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Creating Effective Research Assignments:
Developing Student Information Literacy Skills

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A well-designed research assignment is an excellent teaching tool. Effective assignments develop not only students’ research skills, but their critical thinking abilities and subject knowledge. Through faculty and librarian collaboration we hope to develop assignments that enhance course objectives and minimize frustration.(13)  The exponential increases in the number of information resources and technology tools available today have made libraries more complex than ever. This phenomenon of “information overload” has led to the increased importance of Information Literacy and critical thinking skills on the part of today’s college students. An information literate student is able to recognize their information need and then locate, evaluate, and use effectively and ethically the needed information. Enabling students to go beyond the confines of an assignment and focus on the process of seeking solutions to their information needs is crucial. Information literacy enables students to recognize the value of information and use it to make informed choices in their personal, professional and academic lives. An important first step in laying the foundation for an information literate student body is the collaboration between faculty and librarians in creating effective research assignments.

Help Us Stamp out Bad Research Experiences!

Please Do:

Please Try to Avoid:

Assignment Ideas that Develop Information Literacy Skills:

Open the Word File

Sample Research Exercises/Assignments:

Here we provide you with some more detailed and developed sample research exercises, activities and assignments. Most of these have student learning outcomes listed, and some provide a listing of corresponding ACRL Information Literacy Competency Standards. Please feel free to use or adapt these for your needs!

These links will open Microsoft Word files:
Topic Selection and Refinement Worksheets
Best Source Essay
Information Source Comparison
Periodical Comparison
Editorial Assignment
Annotated Bibliographies
Knowledge Inventory
Scholarly vs. Popular Periodicals
Summarize vs. Analyze
Portfolio Reflective Questions

Resources Consulted:

  1. North Harris College Library. “Keys to Designing Effective Assignments.” http://nhclibrary.nhmccd.edu/library/instruction/keys.html
  2. Beck, Susan E. New Mexico State University Library. “Suggestions for Successful Internet Assignments.” http://lib.nmsu.edu/instruction/evalsugg.html
  3. Funes, Carolyn. Palomar College Library. “Assignments to Promote Information Competency.” http://www.palomar.edu/library/infocomp/assignchart.htm
  4. University of Maryland University College. “Information Literacy and Writing Assessment Project: Tutorial for Developing and Evaluating Assignments.” http://www.umuc.edu/library/tutorials/information_literacy/sect4.html
  5. The University Libraries at the University of Missouri – Kansas City. (Handout from conference – not on the Web).
  6. Kauffman, Lynn. School Without Walls, Washington, D.C. (Post in a Discussion Board).
  7. Queen Elizabeth II Library. “Ideas for Library/Information Assignments.” http://www.library.mun.ca/qeii/instruction/assignment_ideas.php
  8. Heller-Ross, Holly. “Plattsburgh Tip Sheet.” http://faculty.plattsburgh.edu/holly.hellerross/InfotechLithandout.doc
  9. Francis A. Drexel Library. St. Joseph’s University. “Information Literacy Standards for Higher Education with Selected Outcomes and Ideas for Active Learning.” http://www.sju.edu/libraries/drexel/forfaculty/illstds.htm
  10. D. Leonard Corgan Library, King’s College. “Term Paper Alternatives: Ideas for Information Based Assignments.”
  11. Columbia Gorge Community College Library. “Alternative Assignments Requiring Library Research.” http://www.cgcc.cc.or.us/Library/facultyservices/alternatives.htm
  12. University of Arizona Library. “Information Literacy Outcomes with Ideas for Active Learning & Assessment.” http://dizzy.library.arizona.edu/library/teams/InfoLit2000/Outcomes_Activities.pdf
  13. King’s College. “Teaching With Information Sources: Designing Effective Assignments.”

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