April 7, 2021 – Information Literacy in a Post-Truth Era
Posted in: Democracy 2021, Event, Opportunities
Information Literacy in a Post-Truth Era
April 7, 2021
11:30am EST
Description:
The founders of American democracy believed it could not survive without an 鈥渋nformed citizenry鈥.聽 What does an informed citizenry look like in today鈥檚 world? And what role do we have as educators and students to support it? First, we look at the significant challenges to institutional and media legitimacy that emerged in the second half of the 20th century, which rightfully called attention to the ways longstanding Western knowledge practices excluded marginalized communities and silenced important histories. We ask about the status of norms and mores in the aftermath of this challenge, in an era often called 鈥減ost-truth.鈥漇econd, we consider the challenges of teaching information literacy.聽 To the extent that we teach it at all, how have our instructions to 鈥渄o the research鈥 and 鈥渁void fake news鈥 failed?聽 We invite instructors to interrogate their own information literacy practices (which are typically invisible); and to understand, empathize with, and value students鈥 information literacy practices.
Panelists:
Jeffery Gonzalez, Assistant Professor of English, teaches courses on 20th and 21st century American literature. His research and writing explore how literary forms and narratives relate to economic, political, and social concerns. He has published essays in the academic journals Critique, Mosaic,听补苍诲听College Literature,聽among others.
Catherine Baird, Online and Outreach Librarian, teaches and studies information literacy, and her recent publications examine MSU faculty and students.聽 She and collaborator Jonathan Howell, Associate Professor of Linguistics, have written and presented on librarian-faculty collaboration.聽 Their current book project,聽Teaching Information Literacy,聽offers faculty an accessible and practical introduction to recent research in the learning and information sciences.