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Mary E. Brown, Ph.D., Professor
Information Science

Southern Connecticut State University
501 Crescent Street, New Haven, CT 06515

Department of Information and Library Science
Fax: 1.203.392-5780 / Phone: 1.203.392-5781
Toll Free: 1-888-500-SCSU, then press 4

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ILS 244 Home

ILS 244 Syllabus



Southern Home


Constructing an Information Resource Guide /
Exploring Kinds of Resources
Tackling Information Tasks: the Big 6 Cycle /
5-day model for writing a short paper
Getting Started
   

Use of Information Sources

ILS 244W Unit 1

Fall 2009
August 31 - September 7

NOTE: Please print a copy of this page and keep it nearby for ready reference.

UNIT 1 READING ASSIGNMENT

LECTURE: Read the lecture notes below (then take a quiz on the material).
READINGS IN TEXT: Read chapter 1 (pp 1-18) in List-Handley (then take a quiz on the material)
OTHER READINGS: Read ONE of the following:

After reading the lecture notes, contact the library you will be using during this course. Meet at least one Reference Librarian, introduce yourself and tell them you are a student in an online course "Use of Information Sources." Ask for 1) a copy of the library's hours of operation and the rules and regulations for patrons and 2) an orientation tour of the library.

In your journal, record a narrative of this visit. Be sure to include the date of your visit, the name of the library, and the name of the librarian(s) you met. Title this journal entry "LIBRARY ORIENTATION VISIT."

UNIT 1 WRITING ASSIGNMENTS

This week you will use the Big Six process to write a short (2-3 page) paper on a topic of your choice. When writing your paper try to focus on writing with (1) No excess words; rather, write with nouns and verbs and (2) No long, confusing sentences; no groups of short, monotonous sentences. The following schedule is offered to help you manage your time and the work:

Day 1

  1. Select a topic (EITHER Working in 2016 OR Communicating through handwritten letters versus text messaging). Define the topic by rewriting it as a question.
  2. List the information you will need to find.
  3. List possible information sources.
  4. Select the best sources.

Day 2

  1. Locate the selected sources, including through finding appropriate subject headings.
  2. Find information within each source.
  3. Engage information in the source.
  4. Extract inforamation from the multiple sources, using a graphic organizer.

Day 3

  1. Organize the information from the various sources into a logical sequence, perhaps following an outline format.
  2. Write a draft linking the various pieces of information into a coherent telling.
  3. Revise the draft for a better telling/reading.

Day 4

  1. Evaluate the paper. [How effective was your work?]
  2. Evaluate the research process. [How efficient was your research activity?]

Day 5

  1. Be sure you have included a Bibliography or List of References, giving the sources you used.
  2. Paste your final draft into the threaded discussion area of this unit.

UNIT 1 LECTURE

Parts of a book (click on the title to go to this part of the lecture)

The Big6

The Big6 is the most widely-known and -used approach to teaching information and technology skills in the world. Used in thousands of K-12 schools, higher education institutions, and corporate and adult training programs, the Big6 information problem-solving process is applicable whenever people need and use information.

Big Six Skills provide a systematic approach to information problem-solving that relies upon critical thinking skills. The Big Six is a problem solving model that students can use to successfully complete any homework assignment, research paper or classroom project in any subject area. Big6 can also be used to solve business and life problems.

The steps in the Big Six approach to information problem-solving are:

  1. Task Definition
    1. Define problem
    2. Identify requirement of the problem
  2. Information-seeking Strategies
    1. Determine range of possible sources
    2. Select best sources
  3. Locate and Access Information
    1. Locate sources
    2. Find information within sources
  4. Use Information
    1. Engage information in sources
    2. Extract information from sources
  5. Synthesis
    1. Organize information from multiple sources
    2. Present information
  6. Evaluation
    1. Judge the product (effectiveness)
    2. Judge information problem-solving (efficiency)

This week we will use the Big Six process to write a short (2-3 page) paper.

Steps One and Two (Day 1)

  1. Select a topic. [Example: Designing healthy cities] Define the topic by rewriting it as a question. [Example: Would communities designed with a greater emphasis on health be much different from American communities now being built?]
  2. List the information you will need to find. [Example: perception of health and disease; physical factors of health; biochemical factors of health; socioeconomic factors of health; psychological factors of health; economic factors of health; models for unhealthy communities; models for healthy communities.]
  3. List possible sources. [Example: health professionals, newspaper articles, conference proceedings, books.]
  4. Select the best sources. [Example: select the sources to which you have access, seem to be written for relatively easy understanding, and are in your budget means]

Steps Three and Four (Day 2)

  1. Locate sources, including through finding appropriate subject headings. [Example: items found using the subject headings City planning -- Health aspects; Urban health.]
  2. Find information within each source. [Example: use the table of contents, back of the book index, skimming to find promising passages.]
  3. Engage information in the source. [Example: compare information to research question to determine if it can give background to the question, help answer an aspect of the question, demonstrate problems that are associated with finding an answer.]
  4. Extract inforamation from multiple sources. [Example: notetaking, highlighting photocopies, constructing charts and tables.]

Step Five (Day 3)

  1. Organize information (notes) from the various sources into a logical sequence, perhaps following an outline format.
  2. Write a draft linking the various pieces of information into a coherent telling.
  3. Revise the draft for a better telling/reading.

Step Six (Day 4)

  1. Evaluate the paper. [Example: Does the finished product match the assignment requirements? Did you answer the question you asked? Did you give credit to your sources (including books and people)? ]
  2. Evaluate the research process. [Example: Did you make the right choices in planning and working through this assignment? Did you list all of the information that you would need? Did you list and select the best possible sources to find this information? Did you use the best methods to locate the information?]

Submit product (Day 5)

  1. Be sure you have included a Bibliography or List of References, giving the sources you used.
  2. Paste your final draft into the threaded discussion area of this unit.

Related Resources:

The Big6.com Website
The Big 6 Board Game

UNIT 1 QUIZ

Test what you learned from this week's reading.

This is a short 5 question quiz covering the assigned reading for this unit. Take a maximum of 10 minutes. Some questions require you to apply what is learned from the readings. Other questions ask you to recall specific material. After you have taken the quiz, go back and check you answers in the text.

UNIT 1 JOURNAL ENTRY

1.
In your journal, write a narrative describing what you expect to gain from this course, your feelings about online versus onground courses, and why you chose to study online during this term. Be sure to mark the entry with the title "BEGINNING REFLECTIONS - FIRST WEEK OF CLASS".

2.
Contact the library you will be using during this course. Meet at least one Reference Librarian, introduce yourself and tell them you are a student in an online course "Use of Information Sources." Ask for 1) a copy of the library's hours of operation and the rules and regulations for patrons and 2) an orientation tour of the library.

In your journal, record a narrative of this visit. Be sure to include the date of your visit, the name of the library, and the name of the librarian(s) you met. Title this journal entry "LIBRARY ORIENTATION VISIT."


On this class site, every effort has been made to acknowledge the work of others. Any omission is unintentional. If anyone finds an oversight, please contact me at brownm6@southernct.edu immediately so that any error can be corrected.