also they had quotes about confidence going up and benefiting from interacting with peers. Of respondents to the questionnaire 8 had completed a draft of their writing, 7 not, and the 6 month follow up showed that some had submitted and all at least intended to.
In terms of the observations, participants engaged more fully as the weeks progressed (having been less active in information interaction initially). They observed some breakout rooms: dynamics varied between breakout rooms. They had the suggestion of having the same people in your breakout room every time - positives were that people might be more likely to talk & it saved time as you didn't have to introduce yourself each time, although there were downsides such as getting to know fewer people. Also there was a suggestion on having one on one breakouts, which also had positives and negatives.
Looking to the future they will use their findings to develop the programme and plan to run it every 2 years with (probably) rotation of facilitators. They also plan to write an article!
They also helpfully include material from their programme in a google folder with the slides from this presentation the link (added 2nd April) is https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1ziiMh3_o-m4AZlth0pbck8olOQiGdcka.
Photo by Sheila Webber: Camellias in the Sheffield Botanic Gardens, March 2026
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Reframing Information Literacy Instruction through a Lens of Knowledge Justice #LILAC26
The last session I'm attending final session today at the LILAC information literacy conference is Reframing Information Literacy Instruction through a Lens of Knowledge Justice presented by Heather Campbell and Ashley McKeown (Western University, Canada). The abstract is here This is a liveblog, so this is just my rushed impression of this rich session.
The presenters started by recognising the traditional holders of the lands that their university stands on, and identifying themselves as white settlers in Canada, and they shared aspects of their identity and positionality. They talked about the Canadian Truth and Reconciliation Commission and the responsibilities it brings for decolonisation. They cited "We must make space to balance generate and enable diverse knowledge systems to thrive". They talked about the work being done in the nursing profession (as Ashley is a nurse educator) to decolonise and critique figures such as Florence Nightingale. The coauthor Lea Sansom also introduced herself via video.
The went on to talk about how Ashley and Heather collaborated on teaching and learning, following on from Ashley discovering the university's Library Curriculum https://www.lib.uwo.ca/teaching/curriculum.html. This collaboration has resulted in the Knowledge Justice in the Helping Professions learning resource, currently an open resource, https://ecampusontario.pressbooks.pub/epistemicjusticeoer/
They defined epistemic injustice [if I can find this definition in their book I will insert it later] and talked further on how there can be epistemic injustice even within that field of study, encouraging us to think about who we cite, who isn't being cited, whose voice is being promoted or supressed. When teaching undergraduates they use AI and social media as teaching tools, and they gave an example of 2 videos that show how gen AI is biased when prompted for images of people with autism. This leads into debates e.g. of where are people's stories being shared, what are the sources that are contributing to the bias within a specific discipline. The presenters then shared a clip from a video on Epistemic injustice in health and medicine. This video provides a stimulus for learners to share examples of epistemic injustice.
Following on from that, the presenters talked about the importance of questioning who conducts academic research, whose voices are represented in the academy (e.g. on editorial boards) and who has power in authorising knowledge and knowers.
Then they talked about how they do talk about the words epistemology, ontology and axiology (particularly with faculty). Heather said that she spends more of her time teaching faculty, in addition to teaching students. Prompt questions for faculty include - what is the origin of your discipline, what does knowledge mean in your discipline, who is seen in the field. The presenters showed a list of types of knowledge (including ancestral knowledge, letters, ceremony, plants, water, as well as journals etc.) and ask people to reflect on which type of knowledge is acknowledged in their field. This leads on to asking people to reflect on the edges of their discipline's knowledge and their relationship with multiple ways of knowing and knowledge justice. The presenters also teach people about approaching knowledge seeking with humility.
Ashley talked about how she asks her students to interrogate what is meant by "best evidence" (troubling both words - best and evidence), and use case studies (each of which has an ethical conundrum). For an assignment she asks students to pick a case study and then generate a diverse list of references that could guide practice for this case. They encourage people to look for "voices" not "sources", focusing on (in their search) balancing lived experience, academic research and "arms length observers".
Something there wasn't time for in the presentation was talking about searching (e.g. adjusting your language to find a wider range of voices). Then they played a clip from a video from Lea about evaluating material critically using a knowledge justice lens, using a "framework of harms" (do they have potential for harm embedded in them). This is applied to all types of information. Lea also gave an example of when a faculty member had said she didn't want Lea to take a knowledge justice approach in a teaching session. However, Lea was still was able to introduce relevant questions into the teaching and bring in discussion of the different types of online harm. She noted that the students were in this case prepared for this type of discussion (e.g. they felt safe to share thoughts), which might not always be the case, also the faculty member felt that the teaching goals had been met.
The presenters finished by presenting some of the feedback from learners.
Photo by Sheila Webber: magnolia tree, Sheffield Botanic Gardens, March 2026
Starting, scrapping, and rebuilding AI literacy at Sussex #LILAC26
This is my first blog post for the 2nd day of the LILAC information literacy conference is From workshop to workshop: Starting, scrapping, and rebuilding AI literacy at Sussex presented by Nicholas Heavey (University of Sussex, UK). The abstract is here
Heavey said that initial initiatives felt a bit piecemeal, so they first identified a framework to help map skills across the curriculum. They decided to use UNESCO's framework for AI competency. This has 3 progression levels and 4 competency aspects. This helped them to see where gaps were, what they needed to cover and what they didn't. As this framework was designed for schools, they also mapped it to the UK's QAA HE framework, which gave a roadmap and helped to break this down for session aims and learning outcomes. Also it gave legitimacy when they went to talk to academics.
Heavey said that the first workshops didn't go quite as planned but gave useful insights into how students were actually using AI & what they needed. The library team went on to a dialogic and problem based approach, e.g. asking learners iteratively using prompts to see what happens and develop effective prompting techniques.
Looking at what worked at what didn't - early workshops were too technical, overloading learners with detail they didn't need. Therefore they turned to a more experiential learning approach, with more time to reflect. Secondly, they noticed that learners were anxious about AI e.g. not wanting to use it in a way that would make them discredited. Therefore it important to have open conversations, not being the assessment police and also not overstating the case against AI. Thirdly they have introduced more playful elements, e.g. using lower stakes activites/ tools to encourage experimentation. Two of their main sessions are: Questioning & prompting and Chatting and searching.
Heavey identified that sessions are structured around the brain vs AI (so thinking about what just uses the brain, what uses LLMs, how can you effectively use LLMs to assist) "LLM and research tasks emphasise the value and importance of researching and writing". The focus is on learning and understanding and they ask the learners to think of themselves as researchers. They explain key concepts through analogies and metaphors, which can be used to stimulate discussion. They also remind learners that they are responsible for any AI generated material. They ask people to reflect on whether the response from AI is changing the question they are asking - whether it actually answers the question they are posing.
The team use the CLEAR framework for AI prompts (example explanation here). Heavey presented a diagram to do with tool choice with more creative at one end and less creative at the other.
They use a three level model - introduction; Critical AI skills; and (not developed yet!) Advanced AI applications. They have also collaborated with teaching faculty (which sounded like a good collaboration with co-design and co-teaching), and gave an example of collaboration with Law where students took on the role of trainee solicitors (they undertook an authentic task, evaluated LLM outputs and reflected on professional ansd ethical implications). This was embedding traditional and AI research skills together.
In conclusion, Heavey saw this as an opportunity, as academics and learners are looking for support, and librarians can show how they can help.
Photo by Sheila Webber: not AI generated - magnolia tree in Sheffield Botanic Gardens, March 2026.



