Information Literacy of Lawyers in Their Working Environment

Author(s):  
Dejana Golenko ◽  
Ljiljana Siber
2011 ◽  
pp. 1482-1498
Author(s):  
Mona Florea ◽  
Lillian Rafeldt ◽  
Susan Youngblood

The chapter presents healthcare examples of the current virtual working environment and introduces nursing skills necessary for evidence-based practice in a virtual workplace. The authors discuss how the Nursing Information Literacy Program was designed and implemented at Three Rivers Community College to assist nursing students in developing skills such as critical thinking and problem-solving, technological literacy, information literacy, and collaborative and cooperative learning. The authors hope that this example will serve as a model for creating other information literacy programs that prepare students for working in a virtual workplace.


2013 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva-Christina Edinger ◽  
Ricarda T. D. Reimer

DOI: 10.12685/027.7-1-1-13Bibliotheken erfahren im Zeitalter des Internets neue Dimensionen: Sie existieren materiell, digital und virtuell. Allerorts generieren BibliotheksnutzerInnen mittels mobiler Endgeräte ihre ganz eige­nen individuellen Räume und beteiligen sich gleichzeitig am Diskurs und sind somit Teil einer Community. Der vorliegende Beitrag zeigt Standorte und Perspektiven für die Vernetzung bestehender Bibliotheks­räume zu einer zukunftsweisenden Bibliothek 2.0 auf und verweist auf die Bedeutung einer interdisziplinär angelegten Information Literacy. In the internet age, libraries experience new dimensions: they exist in physical, digital and virtual forms. With the help of mobile devices, library users generate their individual working environment. At the same time they are participating in discourses and thus become members of a community. This ar­ticle outlines the current position and future perspectives for linking existing library spaces to a forward-looking library 2.0. Also, it points out the significance of an interdisciplinary information literacy.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Titi Savitri Prihatiningsih ◽  
Prattama Santoso Utomo ◽  
Hikmawati Nurrokhmanti ◽  
Mora Claramita ◽  
Albert Scherpbier

Abstract Background: An internship is a transitional training period a medical school graduate undertakes prior to attaining full registration as a medical doctor. Numerous studies have shone a light on the unpreparedness of medical school graduates for the realities of medical practice. Implementation of a competency-based curriculum (CBC) is thought to produce better prepared medical graduates because this curriculum is more structured and integrated; moreover, learning outcomes, the learning process, and assessment are better aligned in the cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains. During 2006–2011, Indonesia conducted a nation-wide reform shifting to a CBC from a subject-based curriculum (SBC) and launched an internship program in 2013. This study aimed to compare the performances of medical interns training under these two different curricula. Methods: This study was conducted in Yogyakarta Province, involving six supervisors and six interns from six different types of district hospitals. Qualitative, semi-structured interview methods, and thematic analysis were applied. Results: In total, 1,296 initial codings were identified and grouped under the following topics: overall experience (327), effective communication (97), scientific foundation (47), clinical skills (48), information management (23), management of health problems (194), self-insight and professional development (351), and professionalism (209). Eighteen themes emerged, namely understanding the internship, authority, practice context, interprofessional communication, patient communication, cultural awareness in communication, gap and fulfillment in clinical skills, knowledge gap and enhanced knowledge, assumption of a General Practitioner role, progression to profiency, information literacy, internal motivation, learning opportunities, constructive feedback, transition, and working culture. There were irregular patterns of performance from both of the CBC and SBC interns. Interestingly, compared with the SBC group, the CBC group revealed less confidence and assertiveness in handling patients. This group also lacked communication skills when interacting with nurses and patients alike. Moreover, the SBC group demonstrated the ability to learn and adapt quickly to the working environment. Neither group paid much attention to information literacy. Conclusion: We cannot conclude that a CBC would yield better prepared medical graduates. The results of this study showed irregular patterns in eight areas. Hospital contexts and variation in the characters of interns might have contributed to this irregularity. More exposure to the working context and greater contributions from the healthcare system are recommended in the medical curriculum, whether it be a CBC or a SBC. WC:338


2018 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 600-627
Author(s):  
Aviel Cogan ◽  
Konstantina Martzoukou

