Librarian as Teacher: Information literacy in special libraries, or, how to secretly teach people things
When I was in library school I learned that information literacy is
something that is taught in classes and seminars, by professional
librarians to small or large groups of clients. While the content of
information literacy training varied, what was made clear in the model I
was presented with was that a client knew when they were being taught
information literacy.
However my first few jobs were in special libraries, in corporate environments. I found the difference between information literacy theory and practice very wide. Staff members, my clients, were not going to give 30 minutes or an hour of their time to ‘learn information literacy’ – not the least because they had been doing their jobs well before I came along, what did I have to teach them?
http://interlibnet.org/2015/09/29/librarian-as-teacher-information-literacy-in-special-libraries-or-how-to-secretly-teach-people-things/
However my first few jobs were in special libraries, in corporate environments. I found the difference between information literacy theory and practice very wide. Staff members, my clients, were not going to give 30 minutes or an hour of their time to ‘learn information literacy’ – not the least because they had been doing their jobs well before I came along, what did I have to teach them?
http://interlibnet.org/2015/09/29/librarian-as-teacher-information-literacy-in-special-libraries-or-how-to-secretly-teach-people-things/
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