LIB120 Introduction to Information Literacy
Introduction | Goals and
Objectives | Requirements | Grading
Class Schedule | Jamuary | Februrary | March | April | May
Homework Master List | LIB120 Index
Instructor: Jim Kinnie |
Fax: 874-5403 Office hours: Mondays 2pm or by appointment |
Information Literacy is the ability to "recognize when information is needed and have the ability to locate, evaluate, and use effectively the needed information. Information Literacy is common to all disciplines, to all learning environments, and to all levels of education. It forms the basis for lifetime learning." -American Library Association. Presidential Committee on Information Literacy. Final Report. (Chicago: american Library Association, 1989) |
| Information Overload | Top |
In his 1989 book, Information Anxiety, Richard Saul Wurman helps us get a feel for just how dramatic the information explosion really is:
Also:
| Course Goals and Objectives | Top |
Information is a commodity readily available in overwhelming abundance. However. information is only useful if the researcher has the knowledge and skills necessary to manipulate it. While exploring the information world students will learn to use effective methods and techniques of information gathering, evaluation and presentation. The knowledge gained in this course will prepare students to conduct university level research and beyond that, develop skills necessary for life-long learning.
Student Objectives
| Requirements: | Top |
There is no required textbook for this course.
Required Materials:
| Grading | Top |
Grades for the course will be A-F. Grades should be considered as a way for an instructor to communicate how well students have learned what the course is designed to teach. I will grade Homework and Class Exercises on a check / check plus / check minus basis. This translates into 1, 2, 3 or 0 points for each assignment (1=not great,, 2=good, 3=excellent, 0 = not done at all). Exams and projects will be graded traditionally as a percentage of 100 points.
The goal of the homework and exercises is to facilitate your learning through engaging with the material and to provide an opportunity to learn and practice the skills we are covering in class. Assignments are expected to be submitted on the date due. It is very important that you submit the assignments on time so that you will not fall behind in the class. I will accept late homework assignments only before three benchmark dates: February 16, the date of the first exam, will be the last day I will accept assignments that were due before that date; March 31 for assignments due 2/18-3/31; May 3 for assignments due 3/31-5/3. I will not accept assignments later than those dates. In-class exercises cannot be made up. Turning assignments in late is highly discouraged. I will not be as flexible with the Paper Trail Project which is due on May 3. Paper Trail Projects that are turned in late will lose 10 points off the total Semester Project grade for each day late.
Your grade will be based on the following:
| Criterion | Percent of final grade |
| Writing-to-learn exercises/Reserve reading responses | 5% |
| Attendance/In-class exercises (class participation) | 10% |
| Homework assignments | 15% |
| Team Database Project | 10% |
| Exam 1 | 10% |
| Exam 2 | 10% |
| Semester Project - "The Paper Trail" | 30% |
| Final exam | 10% |
| Total | 100% |
The following number of points out of a total of 100 will determine the corresponding letter grade:
A = 93-100
A- = 90-92
B+ = 87-89
B = 83-86
B- = 80-82
C+ = 77-79
C = 70-72
D+ = 67-69
D = 60-66
F = Below 60
Writing-to-learn exercises/Reserve reading responses - 5% of the grade
Writing -to-learn exercises - Writing-to-learn exercises are short. I will ask the class a question, and in response each student will write a few sentences, or at most a paragraph on an index card that is provided. These exercises are designed to help students review and retain material from the last class, to provide practice in applying ideas, to promote understanding of concepts, and to encourage active reading of assigned texts.
