Learning Information Literacy Across the Curriculum (LILAC) and its impacts on student digital literacies and learning across the humanities

College students need information literacy skills—they need the ability to locate and evaluate sources, and to extract and apply information from them but research shows that most students lack these skills. A nation-wide research project entitled Learning Information Literacy Across the Curriculum (LILAC) is evaluating students’ attitudes and research behaviors in hopes of nderstanding students’ existing information literacy skills and developing pedagogical interventions to increase students’ information-seeking and -using abilities. The research described in this article incorporates surveys and observations of students engaged in information-seeking tasks. Read More

About Chua Junjie

Junjie is a Scholarly Communication librarian (research impact and copyright). He has an honours degree in Psychology from NUS and a Masters of Information Studies from NTU. In his free time, he enjoys learning foreign languages, playing the piano, fine arts, fiddling with R programming, inferential statistics – e.g. GLMs, predictive modelling & more.

22. February 2018 by Chua Junjie
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