Friday, July 26, 2013

LILAC Project Workshop

This year's post-conference workshop at the annual Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy August 23-24, 2013, in Savannah, Georgia, will be a LILAC Project workshop, facilitated by Katt Blackwell-Starnes (Lamar University); Janice R. Walker, Leigh Ann Williams, and Liz Kelly (Georgia Southern University); and Susan Brown (Kennesaw State University).

We will be working on identifying student information-seeking behaviors in the videos for use as we move forward with the study.  We hope to have approval to begin a larger, multi-institutional study this coming year.  Stay tuned for more information!

If you will be attending this year's conference, please plan to join us at the workshop.  If not, why aren't you coming?! :)

 

Thursday, May 02, 2013

Join us for the Graduate Research Network at Computers and Writing Conference!


DEADLINE FOR SUBMISSION MAY 9, 2013!

The 2013 Graduate Research Network (GRN) is an annual forum at the Computers and Writing Conference to connect researchers with other researchers and discussion leaders in the field.

We invite proposals for work-in-progress discussion at the 14th annual GRN, June 6, 2013, at the Computers and Writing Conference hosted this year by Frostburg State University, Frostburg, MD.  Work at any stage of completion is welcome, from those just beginning to think through ideas to those ready to consider venues for publication. The GRN is FREE to all registered conference participants.  Remember, too: you do NOT have to be a graduate student to participate! Anyone who would like to benefit from the conversations and feedback about projects they are working on is welcome!

Morning sessions will consist of roundtable discussions of works-in-progress.  During the afternoon GRN, we will offer an exciting job workshop.  We need both presenters and Discussion Leaders.  Sign up NOW.
 
·        For more information about the GRN and to sign up to participate, please visit our Web site at http://www.gradresearchnetwork.org/.   And don’t forget to apply for GRN/C&W Travel Grant Funding if you meet eligibility requirements. Even if you have already registered for the C&W Conference and checked the GRN Workshop box, you will still need to complete our form. And if you did NOT register for GRN, don't worry--there's still time!

·        We also hope that those who can will consider donating to the GRN/C&W Travel Grant Fund.  For more information on how you can contribute—or to apply for funding—see http://www.gradresearchnetwork.org/donate-to-the-grn/.

·        AND don’t forget, you can also help us raise money for the GRN/C&W Travel Grant Fund , stay fit, and have fun by participating in Ride2CW.  For more information, see http://www.ride2cw.org/.

See you in Frostburg!  Remember:  GRN!

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Deadline Extended: Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy


Deadline Extended to April 1, 2013

The Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy, August 23-24, 2013, in Savannah, GA, invites proposals across disciplines for workshops and presentations that will consider, extend, or otherwise address information literacy in K-12 and postsecondary settings:
• DEFINING INFORMATION LITERACY in a digital age.
• EFFECTIVE MEANS of developing information literacy skills in learners.
• PARTNERSHIPS between librarians and classroom teachers to teach students research skills.
• INFORMATION LITERACY across the disciplines.
• ASSESSMENT of information literacy initiatives.
• INTELLECTUAL property, copyright, and plagiarism in the digital age.
Conference organizers welcome international participants and proposal submissions, in order to broaden and share knowledge regarding information literacy practice, theory and research in a variety of cultural settings worldwide. Please note, however, that presentations must be in English and that the Conference cannot provide funding for attendees or for presenters. 
For more information, visit our Web site at http://ceps.georgiasouthern.edu/conted/infolitproposals.html


Monday, March 25, 2013

LILAC Wins Grant

We are pleased to announce that one of the 2013 Conference on College Composition and Communication (CCCC) Research Inititaive Grants was awarded to the LILAC Project this year. With the help of this grant, and now that we have completed our small, local pilot study, we hope to expand the LILAC study to a multi-institutional study.

I have added the PowerPoint presentation I delivered at CCCC to the LILAC Wiki.  It includes an invitation to join us in this expanded project.  Katt Blackwell-Starnes and I plan to revise the IRB protocol and create training materials and handouts to aid partners in collaborating with us.  We also are looking at other grant opportunities to help us expand the project.

Please email jwalker@georgiasouthern.edu if you are interested in joining us!

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

LILAC Presentation at CCCC

Join us at CCCC in Las Vegas. Session K.34, Friday, March 15, 2013, 3:30-4:45pm.  "Designing a Multi-Institutional Cross-Disciplinary Study in Information Literacy." 