Reading responses - Students will submit reading responses for selected readings. Your written responses will be composed of thoughts and evaluations of the readings based on class discussions and experiences with the assignments, exercises and readings for the course, There is no prescribed length for the written responses, but it is expected that each will reflect your own thoughts about the readings. Each student will present their summary/opinion to the class for discussion. I will refer those that need help in composition to the URI Writing Center, 874-4690 or http://www.uri.edu/artsci/eng/wrtcnt.html
Attendance/In-class Exercises (Class Participation) -10%
You will probably not do well in this course unless you are in class to share and actively
contribute to the learning. As much as I am the facilitator of your learning in this
course, it is your responsibility to learn the materials and share your learning with your
classmates. Exercises will involve group learning and discussions with the class. In-class
exercises cannot be made up. If you must miss a class due to illness or emergency you
should contact me immediately
Homework Assignments (10%)
Most of the homework assignments will be considered first drafts of the elements that make
up the semester project. Assignments and exercises are expected on the date due. You may
submit your work to me in paper, or electronically by email or fax. >>Homework Grading Scheme<<
Team Database Presentation Project - 10%
Working in teams of 2-3, students will be assigned a specific database. Each team will
have class time to investigate and learn to use the database. Outside of class each team
will prepare an in-class presentation of the database. Use the Database Discovery
Worksheet to help you format the presentation. The presentation must include information
about the database's content, coverage, audience, search mechanisms, and retrieval
options. A good project will include visual aids and helpful tips for students to learn
the database.
Exams (3 Exams, each worth 10% of the final grade for a total of 30%)
The exam dates are listed in the Class Schedule below. The exams will cover anything
listed on this syllabus including the readings, class discussions, notes, PowerPoint
presentations and Web sites used in class. The final ezam will be an essay describibg your
research strategy given a choice of topics.
NOTE: Absence during an exam must be excused by a doctor's note verifying illness, an
official University letter verifying a participation in a sports event, or a note from a
University counselor verifying personal problems. Without an approved excuse, you will not
be allowed to take a make-up exam.
The Paper Trail - Semester Project - 30% of grade
The Paper Trail is due Monday May 3. You will be working on it for most of the semester.
It is worth 30% of your grade, so be sure to stay on top of this project. Essentially the
Paper Trail is an annotated portfolio or a map of the research process used for a research
paper or project. Your Paper Trail project should allow me to follow your research path
for a pre-selected research question. It is a map to trace all of your research - the
processes that worked and those that didn't work. Homework assignments throughout the
semester will directly apply to the Paper Trail project and a personal journal describing
your research experiences will also be included. Journal entries and homework will
be collected and returned for revision as the semester progresses. It is highly
recommended that you use a topic from a course you are currently taking. The topic
idea must be submitted to me for approval before you can begin the project.
Readings
Readings will include online lecture notes, Web sites, short readings from handouts
and periodicals. Some reading material may be held in the Reserves Unit of the
library.
Any student needing special accommodations should contact the URI Office of Student Life, Disability Services at (401) 874-2098, TT (via RI Relay) 1-800-745-5555, or on the Web at http://www.uri.edu/disability_services/
Please read the University Manual sections on Plagiarism and
Cheating, 8.27.10+
http://www.uri.edu/facsen/8.20-8.27.html
| Class Schedule | Top |
January 14 - Wednesday
Overview and Introductions
Syllabus
Information Skills Survey
Information explosion/Information overload
What exactly is information?
January 20 - Tuesday (Monday classes)
What is Information?
Characteristics of Information
Organization of Information
"Let's buy a car!"
Lecture Notes:
January 21 - Wednesday
Information organization continued
Classification systems
Academic disciplines - what field of study is your topic related to?
January 26 - Monday
The Research Process - How does it work?
Keys and steps to Successful Research
Using Encyclopedias as Background Sources
General and Subject-Specific Sources
Lecture Notes:
January 28 - Wednesday
How to develop a topic - Mind Mapping and other techniques
Formulating an effective research question - narrow it down
Develop a Research Plan
February 2 - Monday
Finding Monographic Information
The HELIN Catalog
Bibliographic records
February 4 - Wednesday
Advanced HELIN - Keyword, Truncation, Limiting, Restricting
Reviewing Bibliographic Records (Access Points, Publication info,
Location Info)
MLA Citation format
February 9 - Monday
Interpretation and Evaluation Criteria - How to evaluate the
information you find - is it GOOD information?
Annotated Bibliography (What is it? Why use one? How to write one!)
