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Entries in Information Literacy (106)

Thursday
Feb192009

Visit to Robert Gordon University Business School

On Tuesday 17th February Christine and I went to Aberdeen to visit David Gibbons - Wood, a senior lecturer in the Business School at Robert Gordon University who has obtained over £400,000 in European funding to run training programmes for SMEs in the Aberdeen area. So far he has enrolled 20 businesses that are providing 70 participants although he wants 175 people in total.  He is offering 12 courses in ‘bite sized chunks’. There will be an online forum to identify what learners want to do. However a blended learning approach will be used as wholly online delivery is unlikely to be successful. He is finding that individuals are more motivated than organisations which tend to focus on short term objectives.  He has been interviewing representatives of local SMEs. A lack of time available for training was the most cited problem in developing business skills in the organisation followed by a lack of money. From the list of subjects proposed the most popular was Marketing, followed by Finance, Enterprise Skills, leadership and E –Business.  This is interesting information for those interested in information usage in the workplace as marketing has fairly obvious possibilities. However there are clearly going to be problems of uptake with any form of training.


David had not previously given much thought to a role for information literacy in workplace training but he is interested now. There will be more feedback from his work in due course which should be very useful and we will continue to collaborate.


 


For more information about the project see the Business Skills for Growth website 

Wednesday
Feb112009

Scottish Government's Skills utilisation literature review

I have been reading the recently published Skills utilisation literature review, a report by CFE for the Education Analytical Services, Lifelong Learning Research, Scottish Government (Executive summary and full text vailable at http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2008/12/15114643/0)


which aims ‘to bring together evidence on the topic of skills utilisation to provide a clear picture of the nature and extent of the current evidence base’.  Naturally I read it from an information literacy perspective and therefore found it somewhat disappointing as the extensive list of references has nothing about information although there are a couple of useful education references. Although the researchers interrogated a range of databases Library and Information Science Abstracts was not among them. However there are some useful lessons for us.  


The occasion of the report is the lack of evidence of a ‘conclusive and causal correlation between increased investment and skills and increased productivity’. (p.1) Attention is therefore moving away from simple skills acquisition to how skills are actually used in the workplace i.e. – skills acquisition which is defined as:


'Skills utilisation is about ensuring the most effective application of skills in the workplace to maximise performance through the interplay of a number of key agents (e.g. employers, employees, learning providers and the state) and the use of a range of HR, management and working practices. Effective skills utilisation seeks to match the use of skills to business demands/needs.' (p.2)


The last sentence seems particularly important although what we have been finding out suggests that businesses are not very sure themselves about what training they need. The study reports that both Scotland and Wales invest proportionately more in training in the workplace than England although this is not reflected in productivity (p.14). ‘Policy development needs to be linked to business need rather than simply trying to increase the number of people gaining qualifications’. (p.15).


The Scottish Skills Strategy has two main aims:


·         Skills must be acquired


·         Skills must be effectively utilised in the workplace in order to improve productivity  (p.18)


The report identifies three approaches to Skills Utilisation: (pp.2-5)


1.      the market driven workplace approach which focuses on individual workplaces


2.      The state driven workplace approach in which the state takes the lead


3.      The holistic approach in which the state collaborates with a range of agencies


However the report finds that substantive evaluation of these approaches or evidence of direct impact on productivity is lacking and that, not surprisingly, the large organisation is most important. Such findings are not encouraging for a country of SMEs.


On p.6 the report notes:


‘The evidence identifies a link between skills utilisation and a range of workplace matters such as employee motivation, job design, employee participation, equality issues, collective agreement and well being.’


While this may not be the most original observation in the world it does highlight points which have to be borne in mind when promoting information literacy in the workplace.


Pp.75-76 offer the most relevant quotes for information literacy:


Marchington and Wilkinson (2005) argue that the management of learning and transfer of knowledge have been shown to have a major effect on skills utilisation. If the learning fails to be integrated into wider business practices, it will become a barrier to the utilisation of new skills.


