Librarians fight mis- and dis-information through information literacy

These are must-reads!!

Barbara Fister wrote this originally for Project Information Literacy (which Mike E was part of for many years). Then, it was picked up and published on Feb 18, 2021 by the Atlantic Magazine with the even more provocative title -

The Librarian War Against QAnon - https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2021/02/how-librarians-can-fight-qanon/618047/

Here’s the link to the original article -

Lizard People in the Library - https://projectinfolit.org/pubs/provocation-series/essays/lizard-people-in-the-library.ht

Crowd-Sourced Student Curation

My friend Bob Boiko, Senior Lecturer at the Information School at the University of Washington is a master online/virtual instructor. One of his techniques is to use students to "crowd-source" relevant and credible sources for learning specific topics.

The topics can be on anything. In information science, this might be "the join command in a SQL database," or "animals of the Galapagos Islands," or "the Krebs cycle in biology."

Instead of the teacher lecturing (or in addition to), the students seek out quality videos, slide shows, readings, lessons on the topic and post them to the course website - explaining why they chose and recommend that source. If other students use the recommended source, they rate it (on a typical 5 star system). Over time, the better sources rise to the top and the bottom ones drop out.

Yes, you need to coordinate and manage this, for example, dividing the class up so that only 5 or so students choose and post content for each topic or limiting the number of sources each student can post, but you get the idea.

This is one highly motivating technique to engage students in learning and to energize virtual learning. Students are also exercising their Big6 information problem-solving skills - particularly Task Definition, Information Seeking Strategies, and Evaluation.

-Mike Eisenberg

Libraries Lead in the New Normal

Now Available! The first episode of a new podcast - Libraries Lead in the New Normal -

https://publishersweekly.podbean.com/.../a-special.../

Dave Lankes and Mike Eisenberg talk about issues, challenges, and opportunities facing librarians and libraries (and society at large) in this second decade of the 21st Century. A "new normal" is emerging. 2020 was brutal and 2021 is also starting out with serious challenges on many fronts. But there are also life-altering, sea changing, transformative opportunities. Libraries and librarians in all settings and situations have major roles to play as society comes to grip with this new normal.

Over the next year, podcast topics will include - Covid and the lockdown, social justice – mis- dis-information, political unrest and insurrection, learning and teaching virtually and physically, climate and weather change, emergency preparedness, and the changing nature of work and home lives.

Please tune in and please share with others!