Sheila Webber
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sheilawebber.bsky.social
Sheila Webber
@sheilawebber.bsky.social

Faculty member @ Sheffield University (UK) Information School. Love information literacy, Second Life & various other things. Blog all things infolit at https://information-literacy.blogspot.com/ - I post links to that. Sheila Yoshikawa in Second Life .. more

Computer science 48%
Education 27%

Reposted by Sheila Webber

It was another inspiring day of the @BritLibraryPCS strike for fair pay with dozens on the picket line and incredible speakers including renowned novelist Zadie Smith, actor Ayvianna Snow, and PCS President Martin Cavanagh! Thanks everyone for your amazing support! #PCSonStrike

If you get hold of it, it's certainly a solid read (as in, lots of pages) 😊

Reposted by Sheila Webber

Could have conference walks to go a take photographs with the statues!
New Issue Out Now!

Explore the Journal of Embodied Research (JER) 8.1, featuring new work in #videographic scholarship and embodied research.

Includes 4 #videoarticles and 1 #videoessay

jer.openlibhums.org/issue/1724/i...

Here is the photo with us and @pammckinney.bsky.social

@pammckinney.bsky.social and I are liveblogging from the European Conference on Information Literacy, being held in Bamberg, Germany, this week. So far we have blogged 12 talks! You can find the posts at information-literacy.blogspot.com/search/label...
Information Literacy Weblog
Curating information literacy stories from around the world since 2005 - - - Stories identified, chosen and written by humans!
information-literacy.blogspot.com

Lovely to meet up with you again! Is it OK to post the photo here?

This week @pammckinney.bsky.social and I will be liveblogging from the European Conference on Information Literacy ecil2025.ilconf.org - look out for our posts #infolit #ecil2025 #ecil
ECIL 2025 | European Conference on Information Literacy | ECIL 2025 | European Conference on Information Literacy
ecil2025.ilconf.org

Celebrating 20 years of the Information Literacy Weblog
6,425 posts, 5.2 million page views ... the Information Literacy Weblog has been publishing c. 300 posts a year for 20 years. Looking at the first post, we said "Hi, This is a temporary blog created whilst The Information Literacy Blog (at http://ciquest.shef.ac.uk/infolit/ since April 2003) is being found a new home. ... We hope to have a new home as soon as we can!" Well, it hasn't been so temporary! The old blog (2003-2005) ceased because it was run under LaTeX was on an old server, and the person who was supporting it moved jobs. Some pages from have been archived in the Internet Archive (e.g. this home page from June 2004, which has a report from a workshop in Yeppoon, Australia and reports from the LIDA conference in Dubrovnik, e.g. this one. I was busy in those days! BTW the internet archive links can be slow to respond, so patience is needed). Initially Stuart Boon provided some posts, and latterly Pam McKinney has joined me in liveblogging conferences, but otherwise the posts are devised and written by me (Sheila Webber). The tagline of the old blog 2004 was Sharing relevant items and information relating to information literacy worldwide, which became the slightly snappier We bring you news and reports about information literacy around the world to start with on this blog. In due course (i.e. I can't remember when) I changed this to Curating information literacy stories from around the world since 2005. You may have noticed that I have now added a further tagline "Stories identified, chosen and written by humans!" since nowadays it seems worth pointing out that there is human agency both in deciding what to blog and in writing the posts.  It seems unlikely that I will still be blogging in 20 years time, but I intend to keep going for now!
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Reposted by Sheila Webber

The Role of Libraries in Mental Health/Here's how #librarians play a role in addressing trauma, mental health and more. www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/well...
The Role of Libraries in Mental Health
Post-pandemic librarians have seen an increase in social and mental health issues impacting library patrons. Here's how library workers can play a role in mental health.
www.psychologytoday.com

