Exploring behaviour in the online environment: student perceptions of information literacy

  • Smith J
  • Oliver M
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Abstract

The aim of this paper is to show how information literacy can be conceptualised as a key learning process related to discipline and academic maturity, rather than as a generic skill. Results of a small- scale study including questionnaires and observation of student behaviour are reported and analy- sed in relation to Bruce’s ‘seven faces of information literacy’ framework. The findings illustrate that information literacy is a highly situated practice that remains undeveloped through mandatory schooling. Some methodological issues are considered in relation to researching information liter- acy, including the limits of the Bruce model as a framework for analysis. We also show how decon- textualised courses can foreground and privilege certain behaviours that are beneficial but that developing higher-level information literate attitudes is likely to be an iterative and contextualised process.

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Smith, J., & Oliver, M. (2005). Exploring behaviour in the online environment: student perceptions of information literacy. ALT-J, 13(1), 49–65. https://doi.org/10.1080/0968776042000339790

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