Chair: Rachael Geary, Texas Woman's University

Speakers:
Janice Walker, Georgia Southern University: Report from the LILAC Project: Designing a Study of Student Information-Seeking Behaviors

Katt Blackwell-Starnes, Georgia Southern University: First I'll Go to Google: Insight into Student Search Habits from the LILAC Project

Eleanor Haynes, Compliance Officer, Georgia Southern University: Navigating Institutional Review Board Approval for a Multi-Institutional Cross Disciplinary Study.

Monday, February 04, 2013

CFP - 10th Annual Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy


Please mark your calendar and plan on being with us for the 10th Annual Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy.

In honor of our 10 year Anniversary, the conference will be held at the HYATT Regency Hotel in Savannah, Georgia,AUGUST 23-24, 2013.

We are excited to introduce Dr. Alison Head - Executive Director and Lead Researcher, Project Information Literacy, Sonoma, CA - as our Keynote Speaker.

For complete conference details please access the website at -


Please follow this link to access and submit the *Call for Proposal* –


The deadline for proposal submission is March 15, 2013.

We appreciate your efforts to share this message with your colleagues and other interested professions.

Join us in Savannah for this annual conference jointly hosted by Georgia Southern University’s:

Zach S. Henderson Library
Department of Writing and LinguisticsCollege of Liberals Arts & Social Sciences
College of Education and the Division of Continuing Education

We are looking forward to seeing you in August!

Friday, September 28, 2012

Call for Proposals for Edited Collection


Information Literacy—Not Just for Librarians: Issues in Assessment, Teaching, and Application
Editors: Barbara D’Angelo, Sandra Jamieson, Barry Maid, and Janice R. Walker

Information Literacy—Not Just for Librarians: Issues in Assessment, Teaching and Application is an edited collection that will address research in and issues surrounding theoretical, pedagogical, and practical approaches to information literacy (IL).  According to the Association of College and Research Libraries (ACRL) an "information literate individual" is able to “determine the extent of information needed, access the needed information effectively and efficiently, evaluate information and its sources critically, incorporate selected information into one's knowledge base, use information effectively to accomplish a specific purpose, and understand the economic, legal, and social issues surrounding the use of information, and access and use information ethically and legally.” As this definition reveals, IL goes far beyond the traditional image of locating and assessing sources to include understanding and using them. In other words, today IL exists beyond the realm of academic librarians.  One example is the fact the WPA Outcomes Statement and the ACRL Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education mirror one another and were created in the same timeframe.  Both WPA and ACRL were replying to the same exigence.

Information literacy as a core competency has been endorsed by the Council of Independent Colleges and forms the basis of the Quality Enrichment Plans of many SACS-accredited institutions   Yet in spite of the broad currency of the term, there is still no agreed-upon definition or understanding of what IL instruction entails. Calls for more broadly-shared ownership of and responsibility for IL (see for example Fister 1992, Gavin 1995, Norgaard 2003, & Lupton 2004), have been largely unheeded in practice. Research by Project Information Literacy, The Citation Project, and the LILAC Project reveal that the majority of American college students remain far from “information literate individuals” and suggest that focused attention to information literacy is essential across disciplines and specializations, and for this it remains imperative to establish a significant literature that draws on the expertise and vision of scholars in multiple disciplines.

This collection seeks to bring together the work of faculty across the curriculum, including those from academic and professional disciplines, general education programs, writing studies, technical communication, and library sciences.  Proposals should address one or more of the following issues or related issues:

·         Status of IL initiatives
·         Partnerships across disciplines and/or between faculty and librarians
·         Impact of new media/technologies on IL instruction
·         Impact of assessment and accreditation standards on IL initiatives
·         Theoretical considerations
·         Pedagogical approaches
·         IL as part of a vertical curriculum
·         Research in the transfer of IL skills across the curriculum
·         IL in theory and in practice
·         IL beyond the classroom
·         Research on students’ and/or faculty IL practices

·      

Submit abstracts (approximately 200 words) via email by January 31, 2013 to jwalker@georgiasouthern.edu.

2012 Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy

 Just a few pics from the conference. If you missed this year's Conference, you missed a great one!  Over 300 people in attendance (a new record)!
The first three pictures are from the Saturday morning keynote by Joyce Valenza.  She managed to pack into an hour several YEAR's worth of information!  But she has promised to provide us with a link to her presentation online so we can peruse it at our leisure. Keep an eye out on the Conference Web site at http://ceps.georgiasouthern.edu/conted/infolit.html 

 The last three pictures here are from the wonderful post-conference workshop on the Citation Project, presented by Sandra Jamieson and Tricia Serviss.
Let's hope we can entice them to return next year for another update!

