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Workplace information literacy for administrative staff in HE

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journal contribution
posted on 2008-10-10, 09:18 authored by Mark Hepworth, Marian Smith
A joint project carried out by Leeds University and Loughborough University, funded by JISC studied the information literacy of non academic staff in higher education. The in-depth, qualitative, study deployed an information audit, interviews and focus groups with eleven staff in the Finance and Research Departments at Loughborough University. The information literacy needs of staff were compared with the JISC iskills model. The hierarchical and collaborative nature of the workplace meant that people’s experience of information literacy in the workplace was more fragmented than in the academic context. Common labels could be used to describe information literacy in the different contexts but more emphasis was placed on data, internal information and information from other people in the workplace. Time had an impact on information literacy. Social networking skills were recognised as key information literacy skills. The need for staff to know how to organise information and develop information policies was identified.

History

School

  • Science

Department

  • Information Science

Citation

HEPWORTH, M. and SMITH, M., 2008. Workplace information literacy for administrative staff in HE. Australian Library Journal, 57 (3), pp. 212-236

Publisher

Australian Library and Information Association

Publication date

2008

Notes

This is a journal article. It was published in the Australian Library Journal and the definitive version is available at: http://alia.org.au/publishing/alj/

ISSN

0004-9670

Language

  • en