The art of information literacy: New competencies for art, architecture, and design learners

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Abstract

Art, architecture, and design curriculum in higher education has evolved in many ways over the past decade. While many universities and colleges still ascribe to the Bauhaus model as a core approach to instruction, shifts in technology, modes of making, global perspectives, and the professional landscape have required responsiveness on the part of these institutions. Today’s art, architecture, and design learners need to be equipped to navigate, evaluate, and ethically use vast quantities and varieties of information in their practices. As a result of these evolutions and the influence of the ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education, library pedagogy for these disciplines has accordingly shifted away from traditional bibliographic instruction and towards information literacy-based approaches.

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How, L., Meeks, A., Robinson, S. M., & Vincent, A. (2019). The art of information literacy: New competencies for art, architecture, and design learners. College and Research Libraries News, 80(3), 165–168. https://doi.org/10.5860/crln.80.3.165

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