Information Literacy: The ability to access and use information,
analyze content, work with ideas, synthesize thought, and communicate results.
Digital Literacy: The ability to attain deeper understanding
of content by using data-analysis tools and accelerated learning processes
enabled by technology.
New Literacy: The ability to solve genuine problems amidst
a deluge of information and its transfer in the Digital Age.
Computer Literacy: The ability to accurately and effectively
use computer tools such as word processors, spreadsheets, databases, and presentation
and graphic software.
Computer-Technology Literacy: The ability to manipulate
the hardware that is the understructure of technology systems.
Critical Literacy: The ability to look at the meaning and
purpose of written texts, visual applications, and spoken words to question
the attitudes, values, and beliefs behind them. The goal is development of
critical thinking to discern meaning from array of multimedia, visual imagery,
and virtual environments, as well as written text.
Media Literacy: The ability to communicate competently
in all media forms—print and electronic—as well as access, understand, analyze
and evaluate the images, words, and sounds that comprise contemporary culture