Applying An Information Literacy Rubric To First-year Health Sciences Student Research Posters
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2018
Publication Title
Journal of the Medical Library Association
Publisher
Medical Library Association
Volume
106
Issue
1
First page number:
108
Last page number:
112
Abstract
Objective: This article describes the collection and analysis of annotated bibliographies created by first-year health sciences students to support their final poster projects. The authors examined the students’ abilities to select relevant and authoritative sources, summarize the content of those sources, and correctly cite those sources. Methods: We collected images of 1,253 posters, of which 120 were sampled for analysis, and scored the posters using a 4-point rubric to evaluate the students’ information literacy skills. Results: We found that 52% of students were proficient at selecting relevant sources that directly contributed to the themes, topics, or debates presented in their final poster projects, and 64% of students did well with selecting authoritative peer-reviewed scholarly sources related to their topics. However, 45% of students showed difficulty in correctly applying American Psychological Association (APA) citation style. Conclusion: Our findings demonstrate a need for instructors and librarians to provide strategies for reading and comprehending scholarly articles in addition to properly using APA citation style. © 2018, Medical Library Association. All rights reserved.
Language
English
Repository Citation
Goodman, X.,
Watts, J.,
Arenas, R.,
Weigel, R.,
Terrell, T.
(2018).
Applying An Information Literacy Rubric To First-year Health Sciences Student Research Posters.
Journal of the Medical Library Association, 106(1),
108-112.
Medical Library Association.
http://dx.doi.org/10.5195/jmla.2018.400