Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7532497 | Library & Information Science Research | 2017 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
College librarians express concern over incoming students' information literacy skills and lack of skills preparing them for college-level research. However, it is unclear whether information literacy skills are not being taught at the high school level, whether they are not being retained or transferred as students move on to college, or whether there is a disconnect between the skills taught in high school and those expected of incoming college students. This study explores these questions through a set of parallel surveys sent to a national sample of high school and college librarians. Findings suggest that high school and college librarians agree on the importance of most skills though they vary in their emphasis on their importance, and that information literacy skills are being taught in high school but do not seem to transfer to college. The paper concludes with suggestions for increased communication and collaboration to bridge the high school to college transition.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
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Library and Information Sciences
Authors
Laura Saunders, Jenny Severyn, Jes Caron,