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Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University Head of Public Services Al Harris Library [email protected]
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Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically

Jason DupreeAssistant ProfessorMLIS, University of OklahomaBFA, Phillips University

Head of Public ServicesAl Harris Library [email protected]

Page 2: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Today’s To-Do’s

1. Become Aware of Information Literacy

2. Streamlining Web Searches While Looking for Authoritative Info

3. Putting Information Under a Magnifying Glass

Page 3: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Part 1

InformationLiteracy

Page 4: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Information Literacy

• It is a set of abilities requiring individuals to recognize when information is needed and have the ability to locate, evaluate, and use effectively the needed information.

• Is knowing when and why you need information, where to find it, and how to evaluate, use and communicate it in an ethical manner.

Page 5: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Information Literacy

Page 6: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Library Instruction in the Information Age

• Varied Types & Sources of Information

• Critical evaluation is more important than ever

• Construct Your Search

Page 7: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Information Cycle

Page 8: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Catalogs, Databases, & Search Engines

• A comprehensive list of the books, periodicals, maps, and other materials in a given collection.

• A large, regularly updated file of digitized information related to a specific subject or field.

• Computer software designed to help the user locate information available at sites on the World Wide Web by selecting categories from a hierarchical directory of subjects (example: Yahoo!) or by entering appropriate keywords or phrases (Google).

Page 9: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Educational Goals for 21st Century

1. Teach Students to be self-directed & understand how to organize more & more of their own learning.

2. Teach our students the importance of global communication.

3. Teach our students to deal with massive amounts of information.

Page 10: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Part 2

Web Searching

Page 11: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Web Searching is easy because…..• Speed• Choice• Availability 24/7

• Always get an answer

Page 12: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Web searching is difficult because …

• Organization• Quality control• Reliability

Page 13: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

How does Google Search work?

Page 14: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Google Search

• PageRank (algorithm)– 500 million variables– 2 Billion Terms

• Bias?

• Popularity is a Proxy for Importance

Page 15: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Personalized Search

• Google’s algorithm will suggest “what is best for you” – based on past searches.

• It’s as if we looked up the same topic in an encyclopedia and each found different entries.

Page 16: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Personalized Search

• Find information that is most likely to reinforce your own worldview

• We begin to lose dissenting opinion/conflicting points of view

• Yet search seems neutral, objective, unbiased.

Page 17: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Personalized Search & the Internet

• Google is likely to direct you to material with which you already agree.

“a search for proof about climate change will turn up different results for an environmental activist than it would for an oil company executive.”

“democracy requires citizens to see things from one another’s point of view, but instead we’re more and more enclosed in our own bubbles…offered parallel but separate universes.”

Page 18: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Google: Improve Your SearchesSite Specific Command

What it does: searches only specific domains

What to type: children's health site:edu

children's health site:gov

Page 19: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Anatomy of a URL

Page 20: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Web Domains

• Which one is right?– www.whitehouse.co

m– www.whitehouse.go

v– www.whitehouse.ne

t– www.whitehouse.or

g• Whois.net

– www.whois.net – allows you to conduct detective work on URLs

• .gov• .org• .mil• .com• .edu• .net• .int

Indicates a reliable domain

Page 21: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Web Domain Usage

• Domain name appropriate for the content ?

• Restricted: .edu, .gov, .mil, a few country codes (.ca)

• Unrestricted: .com, .org, .net, most country codes (.us, .uk)

Page 22: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Special Web Searches

• Google Scholar• Academic Index• Infomine

Page 23: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Surface Web

Ever wonder what you might be missing?

Google2.7 billion searches per month

Indexes a trillion web pagesIndexes 16% of the Surface Web

Indexes 0.03% of the entireWorld Wide Web

Page 24: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Deep Web (or Hidden Web)

NO SEARCH ENGINES ALLOWED

54% of DWis databases

DW is 500 timeslarger than SW

And a 1,000 times

higher in quality too

Page 25: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Part 3

Evaluation of Information

Page 26: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Rationale for Evaluating What You Find on the Web

Documents can easily be copied and falsified or copied with omissions and errors, intentional or accidental.

