San Antonio College Library Department

 

Student Learning Outcomes

 

 July 29, 2005

 

 

 

The mission statement of San Antonio College states that it “provides and supports the educational and life-long learning needs of a multicultural community.”  In response to the mission of the college, the Library Department mission is to work effectively with resources “to provide timely client-based services which are a strong base for learning and personal growth in a multicultural environment.”

 

As stated in the Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education published by the Association of College and Research Libraries (available: http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards/informationliteracycompetency.htm) information literacy is a set of abilities requiring individuals to recognize when information is needed and to have the ability to locate, evaluate, and effectively use the needed information.  Information literacy forms the basis for lifelong learning.  It is common to all disciplines, to all learning environments, and to all levels of education.  It enables learners to master content and extend their investigations, become more self-directed, and assume greater control over their own learning.

 

The following departmental goals and objectives are mapped in parentheses to the ACRL Information Literacy Competency Standards For Higher Education.

 

GOAL

 

The Library Department will provide resources, instruction, and services that enable and promote information literacy and life-long learning and enable the information literate student to:

 

-Determine the nature and extent of the information needed (1)

-Access needed information effectively and efficiently (2)

-Evaluate information and its sources critically (3)

-Understand many of the economic, legal, ethical, and social issues surrounding the

 use of information and access to information (5)

 

OBJECTIVES

 

Students who use departmental resources, instruction, and services should learn to:

 

1.  Define and articulate the need for information (1.1)

 

                -explore general information sources to increase familiarity with the topic (1.1.c)

                -identify key concepts and terms that describe the information need (1.1.e)

 

2.  Identify a variety of types and formats of potential sources of information (1.2)

 

            -know how information is formally and informally produced, organized, and

 disseminated (1.2.a)

                -recognize that knowledge can be organized into disciplines that influence the way

 information is accessed (1.2.b)

                -identify the value and differences of potential resources in a variety of formats (e.g.

multimedia, website, data set, audio/visual, book) (1.2.c)

                -identify the purpose and audience of potential resources (e.g. popular vs. scholarly,

 current vs. historical) (1.2.d)

                -differentiate between primary and secondary sources, recognize how their use and

 importance vary with each discipline (1.2.e)

                -realize that information may need to be constructed with raw data from primary sources

 (1.2.f)

 

3.  Consider the costs and benefits of acquiring the needed information (1.3)

 

            -determine the availability of needed information and make decisions on broadening the

 information seeking process beyond local resources (e.g. interlibrary loan, using

 resources at other locations, obtaining images, videos, text, or sound) (1.3.a)

                -define a realistic overall plan and timeline to acquire the needed information (1.3.b)

 

4.  Select the most appropriate investigative methods or information retrieval

 systems for accessing the needed information (2.1)

 

-identify appropriate investigative methods (2.1.a)

-investigate benefits and applicability of various investigative methods (2.1.b)

-investigate the scope, content, and organization of information retrieval systems (2.1.c)

-select efficient and effective approaches for accessing the information needed  (2.1.d)

 

5.  Construct and implement effectively designed search strategies (2.2)

 

            -develop a research plan appropriate to the investigative method (2.2.a)

                -identify keywords, synonyms and related terms for the information needed (2.2.b)

                -select controlled vocabulary specific to the discipline or information retrieval source

 (2.2.c)

                -construct a search strategy using appropriate commands for the information retrieval

 system selected (e.g. Boolean operators, truncation, and proximity for search

 engines; internal organizers such as indexes for books) (2.2.d)

                -implement the search strategy in various information retrieval systems using different

 interfaces and search engines with different command languages, protocols, and

 search parameters (2.2.e)

                -implement the search using investigative protocols appropriate to the discipline (2.2.f)

 

6.  Retrieve information online or in person using a variety of methods (2.3)

 

            -use various search systems to retrieve information in a variety of formats (2.3.a)

                -use various classification schemes and other systems (e.g. call number systems or indexes)

to locate information resources within the library or to identify specific sites for

 physical exploration (2.3.b)

                -use specialized online or in person services available at the institution to retrieve

 information needed (e.g. interlibrary loan/document delivery, professional

 associations, institutional research offices, community resources, experts and

 practitioners) (2.3.c)

 

7.  Extract, record, and manage the information and its sources (2.5)

 

            -select among various technologies the most appropriate one for the task of extracting the

 needed information (e.g. copy/paste software functions, photocopier, scanner,

audio/visual equipment) (2.5.a)

                -differentiate between the types of sources cited and understand the elements and

correct syntax of a citation for a wide range of resources (2.5.c)

                -record all pertinent citation information for future reference (2.5.d)

                -use various technologies to extract the information selected (2.5.e)

 

8.  Articulate and apply initial criteria for evaluating both the information and its sources (3.2)

 

            -examine and compare information from various sources in order to evaluate reliability,

validity, accuracy, authority, timeliness, and point of view or bias (3.2.a)

            -determine probable accuracy by questioning the source of the data, the limitations of the

 information gathering tools or strategies, and the reasonableness of the conclusions

 (3.4.e)

 

9.  Determine whether the initial query should be revised (3.7)

 

            -review search strategy and incorporate additional concepts as necessary (3.7.b)

                -review information retrieval sources used and expand to include others as needed

 (3.7.c)

 

10. Follow laws, regulations, institutional policies, and etiquette related to the access

 and use of information resources (5.2)

 

            -use approved passwords and other forms of ID to access the information resources (5.2.b)

                -comply with institutional policies on access to information resources (5.2.c)

                -preserve the integrity of information resources, equipment, systems, and facilities (5.2.d)

                -legally obtain, store, and disseminate text, data, images, or sound (5.2.e)

                -demonstrate an understanding of what constitutes plagiarism and not represent work

attributable to others as his/her own (5.2.f)

 

11. Acknowledge the use of information sources in communicating the product or

 performance (5.3)

 

            -select an appropriate documentation style and use it consistently to cite sources (5.3.a)

 

 

Updated 01/09/08 Department name updated (C. Peterson)