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Primary Research Group has published The Survey of Use of Emerging Technologies in Information Literacy Instruction, ISBN 978-1-57440-302-2.
This 200+ page report presents data from a survey of 63 colleges in North America. It helps its readers to answer questions such as: What kind of new tools and instructional practices are they adopting in information literacy instruction? What have been the results of these efforts? Which new approaches have they retained? Which discarded? What are their plans for the future? What has been their experience with blended learning, new programming codes, classroom response technologies and gamification? How have they used animation? Web based video tutorial creation tools? Which programs, apps and websites are they using? What has been the impact of the growth of mobile technologies such as tablet computers on their information literacy instruction practices? How about the role of social network? How are they evaluating new technologies? How do they assess online gaming approaches to information literacy? And much more.
The questionnaire was designed and the report written by information literacy veterans Erica DeFrain, Assistant Professor and Social Sciences Librarian at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, and Nicole Pagowsky, Research & Instruction Librarian at the University of Arizona.
Just a few of the report's many findings are that:
- 17.86% of survey respondents report having created and used online games or gamification concepts.
- 23.81% of respondents reported currently using classroom response systems. Research university librarians reported the largest percentage of use (52.94%) and community colleges the least (5.88%).
- 36.59% of those who had used blended learning used a formal assessment method to evaluate its success.
- Video searching was also a popular component of many librarians' IL instruction, with 28.57% using it and 31.75% hoping to soon. 22.22% state that they were not interested, and 15.87% were unfamiliar with the concept. Again, community college librarians were the most likely to teach video searching concepts (52.94%).
The study is available directly from Primary Research Group and also from major distributors of books and research reports. A PDF version is available for $85.00 and print versions are available for $89.00. Site licenses are also available. For a table of contents, free excerpt, list of survey participants and the questionnaire, or to place an order, visit our website at www.PrimaryResearch.com.