Speaking of next year, save the date! September 20-21, 2013 at the Coastal Georgia Center in Savannah.  This will be our 10th anniversary, so expect to party!  See you there.


Monday, May 14, 2012

GSU eReserves Copyright Infringement Case

The decision is in regarding the eReserves case against Georgia State University:  http://blogs.library.duke.edu/scholcomm/2012/05/12/the-gsu-decision-not-an-easy-road-for-anyone/

Basically, 10% was used more as a rule than a guideline, but applied equally to edited collections as well as single-authored books; multi-semester use of materials is allowed; and only 95% of the instances brought before the judge were determined to be in violation of Fair Use.  However, the judge also seemed to think that we (potential infringers that we are) should determine monetary effect of our use, even when that information is not available to us.  I think.  Or something like that.  Anyway, read it for yourself and see what you think.

Libraries can not (yet) breathe easily, but at least they're not (quite) dead.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Join Us at CCCC 2012 in St. Louis!

Understanding Students’ Source Choices: Insights from the Citation Project and LILAC Project
Session: D.19 on Mar 22, 2012 from 3:15 PM to 4:30 PM Cluster: 10) Research
Type: Concurrent Session (3 or more presenters) Interest Emphasis: Not Applicable
Level Emphasis: All Focus: First-Year Composition
Description of session: When instructors read students’ researched writing, they assess the sources in the bibliography and the ways in which sources are cited in the text. The results of two separate research projects, however, provide important new information about how and why students choose the sources they do; what kinds of sources are chosen; and how the source choices affect the intellectual and rhetorical quality of the students’ written work. Speakers in this session describe pedagogical changes that are suggested by the research results.

Speaker One Abstract:
TITLE: Statistical Analysis of Students' Source Choices

The Citation Project has studied almost 1,000 sources cited in 175 student researched papers from FYC classes at 16 colleges across the US, and the correlation between the type and difficulty-level of the source and students’ use of it. This presentation will discuss these findings and related questions about how we describe and they assess sources. There is much room for confusion when we say “peer reviewed” to mean “reviewed by academics” but wikipedia is also “peer reviewed,” and there is more confusion regarding bias. McClure and Clink’s 2009 study of 100 student essays found that sources they classified as “advocacy” were the most frequently cited, followed by “News” and “Informational” (“How Do You Know That?”). A 2011 whitepaper by Turnitin.com, “Plagiarism and the Web,” uses six classifications, and notes that material in “Homework and Academic” is the second most frequently used (25% of 140 million content matches). This category includes www.coursehero.com, which boasts “more than 6,500,000 student-uploaded documents from over 5,000 universities around the world” but would probably not be classified as “academic” by most FYC faculty. Another Turnitin grouping, “News and Portals,” includes The New York Times and answers.yahoo.com (the 2nd most frequently used source after wikipedia). Turnitin studied “content matches” and didn’t distinguish between quoted or correctly cited and uncited work. The citation project only codes cited source use and classifies sources into much finer categories, yet some of the findings match those of Turnitin and both studies conclude that we need to teach students to incorporate source material more effectively. But this research also confirms that students in FYC are failing to use appropriate sources, and suggests that rather than trying to teach them how to find those sources—or using computer programs to monitor which sites they use and how they use them—FYC should stop assigning the research paper.

Speaker Two Abstract:
TITLE: How Students Find and Evaluate Sources

This presentation will report on the LILAC Project’s pilot study of students’ information-seeking behavior (ISB). Using a “research-aloud protocol” (RAP), along with interviews and surveys, we attempt to discover what students are taking away from current classroom- and library-based information literacy instruction so that we can make recommendations for equipping students with research skills that will transfer beyond the first-year classroom. In the past few years, research into and testing of students’ skills in information literacy, usually defined as the ability to locate and use information from outside sources, has proliferated. The results of most of these tests and studies, however, is to tell us what we, as educators, already know: whatever we are doing now to teach essential information literacy skills to our students is just not working. Even though teachers and librarians have tried a wide variety of ways to teach these skills, students continue to fare poorly in assessments of those skills. While there are problems with many of these assessment instruments, we are right to be concerned, as the RAPs I describe in this presentation will show. The problem is not a lack of instruction or a lack of instructional materials dealing with information literacy; of these, we have an embarrassment of riches. Instead, we may need to reconsider how, when, and where we provide students with this instruction.

