Reflective Practice

Over the course of the last few months as I’ve begun my teacher librarian journey I have developed my thinking and my understanding of information. That isn’t to say that I now understand what information is and how best to teach future generations to read and use it. Instead, I believe I am now starting to constantly reflect, refine and rethink about what information is, what information is important and how we should be accessing it.

At the very start of this journey I was faced with the question of what is information? I had never thought about this before. The term information is so hard to pin down and define with one definition that covers everything, yet it is a term that we use nearly every day (Owen, 2006). I found myself having multiple answers depending on the context. This got me thinking that if I can’t define it, how am I teaching information literacy effectively?

Even looking back on my own blog post from the 16th of March, my understanding and perceptions about information have changed dramatically in just two months. For teachers who graduate university I believe it is of the utmost importance that you continue to reflect on your own practice and stay life-long learners so that we can keep up with the new generation and their new needs and learning styles in the classroom.

Thankfully, throughout the weeks and the modules, I was given tools, models and definitions that would shape and morph my understanding of information literacy. At first I was overwhelmed with the amount of different Information Literacy Models that are out there that we can use in the classroom. I found myself questioning “If I can’t get my head around all of these models, how will my students?” Thankfully when I came across the Department of Education’s Information Process (ISP), something clicked in my thinking and I understood it. I was finally able to understand the steps needed to ensure that you could process information correctly.

I found myself reflecting on my own education journey and wondering how different things would have been if I had of had access to this ISP earlier. Would I have been able to understand more complex ideas in my teaching degree earlier? Would that have made me a more effective teacher? These questions have driven me to incorporate this ISP into my teaching now.

When I am helping senior students research for assessment tasks and study I find myself pointing out the six steps of the ISP and asking the guiding questions of each step (Department of Education and Communities, 2017). I have found that this has helped students become more student directed in their learning which has helped them learn how to guide their own investigations into the information. Before I was using this model students would often get lost in the amount of information that would come up when looking on the internet. There is too much information for these students at times to be able to learn effectively (Mosbergen, 2016). Now that my students are become more familiar with this ISP I can see them asking themselves the questions during each stage of the information literacy intake which is helping them to eliminate unnecessary information.

Thanks to my participation in this course I am able to see that it is my role to help teach the students how to read the information and interpret it correctly to ensure that they become well-informed and educated members of society (Floridi, 2007). I have also realised that information is ever-changing and that if I ever stop learning about how to interpret and use information that I will be failing my students by not giving them every possibility to succeed and thrive in this modern world. This course has opened my eyes to so many things and I find myself constantly questioning the ideas, terms and concepts within my classroom now which is making me a better educator and human being.

 

Reference List

Department of Education and Communities. (2017, May 17). The information process. NSW Department of Education. Retrieved from https://education.nsw.gov.au/teaching-and-learning/curriculum/learning-across-the-curriculum/school-libraries/teaching-and-learning/information-skills/the-information-process

Floridi, L. (2007). A look into the future impact of ICT on our lives. The Information Society, 23, 59-64. CSU Library.

Mosbergen, D. (2016). French legislation suggests employees deserve the right to disconnect. The Huffington Post. Retrieved July 2016.

Owen, D. (2006). Looking for Information: A Survey of Research on Information Seeking, Needs, and Behavior. Emerald Publishing Limited.

Are school librarians an endangered species?

From my understanding of Karen Bonanno’s keynote speech, I believe that librarians are not an endangered species but the traditional old school, dealing with physical books librarian is endangered. I believe that due to the changing nature of today’s society and our reliance on technology, e-books, podcasts and websites that our librarians need to change as well. As children grow up with less reliance on having to develop the skills to go to a shelf and physically locate a book they are instead developing skills that helps them to search electronically for the information they desire. I believe that librarians need to adapt to being a teacher of research more than locating books.

Information and the Future

Information is a term that as a teacher I use daily. Yet when you think about the term more deeply it becomes an abstract thought which is hard to define and isolate what it is. Information is a word that we all use every single day yet when asked what it actually meant you would struggle to give a single definition (Owen, 2006). To me information is anything that you can learn from or about.

Information has only been complicated even more by the introduction of technology and morphed with our reliance on technology in our daily lives. ICT has allowed us, as humans to have access to any answer we need in our pockets at any time. However, this benefit has it’s equal in negatives. We may have unlimited access to learning, but we are now over saturated in information. There are a million articles which each have contradictions out there as well. For every yes article, there is a no article. This has led to the human race being more informed than ever. Due to this we are able to call out people who are misinformed and have facts, details and articles to back up our opinion (Floridi, 2007).

Information now comes in multiple forms, not just verbal or written. This allows all types of learners to access the information and analyse it in their own personal way. I believe that the ever evolving landscape of information is something that we should strive to continue and adapt to in order to advance our species. Information gives us new challenges to overcome and new learning goals every single day.

