The document discusses evidence-based practice and the expectations for first-year higher education students. It explores how the information seeking habits of the "Google Generation" can present challenges to evidence-based practice. Specifically, students may have difficulty evaluating sources for quality and appropriateness due to overreliance on sources like Wikipedia and Google. The document emphasizes the need to teach students critical thinking and evaluation skills so they can assess what counts as valid evidence and support their academic work with appropriate sources.
Evidence-Based Practice in HE: Expectations of 1st Years
1. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk Evidence-based practice: What do we expect of 1st years in HE? 20th July 2011 Hannah Spring Senior Lecturer: Research and Evidence Based Practice Support
2. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk Evidence-based practice in HE What is evidence-based practice?
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4. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk SCONUL 7 Pillars of Information Literacy
5. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk Evidence-based practice in HE So how can we ensure that HE students take a more evidence-based approach to their academic practice?
6. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk Evidence-based practice in HE Who are our students? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dGCJ46vyR9o
7. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk The Google Generation “ Those born after 1993… a cohort of young people with little or no recollection of life before the web” Rowlands et al (2007) Information behaviour of the researcher of the future: a ciber Briefing paper [Online] Available from: http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/programmes/reppres/gg_final_keynote_1 1012008.pdf [Accessed 15th July 2011] What is the Google Generation?
8. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk The Google Generation Digital Natives (Generation Y) & Digital Immigrants (Generation X) Prensky, M. Digital natives, digital immigrants. On the horizon 2001, 9, 1–6. Accessible at: http://www.marcprensky.com/writing/prensky%20-%20digital%20natives,%20digital%20immigrants%20-%20part1.pdf
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10. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk Information seeking habits of the Google Generation “ Our students love the net, which is OK The problem is, they also trust it, which is not” Block, M (2002) Gullible’s travels [Online]. Library Journal . Available from: http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA210719.html [Accessed 3rd June 2010]
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17. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk Evidence-based practice in HE What is ‘evidence’?
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19. York St John University | www.yorksj.ac.uk What counts as evidence in EBP?
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Notes de l'éditeur
Attendees to come up with a defining statement.
A researcher is able to identify a need for information to address the research question A researcher can scope what information is available to support the information need and know how to access it. Plan the search strategies (specific to different information sources). Gather information – apply search strategies (and continue to stay up to day by using current awareness, online communities, email lists, RSS feeds, etc). A researcher can review the research process and compare and evaluate information and data. A researcher can manage - organise information professionally and ethically (referencing, plagiarism, copyright, etc) Present results of research (synthesis, presentation, dissemination)
Digital natives / digital immigrants
Digital natives / digital immigrants
University of Alberta
A lot of what is written on such resources are more opinion based than based on authoritative, research based evidence. Anecdotal
British Library research study – Information Behaviour of the Research of the Future (2008).
Students used to speed and immediacy of information. Power browsing – short stints online.
Students only want full-text now – won’t wait for interloans – only read abstracts Google facilitaties bad behaviour and poor scholarship / academic practice. Google does not encourage the discipline which is needed for academic practice.
Audience to consider this.
Example = student teachers ‘ Patient experience’ – ‘pupils / students’ ‘ Local data’ – areas where schools are situated – would the same thing work in an inner city area as would a rural area?