Ahlgren et al. (2007) identified good practice in workplace learning and found managers had an important role in the following practices:




  • Promotion of open communication and encouragement of informal and social forms of learning

  • Encouragement of employees' ability to learn and to bring new knowledge, skills and experience into the workplace

  • Welcome new knowledge and found it applicable in the workplace


Some food for thought perhaps


 


  

Wednesday
Feb112009

JISC Podcast - Interview with Philip Pothen 

On Friday 28th, November last year Christine and I attended  the Scottish Library and Information Council Further Education  conference, at the invitation of Catherine Kearney, Assistant Director of SLIC to whom, Many Thanks. At the end of the day we were interviewed about our work by Philip Pothen, at that time, the JISC Press and PR manager. JISC has now posted the interview on its website. http://www.jisc.ac.uk/news/stories/2009/02/podcast71johncrawfordchristineirving.aspx


There are a few Ahs and Ums but the main points are there.  We spoke to Philip about the role of information literacy in the education sector, the workplace, in libraries and how government agencies can be encouraged to promote it. We also emphasised that information literacy is the democratic right of every learner and citizen. The noise in the background is the sound of librarians consuming the free food and wine thoughtfully provided by JISC.


 


 


 

Tuesday
Feb102009

Librarians should get out there ... and start knocking on doors

Brilliant article about school librarians in TESS includes our very own Ian McCracken, Govan High who is a project partner and on our project advisory group. Article also includes quotes / case studies from other activists in the field: Duncan Wright, convener of the School Library Association (Scotland) and librarian at Stewart Melville's College; Wendy Pieroni, learning resource co-ordinator at Blairgowrie High in Perth and Kinross; Mary Sherriffs, Pitlochry High's librarian; and Ayr Academy librarian Heather Stewart.

Douglas Blane reports:
School libraries and the people who run them can play a central role in A Curriculum for Excellence, inspiring new initiatives and pulling various departments together.

I would certainly endorse that and have been saying so for quite some time. Advocacy at its best.

Read the full artilce 'Librarians should get out there ... and start knocking on doors'
Wednesday
Jan282009

New year activities

This is the first blog of 2009 and I have delayed writing until I had something to report.   We got our first statistics report earlier this month which showed that the blog had been visited 1,086 times between December 13th, 2008 and January 12th 2009. There was a peak of activity about mid December with an understandable tailing off between 22nd December and 5th January   with a revival in visits thereafter. This seems like a healthy start and hopefully visits will increase as the blog becomes better known. We should get a clearer picture by the end of February.  Last week I was speaking to Alistair McCleery at the Scottish Centre for the Book at Napier University who is a reader so we are casting our net wide.


Our first meeting of the year, on 8th January, was at Glasgow Chamber of Commerce with Elaine Rodger, their Training and Workforce Development Manager, who has agreed to distribute a questionnaire on the information needs of small businesses, designed by us, to Chamber members. We are currently focusing on identifying possible content of information literacy training programmes for the workplace and the wider employability agenda. This will help us to plan content effectively and identify the needs of specific stakeholder groups.


Coincidentally I came across newspaper reports at the beginning of the year indicating that the Business School at Robert Gordon University has secured large funding to develop training programmes for small businesses in the Aberdeen area.  I have been in contact with David Gibbons-Wood who is leading on this and we are currently exchanging information. On Friday 9th January we met further with Skills Development Scotland to plan the symposium on the role of information literacy in career choice, progression and work situations. We have had to revise the date to Friday 27th March.


On Thursday 15th January we had a visit from two of our most enthusiastic Project partners, Jenny Foreman and Lesley Thomson of the Scottish Government Library Services. They were active participants in our interview based study of the use of Information in the workplace. The refereed article reporting on the research as a whole should appear in the next issue of Journal of librarianship and information science and we hope it will be widely read as not a great deal has been published in this area. Meanwhile a shorter piece focusing on the use of information in the Scottish Government and how the problems identified in the study, specific to the Scottish Government, are being addressed has recently appeared.  (Crawford, John et al, (2008) Use of information in the Scottish Government, Library & information update, December, pp. 48-49.)  We discussed with them the first draft of their Scottish Government Information Literacy Strategy which was partly inspired by our joint working and made a few suggestions towards the next draft. No doubt we will hear much more about it in due course.


On Monday 26th January I had a visit from Tanya Wiseman of the International Development Association of Scotland who is working on a three year Project to get teacher educators to think about global citizenship. This involves changing practices of teacher educators including a focus on information literacy.  We share an interest in influencing teacher educators and trainee teachers so we hope we will be able to work together on this.


Meanwhile, back at the ranch, we are trying to raise our internal profile but more of this later.