Purpose The purpose of this study is to investigate how in-service teachers within the context of an American Jewish day school perceive, practice and develop Information Literacy (IL) as a sociocultural practice and through Continuing Professional Development (CPD). A research gap exists in relation to empirical studies which examine sociocultural IL practices and the CPD learning experiences of in-service teachers within the professional environment of their work. Two emergent and compatible frameworks for investigating teachers’ IL practices and CPD in context are identified and discussed within that context: the sociocultural approach and the interactive CPD model. Design/methodology/approach The research adopted an interpretivist phenomenological perspective. Semi-structured in-depth interviews were conducted with six teachers to explore their IL experiences. Questions addressed the participants’ previous background, the working culture of the school, approaches to learning and developing new knowledge, sources and methods of obtaining work-related information, IL practices and the differences between IL and CPD practices. Findings Although teachers value the role of IL in their professional lives and they have confidence in their performance of it, they remain confounded by the IL terminology. Within the teachers’ everyday working environment, the primacy of social and embodied information and the centrality of information sharing demonstrated the social and experiential nature of learning and the significance of contextualisation to IL development. The study found IL, CPD and learning to be inseparable, as they intersected within a single, organic situated learning practice of becoming an expert in context. Originality/value This study makes valuable contributions to theory by supplying empirical evidence of sociocultural IL practices, linking the currently disparate scholarships on IL, CPD and learning and providing suggestions for future research. In addition, the study demonstrates alternative avenues for developing teachers’ IL and offers recommendations for supporting their CPD.


Author(s):  
Nelson C. Y. Yeung ◽  
Bishan Huang ◽  
Christine Y. K. Lau ◽  
Joseph T. F. Lau

The COVID-19 pandemic negatively impacts psychological well-being (e.g., anxiety symptoms) among the general population of Hong Kong and migrant Filipina domestic helpers (FDHs). Having to live with the employers by law, FDHs’ working environment might affect their well-being during COVID-19 (e.g., household crowdedness/size, insufficiency of protective equipment against COVID-19, increased workload). Research has suggested that coping resources (e.g., social support, COVID-19-related information literacy) and COVID-19-specific worries are associated with people’s well-being during COVID-19. This study examined the psychosocial correlates of probable anxiety among FDHs in Hong Kong amid the COVID-19 pandemic. By purposive sampling, FDHs (n = 295) were recruited and invited to complete a cross-sectional survey. Participants’ working environment (crowdedness, household size), COVID-19 job arrangements (workload, provision of protective equipment), coping resources (social support, COVID-19 information literacy), COVID-19-specific worries (contracting COVID-19, getting fired if contracting COVID-19), and anxiety symptoms were measured. Multivariate regression results showed that the insufficiency of protective equipment (OR = 1.58, 95%CI: 1.18, 2.11), increased workload (OR = 1.51, 95%CI: 1.02, 2.25), and worries about being fired if getting COVID-19 (OR = 1.32, 95%CI: 1.04, 1.68) were significantly associated with probable anxiety. This was one of the earliest studies to indicate that job arrangements and COVID-19-specific worries significantly contributed to FDHs’ anxiety symptoms. Our findings shed light on the importance of addressing employment-related rights and pandemic-specific worries through interventions among FDHs in Hong Kong during pandemic situations.


Author(s):  
Mona Florea ◽  
Lillian Rafeldt ◽  
Susan Youngblood

The chapter presents healthcare examples of the current virtual working environment and introduces nursing skills necessary for evidence-based practice in a virtual workplace. The authors discuss how the Nursing Information Literacy Program was designed and implemented at Three Rivers Community College to assist nursing students in developing skills such as critical thinking and problem-solving, technological literacy, information literacy, and collaborative and cooperative learning. The authors hope that this example will serve as a model for creating other information literacy programs that prepare students for working in a virtual workplace.


Diagnostica ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (3) ◽  
pp. 147-157
Author(s):  
Martin Senkbeil ◽  
Jan Marten Ihme

Zusammenfassung. ICT Literacy legt eine performanzbasierte Erfassung mit simulierten und interaktiven Testaufgaben nahe. Der vorliegende Beitrag untersucht, ob mit Multiple-Choice (MC)-Aufgaben ein vergleichbares Konstrukt wie mit Simulationsaufgaben erfasst wird. Hierfür wurden die Testergebnisse zweier Instrumente aus aktuellen Large-Scale-Studien gegenübergestellt, die an N = 2 075 Jugendlichen erhoben wurden: der auf MC-Aufgaben basierende ICT Literacy-Test für Klasse 9 des Nationalen Bildungspanels (National Educational Panel Study, NEPS) und der simulationsbasierte Kompetenztest der internationalen Schulleistungsstudie ICILS 2013 (International Computer and Information Literacy Study). Die Analysen unterstützen die Gültigkeit der Konstruktinterpretation des MC-basierten Tests in NEPS. Im Sinne der konvergenten Evidenz korrelieren die MC-Aufgaben substanziell mit den computer- und simulationsbasierten Aufgaben in ICILS 2013 (.68 ≤  r ≤ .90). Weiterhin ergeben sich positive und für beide Tests vergleichbar hohe Korrelationen mit ICT-bezogenen Schülermerkmalen (z. B. Selbstwirksamkeit). Weiterführende Analysen zum Zusammenhang mit allgemeinen kognitiven Fähigkeiten zeigen zudem, dass ICT Literacy und kognitive Grundfähigkeiten distinkte Faktoren repräsentieren.


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