As a member of a generation that has grown up with technology I find myself reliant on technology in my day to day life. There both positives and negatives to having constant access to information (Mosbergen,2016).

Some negatives that I find are quite relevant to my own personal life and my outlook of technology include the following points.

When the internet goes down I find myself at a loss when I have work to do. I have become reliant on the fact that I could pull out my smart phone, hit a few buttons and have the answer to any question but when that is taken away I feel like my skills in information searching has almost disappeared.

Another negative would be the amount of information that is on the internet. With the amount of information that is out there is becomes hard to find relevant, accurate information. It’s so easy to read an article and draw a conclusion from that article or information yet because anyone can put something on the website it’s very hard to determine which sources are reliable and which are not.

Not everything is negative though. There are many positives for every negative.

One positive that jumps to my mind is the ability to foster your own passion in learning in an area that fascinates you without having to go to a traditional learning setting. For example, I am able to undertake a university degree from the comfort of my own living room or staffroom whilst still working full time. Without the internet I would not be able to work full time, which is a necessity for me to be able to live, whilst studying the further my career and interests.

The next positive is in an emergency you have access to any information that you could possibly need. For example, if you child were to ingest something that they shouldn’t you could type a few things into your smart phone or computer and you would have some solutions to your problem. This helps to ease your mind in the case of an emergency.

One last positive that I think is highly important is that by having information so readily accessible to most people, it promotes a sense of curiosity and helps you become a life-long learner. This is such an important skill in a world where people are expected t change careers multiple times over their lives. they need to have the ability to learn and the curiosity to want to learn new things.

 

References

Floridi, L. (2007). A look into the future impact of ICT on our lives. The Information Society, 23, 59-64. CSU Library.

Mosbergen, D. (2016). French legislation suggests employees deserve the right to disconnect. The Huffington Post. Retrieved July 2016.

Owen, D. (2006). Looking for Information: A Survey of Research on Information Seeking, Needs, and Behavior. Emerald Publishing Limited.

Reflecting on my teaching journey and what a TL does

Teaching is a relatively new world for me. I only graduated in 2014 and since then I have spent the majority of my time in my KLA of English. Through my experiences in English I have found that student engagement in reading is dropping year after year. This has had a major impact within the classroom. Students are coming into the classroom with no knowledge of common, well known stories such as “Little Red Riding Hood” and “The Three Little Pigs”. I have found myself questioning “How am I expecting students to be creative when they haven’t encountered such fundamental stories which inspire creativity in the formative years?” This has had such an impact on student’s ability to think creatively and to engage in reading just for the pure love and enjoyment of reading. Through my view as an English teacher I have found that by incorporating a “Relax and Read” section to all of my lessons for the beginning 10 minutes it allows students the time to engage in reading and to calm down. For some lower ability classes I have utilised reading aloud to the classes. I have had multiple comments along the lines of “I have never been read to before” which has made me question “How, when and where are these students being given access to reading materials if the school’s library isn’t operating to its potential?”

At my current school there was no teacher librarian currently employed. My school is low socio-economic school with of about 600 students. The library was sitting unloved and just a space that was bookable for the computers. The books were untouched and not promoted. This led to the books becoming outdated and not relevant for younger, more modern students. There was no-one for students to approach and ask questions about researching or resources. It also stopped the library from becoming a safe space for vulnerable students. As teacher in the 21st century I want my students to gain important ICT skills in order to become self-motivated and innovative students who can thrive in a modern world beyond the classroom. Technology aids and assists students in bridging the gap between knowledge intake and a knowledge journey (Wong, Li, Tat-Hueng & Tsz-Ngong, 2008)

Through my role as a literacy coordinator at my school, I was able to have access to this space to plan and develop an intensive literacy program aimed at stage 4 students. Through my engagement in my schools library space I realised the need for someone to take control and reinvigorate the space to get students to visit the library and re-engage with reading.

My understanding of what a teacher librarian role entails is that they are there to inspire students to read and expand on their reading, to create an innovative and welcoming space for students learn in the 21st century and to teach core research skills to all students to utilise in their later lives. The teacher librarian is there as a facilitator of learning rather than a direct instructor.

 

References

Wong, E., Li, S., Tat-Hueng, C., & Tsz-Ngong. (2008). Insights into Innovative Classroom Practices with ICT: Identifying the Impetus for Change. Journal of Educational Technology & Society , 11(1), 248-265.

 

Creative Commons

Being a collaborative learner leads into collaborative teacher. Teaching should be network of professionals who are working together to create the best opportunities for the future of tomorrow.

Creative Commons allows people around the world, not only teachers, to share resources and still have ownership over their intellectual property which allows teachers more flexibility to suit the ever-changing needs of students. The internet is such a valuable tool which allows us to share and reach others all around the world to gather different perspectives and bring them into our classrooms. (creativecommonsorg, 2019)

 

References

Creativecommonsorg. (2019). Creative Commons. Retrieved 10 March, 2019, from https://creativecommons.org/

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