If you want to use the Web for serious research, learn to cultivate the habit of healthy skepticism, of questioning everything you find with critical thinking.

The burden of evaluating information is on you – the reader/researcher.

Page 27: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Did You Know?

Page 29: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Evaluation of Information

4 Criteria:

AuthorityAccuracy

ObjectivityCurrency

Page 30: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 1: Authority

• Books & Articles– Who is

responsible for content?• Author(s)?• Editor(s)?• Publisher• Credentials

offered?

• Newspapers• Writer(s)• Editor(s)• Columnist(s)

• Web Pages– Who is

responsible for content?• Webmaster?• Web team?• Organization?• Institution?• Company?

Page 31: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 1: Authority

• Web Pages–

Credentials/Qualifications/Reputation– Who is responsible for content?

• Is it a commercial site?• Is it a government site?• Is it an education site?• Is it a news site?

Page 32: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 1: Authority: Questions

1. Who is responsible for the content? Domain name? What does this indicate?

2. If you don't recognize the name, or there is no name, what type of information is given about the contact information? - Position? - Organizational affiliation? - E-mail address? - Biographical information?

Page 33: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 2: Accuracy

• Books & Articles– Can the

information be verified?• Bibliography• Works Cited• Peer-reviewed

(journals only)

• Newspapers• Interviews• Eyewitness

Accounts

• Web Pages– Can the

information be verified?• Links to credible

sites• Copyright• Works Cited• Fact check with a

printed source

Page 34: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 2: Accuracy

• Web Pages– Can the information be verified?

• Look for Indicators of Quality Information– Links to credible sites– Copyright materials– Works Cited– Fact check with a printed source

» Always scrutinize the info you’re given

Page 35: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 2: Accuracy

1. Does the website cite sources used to present its information? What type of sources are they? Scholarly? Popular?

2. Is it possible to verify the legitimacy of these sources?

3. If the site is research-based, does the website clearly identify the method of research and the data gathered?

Page 36: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 3: Objectivity

• Books & Articles– Biased or

Objective?• Persuasion/

Emotion• Author’s Point of

View

• Newspapers• Subscriptions ($)• Advertising ($)• Owners• CJR review

• Web Pages– Biased or

Objective?• Opinion/Fan sites• Sponsoring

Organization• Agendas• Political

Propaganda

Page 37: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 3: Objectivity

Biased or Objective?• Sponsoring Organization• Agendas• Political Propagandahttp://english.aljazeera.net/http://www.foxnews.com/ http://www.npr.org/

Do you trust the person(s) providing the information?

Why was this info put on the web? Inform, give facts?Explain, persuade?Sell, entice?

Page 38: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 4: Currency

• Books & Articles– When was it

published?• Copyright date• Important based

upon subject– Science– Social Science– Allied Health– Education– Pharmacy– Computer Science

• Newspapers published daily

• Web Pages– When was it created

and last updated?• Well maintained web

sites have an indication when it was last updated or modified

• Accessibility– Dead links

• Stability– Changes URLs

frequently

Page 39: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 4: Currency

• Web Pages– When was it created and last

updated?• Well maintained web sites have an

indication when it was last updated or modified

• Accessibility– Dead links

• Stability– Changes URLs frequently

Page 40: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Step 4: Currency

1. Is a date clearly displayed?2. Can you determine what the date refers to?

When the page was first written?When the page was first posted on the Internet?When the page was last revised or

updated?The copyright date?

3. Are the resources used by the author current?4. Does the page content demand routine or

continual updating or revision?5. Do the links on the page point to the correct

Internet site addresses?

Page 41: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

Remember to Evaluate!

• Authority– Who created it? Who is responsible?– What credentials do they hold? What makes

them qualified to discuss the topic?• Accuracy

– Can the information be verified?– Check the facts!

• Objectivity– How is the information being presented?– Is it objective or biased? What’s the point of

view?• Currency (important based on subject)

– When was it published?– When was it last updated?

Page 42: Becoming Information Literate & Training Your Mind to Think Critically Jason Dupree Assistant Professor MLIS, University of Oklahoma BFA, Phillips University.

End of First Presentation

Thank Youfor listening