Title :
The challenge of embedding Information Literacy as a graduate attribute into engineering and technology courses
Author :
Keleher, Patrick ; Keleher, Joanne ; Simon, Karin
Author_Institution :
CQ Univ., Rockhampton, QLD, Australia
Abstract :
Universities and professional bodies require graduates to be skilled practitioners educated to a high standard of competency with proficiency in a diversity of graduate attributes. Some attributes are discipline based while others are of a more generic nature. Proficiency in the generic attribute of Information Literacy can provide the necessary scaffolding to enable practitioners to engage in the digital landscape to identify, locate, evaluate, manage and apply information and acknowledge information sources in their chosen field or profession. Non-technical courses have always been considered better suited to addressing Information Literacy skills. Commonly, assessment in these types of programs consists of written essays, analysing case studies, and report writing; assessment which is generally more applicable to the implicit embedding of Information Literacy skills. Technical courses, generally, rely more heavily on mathematical computations and technical descriptions and drawings to demonstrate knowledge and information and are proving to be more challenging to effectively embed Information Literacy as a learning outcome. The Information Literacy framework consists of six competency levels; essentially identify, find, evaluate, manage, apply, and acknowledge. This paper explores the preliminary process of including Information Literacy implicitly, into assessment items in an undergraduate engineering technical course; Control Systems Analysis and Design.
Keywords :
educational courses; engineering education; information science education; acknowledge level; apply level; case study analysis; control systems analysis; control systems design; digital landscape; essentially identify level; evaluate level; find level; graduate attribute; information literacy skill; manage level; nontechnical courses; report writing; technology courses; undergraduate engineering technical course; written essays; Australia; Cities and towns; Control theory; Databases; Libraries; Materials; Standards; assessment; generic skills; graduate attributes; information literacy;
Conference_Titel :
Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2011
Conference_Location :
Rapid City, SD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-468-8
Electronic_ISBN :
0190-5848
DOI :
10.1109/FIE.2011.6142900