This study details the design of instruction sessions for undergraduate students that intended to encourage critical source evaluation and the questioning of established authorities, and appraises these instructional aims through a thematic analysis of 148 artifacts containing student responses to group and individual activities. The authors found a widespread reliance on traditional indicators of academic and scholarly authority, though some students expressed more personal or complex understandings of source evaluation, trustworthiness, and authorship. Based on the findings, recommendations are made for academic librarians interested in promoting learners' senses of agency and authority
This article gives a critical review and investigation of traditional generic ways of teaching sourc...
Each year since 2008, librarians at Carleton College read samples of sophomore writing as part of th...
Researchers at Brigham Young University studied first-year students’ information evaluation behaviou...
This study details the design of instruction sessions for undergraduate students that intended to en...
These lesson plans began with a desire to explore notions of authority in the library classroom at o...
This workshop facilitated by librarian Sarah Dalen focused on teaching students to analyze sources o...
This activity helps students evaluate their own authority on a particular subject so that they can b...
In information retrieval courses organized by the Oulu University Library the students learn i.a. to...
These presentation materials were used to create an online tutorial for undergraduate students about...
Many instruction librarians use the CRAAP test or a similar pneumonic tool as a regular activity in ...
Students can generally find relevant information for their topic that checks the boxes for “quality,...
This study emanates from an assumption that the skill of evaluating sources is placed in a complicat...
As one of the cornerstones of the CRAAP test to evaluate the validity and usefulness of sources, we ...
Currently, college students are being presented with a wide array of information. This wealth of inf...
No Abstract.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63075/1/1450450120_ftp.pd
This article gives a critical review and investigation of traditional generic ways of teaching sourc...
Each year since 2008, librarians at Carleton College read samples of sophomore writing as part of th...
Researchers at Brigham Young University studied first-year students’ information evaluation behaviou...
This study details the design of instruction sessions for undergraduate students that intended to en...
These lesson plans began with a desire to explore notions of authority in the library classroom at o...
This workshop facilitated by librarian Sarah Dalen focused on teaching students to analyze sources o...
This activity helps students evaluate their own authority on a particular subject so that they can b...
In information retrieval courses organized by the Oulu University Library the students learn i.a. to...
These presentation materials were used to create an online tutorial for undergraduate students about...
Many instruction librarians use the CRAAP test or a similar pneumonic tool as a regular activity in ...
Students can generally find relevant information for their topic that checks the boxes for “quality,...
This study emanates from an assumption that the skill of evaluating sources is placed in a complicat...
As one of the cornerstones of the CRAAP test to evaluate the validity and usefulness of sources, we ...
Currently, college students are being presented with a wide array of information. This wealth of inf...
No Abstract.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/63075/1/1450450120_ftp.pd
This article gives a critical review and investigation of traditional generic ways of teaching sourc...
Each year since 2008, librarians at Carleton College read samples of sophomore writing as part of th...
Researchers at Brigham Young University studied first-year students’ information evaluation behaviou...