Getting to work

Information literacy instruction, career courses, and digitally proficient students

Authors

  • Alexandra Hamlett Guttman Community College, CUNY

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.11645/15.2.2857

Keywords:

career focused instruction, community colleges, employability, teaching staff-librarian collaboration, information literacy, information literacy education, search strategies, USA

Abstract

This article discusses how following graduation, students often enter the job market unprepared to find, evaluate, and use information in the digital environment effectively. Essentially, there is a disparity between the skills students attain in college coursework, including information literacy (IL) skills, and those required in the workplace, which impacts graduates’ success as new members of the labour market. The article highlights how collaboration between a librarian and an instructor of a career centered course influenced instructional design for IL instruction in their courses. Librarians and instructors will benefit from practical examples from Guttman Community College’s innovative IL Program and the professional courses, get creative ideas for instructional design, and learn new and exciting ways to deliver IL instruction.

Downloads

Published

2021-08-06