February 11 - Wednesday
LC Subject Headings
Revisiting Catalogs
Review for Exam 1
February 16 - Monday
EXAM # 1
February 18 - Wednesday
Exam 1 review
Finding periodical information
Information Cycle - The Flow of Information Web site - http://www.library.ucla.edu/libraries/college/help/flow/
Publication Cycle - Publication Jungle - The Invisible College
February 23 - Monday
How to Find Periodical Information continued
Indexes and indexers
Reader's Guide to Periodical Literature
Finding subject specific print indexes.
February 25 - Wednesday
How to Find Periodical Information continued
Scholarly, Popular and Trade - What's the difference?
Introduction to the Team Database Project
- Complete the Follow the Paper Trails worksheet.
- Interview a faculty member on the topic of scholarly research and "the invisible college" and write a brief, 3 page report on the interview. See the Scholarly Research Worksheet
- Complete the Information Trail Worksheet .
March 1 - Monday
Finding Periodical Information continued
March 3 - Wednesday
Electronic Databases
Access points in an Online Index or Database
Academic Search Premier (EBSCOHost)/Article First (FirstSearch)
Demonstration and discussion
March 8-14 - SPRING BREAK
March 15 - Monday
Electronic Databases - Advanced Searching Techniques
Search Statements
March 17 - Wednesday
"You Mean They *Lied* to Me?" -- Consumer Literacy for the 21st
Century
Class will meet from 4:30 to 6:30 pm in Chafee 271 for a discussion about consumer information with speakers from the Federal Trade Commission, the National Consumer League and the Federal Reserve.
This lecture is mandatory -- Please complete the assignment linked below. If you can't make this presentation, there is an alternate assignment listed there.
Assignment - Due March 24 --- More information on the program
March 22 - Monday
Electronic Databases continued
March 24 - Wednesday
Team Database Project presentations - LAB
(Working in pairs, students will be assigned a specific database. Each team will teach the class how to use the database. Your presentation should take about 10 minutes. Each team member is responsible to share in the presentation. If you must, meet outside of class to fine tune your presentation. Use the Database Discovery Worksheet to help you format the presentation. You must include information regarding the database's content, coverage, audience, search mechanisms and retrieval options. Include demonstrations and discussion of each. A good presentation will include attractive and informative visual aids.)
March 29 - Monday
Team Database Project presentations
Post your notes - Type a brief summary of your database information in an email message and send it to the course listserv at lib120-jk@pete.uri.edu. The message should be brief and should summarize your answers to Part 1 of the Database Discovery Worksheet (the database description). Send it to the list by Friday, April 2.
March 31 - Wednesday
Team Database Project presentations
Post your notes - Type a brief summary of your database information in an email message and send it to the course listserv at lib120-jk@pete.uri.edu. The message should be brief and should summarize your answers to Part 1 of the Database Discovery Worksheet (the database description) Sent it to the list by Friday, April 2
April 5 - Monday
EXAM #2
Study Guide
April 12 - Monday
Search Engines and Databases
Searchenginewatch.com
Assignments - Due April 21
Find Web Resources - Find two Web sites that will be of use to you in your Paper Trail project. Fill out the Web Discovery Worksheet. (PT)
April 14 - Wednesday
Web Site Evaluations. (List
of Web sites to evaluate)
Evaluation criteria
April 19 - Monday
Experts and Associations: How to find them, how to use them in research.
Statistics: Where to find them, when to believe them
Information Packaging/Citation Formats
April 21 - Wednesday
Reading response presentations
April 26 - Monday
Reading response presentations
April 28 - Wednesday
Plagiarism, intellectual property, copyright
Preserving information
SETS
May 3 - Monday
Paper Trail Projects due today
SETS
Paper Trail Grading Criteria
[Tentative] FINAL EXAM - TAKE HOME - Due Friday,
May 14, 5pm
Follow the directions on the exam linked above and send your response to
me via email before Friday, May 14, 2004 at 5 pm. Please do not send it as an attachment -
Use a word processing program and copy and paste it directly into an email message. I will
reply to your message to say that I received it. (I will be out of state May 6-9 and my
email access may be limited, so please be patient.) My address is jkinnie@uri.edu.
I will add specific topics to the exam after the last class of the semester