Interest in developing ways to assess information literacy has been growing for several years. Many librarians have developed their own tools to assess aspects of information literacy and have written articles to share their experiences. This article reviews the literature and offers readers a flavour of the methods being used for assessment: those which are popular within the field and also illustrative examples from some of the case studies found, particularly where they show how the reliability and validity of the methods have been considered. It does not aim to be an exhaustive list of case studies or methods, but a representative sample to act as a `jumping off point' for librarians considering introducing assessment of information literacy into their own institutions.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Walsh01032009
%A Walsh, Andrew
%D 2009
%J Journal of Librarianship and Information Science
%K Bewertung Informationskompetenz assessment evaluation information_literacy
%N 1
%P 19-28
%R 10.1177/0961000608099896
%T Information literacy assessment: Where do we start?
%U http://lis.sagepub.com/content/41/1/19.abstract
%V 41
%X Interest in developing ways to assess information literacy has been growing for several years. Many librarians have developed their own tools to assess aspects of information literacy and have written articles to share their experiences. This article reviews the literature and offers readers a flavour of the methods being used for assessment: those which are popular within the field and also illustrative examples from some of the case studies found, particularly where they show how the reliability and validity of the methods have been considered. It does not aim to be an exhaustive list of case studies or methods, but a representative sample to act as a `jumping off point' for librarians considering introducing assessment of information literacy into their own institutions.
@article{Walsh01032009,
abstract = { Interest in developing ways to assess information literacy has been growing for several years. Many librarians have developed their own tools to assess aspects of information literacy and have written articles to share their experiences. This article reviews the literature and offers readers a flavour of the methods being used for assessment: those which are popular within the field and also illustrative examples from some of the case studies found, particularly where they show how the reliability and validity of the methods have been considered. It does not aim to be an exhaustive list of case studies or methods, but a representative sample to act as a `jumping off point' for librarians considering introducing assessment of information literacy into their own institutions.
},
added-at = {2013-08-20T12:38:50.000+0200},
author = {Walsh, Andrew},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23fdabbaa77f394310287199b450a7167/blostben},
description = {Information literacy assessment},
doi = {10.1177/0961000608099896},
eprint = {http://lis.sagepub.com/content/41/1/19.full.pdf+html},
interhash = {b24d67d77fe7e7812c794be2133004b0},
intrahash = {3fdabbaa77f394310287199b450a7167},
journal = {Journal of Librarianship and Information Science},
keywords = {Bewertung Informationskompetenz assessment evaluation information_literacy},
number = 1,
pages = {19-28},
timestamp = {2013-08-20T12:38:50.000+0200},
title = {Information literacy assessment: Where do we start?},
url = {http://lis.sagepub.com/content/41/1/19.abstract},
volume = 41,
year = 2009
}