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Home/ Digital Literacy/ Contents contributed and discussions participated by David Bevington

Contents contributed and discussions participated by David Bevington

David Bevington

Digital Literacy - Qedoc - 0 views

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    A Qedoc learning module available for download
David Bevington

Information Investigator 3.1: Apply now for a free preview! - TLNing - 0 views

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    is a 3 hour self paced class combined with a performance assessment of your information fluency skills
David Bevington

Digital Literacy: A Conceptual Framework for Survival Skills in the Digital era - 0 views

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    Digital literacy includes a large variety of skills, which users need in order to function effectively in digital environments.
David Bevington

A New Curriculum for Information Literacy - 1 views

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    Project by Dr. Emma Coonan "IntroductionThis short project, based at Cambridge University Library and funded by the Arcadia Programme, sought to develop a practical curriculum for information literacy that meets the needs of the undergraduate student entering higher education over the next five years.The research is grounded in relevant theoretical models and reviews of recent professional literature and existing best practices. In addition, the authors consulted with experts in the information literacy field, and also those working in curriculum design and educational technologies.Project aims and objectivesThis project sought to develop a practical curriculum for information literacy that meets the needs of the undergraduate student entering higher education over the next five years. Specifically the project aimed:* To understand the information needs of future undergraduate students on entering higher education* To develop a revolutionary curriculum for information literacy that can be used with undergraduate students entering UK higher education* To provide practical guidance about how best to equip students with the knowledge, skills and behaviour around information use to support their learning in the digital age* To develop a flexible curriculum that can be used and adapted in the higher education community and used in face to face, blended and online learning provision."
David Bevington

WhoIs Project: A Tool to Investigate Information Authority, Authenticity, Ownership and... - 0 views

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    Authority. Authenticity. Ownership. Perspective. These four pillars make up the critical facets of the information we consume -- and understanding them makes us and our students wiser users of information. However, on the web, people often make assumptions about the authority and authenticity of information, and it can be challenging to understand ownership and perspective. The Glean Who-Is Tool help you and your students learn to investigate web-based content sources. By using technical information about websites ("whois"), along with historical and factual information, the tool encourages us to dig more deeply, to understand more thoroughly, and to critique more closely.
David Bevington

Information Literacy | Glean Teaching Tools - 1 views

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    Three tools to support information literacy skills including boolify, comparison search and who-is
David Bevington

School of Education at Johns Hopkins University-On Searching for New Genes - 1 views

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    We are entering a time of history where we will need more than intelligence, we will need the increased application of diverse intellect. We will need a workforce and citizenry filled with local, state and national leaders who see the concept of dialoging about new ideas as an important use of time.
David Bevington

LLiDA Wiki: Main/Home Page - 0 views

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    This wiki contains outputs from the JISC funded study into Learning Literacies for the Digital Age (LLiDA). It was used during the project to share and develop ideas and work.
David Bevington

Digital Literacy: Skills for the 21st Century: Introduction - 0 views

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    This Digital Literacy Toolkit began with the premise that multimedia authoring, which is happening with the extensive use of PowerPoint in classrooms, must be taught as a skill, just as traditional text-based writing is taught. While teachers and students have become familiar with the technical skills required to use images in multimedia productions, they lack a critical language to determine whether an image or a sound is used appropriately. Images, sounds and animations - like words - are building blocks whose meanings can be changed to suit the communicative purpose of the author. Just as the same words and phrases can be arranged or manipulated to express different meanings depending on the author's intent, so can sounds and images. The advent of multimedia authoring and an almost unlimited variety of images available via the Internet in the classroom, makes understanding this concept, that an image's meaning changes depending on the purpose for which it is used, a new requirement of 21st Century communication.
David Bevington

Connecting the Digital Dots: Literacy of the 21st Century By Barbara R. Jones-Kavalier ... - 0 views

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    Literacy today depends on understanding the multiple media that make up our high-tech reality and developing the skills to use them effectively. A 2006 article from Educause Quarterly Magazine
David Bevington

Project Sails - Standardized Assessment of Information Skills - 0 views

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    The SAILS test offers universities and colleges a method for testing the information literacy skills of its students.
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