Speaker 3 Abstract:
TITLE: Pedagogical Causes and Rhetorical Consequences of Students' Source Choices

A rhetorical analysis of papers studied in the Citation Project reveals that what often seem to be stylistic infelicities, underdeveloped or disorganized writing, misuse of sources, or excessive reliance on sources cannot be remedied in late stages of composing. The Citation Project research reveals that instead, these issues often derive from “quote-mining” sources rather than reading them; overvaluing brevity and ease of reading as criteria for source selection; and focusing on correct citation without actually engaging with or even reading the sources. Passages from an array of student research papers illustrate problems in style and academic integrity that result from attenuated and cursory source selection and incomplete reading. These results suggest that it may be useful to redefine “early” and “late” stages of students’ writing from sources, with drafting categorized not as an “early” stage but a “late” one. It may be useful, too, to consider the extent to which correct citation is being overvalued in the assessment of student writing. Even when poor sources have been chosen and read only for the discovery of “killer quotes,” the paper may appear to handle sources well. Speaker 3 will offer concrete principles for what seem necessary and extensive pedagogical and curricular reforms.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

LILAC Project Invites Participants

We are looking for students at Georgia Southern University to participate in an IRB-approved research study being conducted by Dr. Janicr R. Walker and Dr. Adrienne Blackwell-Starnes.  Please see the flyer at http://personal.georgiasouthern.edu/~jwalker/LILAC/LILAC.pdf for complete information.

Wednesday, November 09, 2011

IRB Application (finally!) submitted!

I have (finally!) submitted the IRB application for a pilot study of the LILAC Project at Georgia Southern University.  Adrienne (Katt) Blackwell-Starnes has also joined me as Co-Investigator on the Project.

I will be presenting on the LILAC project at CCCC in St. Louis this spring, on a panel with Rebecca Moore Howard and Sandra Jamieson of the Citation Project, and I have been invited to submit an article for Sandra and Tricia Serviss's upcoming book collection (and Katt has agreed to co-author it with me!).

I have also received approval from my Department Chair to purchase/borrow the following equipment and software for the pilot study when approved by the IRB:

2 - laptops (one will be kept in my office, and one in Katt's)
2 - licenses for Camtasia Studio software (to be installed on laptops)
2 -  headsets with microphones
1 - 2T external hard drive

I've posted a copy of the IRB application to the LILAC Wiki, along with the sample videos I posted previously, and a draft of a forthcoming article on the LILAC Project.  After the pilot study, I hope to pursue grant funding to expand the study; I'll be sure to post any information/applications for that as well.

Exciting times!

Monday, October 17, 2011

While this talk was directed to librarians, I REALLY think our students should see it as well.  Very well done.  Kudos, Joyce.

Joyce Valenza, "See Sally Research" on TED Talks
http://tedxphillyed.com/2011/09/video-post-dr-joyce-valenza-see-sally-research/ 

Monday, September 19, 2011

Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy - This weekend!!

THIS weekend is the Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy in Savannah.  Some highlights include:  Keynote speaker Mike Palmquist; free post-conference Citation Project workshop, with Sandra Jamieson as the extraordinary workshop leader.

Hope to see you there!

http://ceps.georgiasouthern.edu/conted/infolit.html

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

2011 Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy


Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy, September 23-24, 2011, Savannah, GA.
Register for the Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy before 9/5/2011 to get the early registration discount!

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Deadline Is May 30!

Final reminder: The deadline for submissions for the Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy is May 30!


This year's keynote speaker is Mike Palmquist, Associate Vice Provost for Learning and Teaching, Institute for Learning and Teaching, Colorado State University. The conference is hosted in the historic district of downtown Savannah, September 23-24, 2011.

For more information, see the Call for Proposals at http://ceps.georgiasouthern.edu/conted/infolitproposals.html or email me. I'm happy to answer any questions.

Hope to see you there!

Thursday, April 21, 2011

The Citation Project: The Movie

Some of you may have read the Inside Higher Education article about Rebecca Moore Howard and Sandra Jamieson's recent presentation at CCCC about the Citation Project (http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2011/04/11/study_of_first_year_students_research_papers_finds_little_evidence_they_understand_sources).  The actual video of the presentation is available online at http://www.viddler.com/explore/yscmcgraw-hill/videos/48/?secreturl=81189253

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Extended deadline: Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy

We have extended the deadline for proposal submissions for the Georgia Interational Conference on Information Literacy until May 30, 2011.

Mike Palmquist will be this year's keynote speaker. You won't want to miss it!

For more information, please visit our Web site at http://ceps.georgiasouthern.edu/conted/infolit.html .