Students have achieved "Information Literacy" when they are able to:
1. Recognize the value of information
- Recognizes the need for information in personal, work and academic settings
- Recognizes the value of information in society at large. Student is aware of the ethical issues, such as information access, copyright and the responsibility to properly credit information sources
- Appreciates that the skills gained in information competence enable lifelong learning
- Recognizes the value of being able to use information effectively
2. Explore information needs
- Ability to define information need
- Ability to concisely articulate and formulate a search question
- Can identify sub topics while researching
- Ability to identify potential and appropriate information providers and resources
3. Understand information structures
- Understands and uses electronic communication
- Understands how library collections, databases and/or the Internet are organized, indexed, classified and accessed for academic research
- Understands and uses library catalogs
- Understands and uses Web browsers and Internet search engines
- Understands and uses periodical indexes (also known as article databases)
- Understands and uses other reference print and electronic resources
- Can identify differences between scholarly and popular information
- Understands library services, particularly the role of the Reference librarian
4. Develop and apply effective search strategies
- Can prioritize sources to organize searches effectively and efficiently
- Uses appropriate thesauri and other tools to identify controlled vocabulary to search for information needed
- Can use broader, narrower and related vocabulary terms effectively
- Understands and uses Boolean logic and truncation
- Can recognize when he/she has sufficient information
5. Locate and retrieve information sources
- Interprets bibliographic citations and Internet equivalents and knows how to obtain cited items
- Uses interlibrary loan, document delivery, or other means to obtain material not available locally
- Understands access and institutional ownership and licensing issues
6. Analyze and critically evaluate information based on standard criteria
- Uses criteria including authority, accuracy, objectivity, currency, coverage, organization, purpose
Borrowed from Carol Hansen, Instruction Services Librarian, Weber State Univ., Utah