Should we flip the script?

A literature review of deficit-based perspectives on first-year undergraduate students’ information literacy

Authors

  • Tatiana Pashkova-Balkenhol Millersville University
  • Mark Lenker University of Nevada Las Vegas
  • Emily Cox University of Texas at San Antonio
  • Elizabeth Kocevar-Weidinger Virginia Military Institute

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11645/13.2.2619

Keywords:

constructivist theory, first-year students,information literacy, strengths-based approach, United States

Abstract

This mixed method systematic review considers recent literature on the information literacy (IL) skills of first-year undergraduate students. The review uncovers the following themes: faculty and librarians perceive first-year students as lacking IL skills; students have varying perceptions of their IL skills; assessment studies yield conflicting findings on first-year students' IL; communication between high school and college librarians is challenging; and some IL researchers emphasise and leverage first-year students' prior knowledge and experience in IL instruction. These themes emerge from extensive searches in four research databases for scholarly and professional articles written in English within the past ten years. With the exception of a few articles, studies reviewed consistently express their findings in terms of students’ gaps or deficits. We question whether this is the most productive basis for developing effective IL programs. Instead, we call for further investigation of students’ existing knowledge and skills as a basis for implementing constructivist and strengths-based pedagogies.

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Published

2019-02-12

Issue

Section

Research articles (peer-reviewed articles)