New articles: Online Learning
The latest issue of the open access journal Online learning (vol. 29, no. 3) is available, the focus of which is pretty obvious from the title. A couple of the articles that caught my attention were: - Donelan, H. et al.: Synchronous online learning: why some students don’t actively participate. This reportings findings from a study at the Open University (UK) "The survey data showed that lack of confidence is an important factor affecting student participation; over a third of students indicated that they experience stress when expected to take part actively. The paper also discusses how the online tools used in synchronous tutorials (e.g. text chat, polls, shared whiteboards) can support different levels of participation; the approaches tutors can use to encourage active engagement; and the role of passive participation". It's worth reading if you do any synchronous online sessions as it talks about things that encourage and things that discourage people from participating (the latter including repeatedly being exhorted to turn on your mic). - Belt, E.S., Friesen, N., Lowenthal, P.R. & Snelson, C.: Teacher-Student Relationships in an Online Graduate Program: A Phenomenological Analysis Go to https://olj.onlinelearningconsortium.org/index.php/olj/issue/view/136 Photo by Sheila Webber: washing on the line, July 2025
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Engineering & information literacy
Papers presented at the 2025 American Society for Engineering Education conference (held in June 2025 in Montreal, Canada) include (all full text papers): - Woods, L. (2025, June). Qualitative methods for studying women’s information experiences in engineering education. Paper presented at 2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition , Montreal, Quebec, Canada . 10.18260/1-2--57507 https://peer.asee.org/57507 - Kaurloto, C., & Lah, J., & Quezada, A. (2025, June). Analyzing Student Information Literacy Skills: Perceptions, Outcomes, and Future Planning. Paper presented at 2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition , Montreal, Quebec, Canada . 10.18260/1-2--55438 https://peer.asee.org/55438 - Mercado Rivera, A., & Prosser, E. (2025, June). Bridging Information Literacy and Data Science: A Collaborative Approach to Project-Based Learning. Paper presented at 2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition , Montreal, Quebec, Canada . 10.18260/1-2--56011 https://peer.asee.org/56011 - Basque, E. A., & Chevrier, J., & Cormier, A., & Du Ruisseau, M., & Fernandez Pereda, O., & Fitch-Kustcher, C., & Fitzgibbon, B., & Hérault, T., & Soare, A. (2025, June). Lasting Impacts of Credited Information Literacy Library Instruction for Graduate Engineering Students. Paper presented at 2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition , Montreal, Quebec, Canada . 10.18260/1-2--56908 https://peer.asee.org/56908 - Verdines, P. (2025, June). Information Seeking and Sensemaking in Engineering Education: A Framework for Capstone Projects. Paper presented at 2025 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition , Montreal, Quebec, Canada . 10.18260/1-2--56795 https://peer.asee.org/56795 Photo by Sheila Webber: creepers, Botanic Gardens, August 2025
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LILi conference recordings and slides
Material from the 12th Annual LILi (Lifelong Information Literacy) Conference Tech for Equity: Leveraging Tools and Tech to Build Inclusive Futures (that took place 17-18 July 2025) is available, with recordings of sessions and slides. Sessions included - Super-Sized Library Instruction: One Size Does Not Fit All - “Our Class Can’t Come to Campus, but Could We Zoom the Session?”: Adapting and Delivering Information Literacy Instruction to Off-Campus Dual Enrollment Composition Classes - Beyond Search: Using AI to Empower Every Student’s Research Journey - Learn in a Week: On demand, scaffolded e-learning - Leveraging Generative AI for Information Literacy Curriculum Mapping in Academic Libraries - Leveraging Technology to Take Professional Development Beyond an Annual Institute to Enhance Professional Skills and Cultural Knowledge of Tribal College Librarians - Using AI to increase the readability of online information literacy tutorials - From Static to Dynamic: Enhancing Online Information Literacy Instruction with Interactive Tutorials - From AI Hallucinations to Critical Information Literacy: A 'Critical Citation Tracing' Approach - Research Without Resources: Incorporating Information Literacy Into Prison Education Programs Go to https://lili.libguides.com/lili2025/schedule Photo by Sheila Webber: Rudbeckia flowers, Botanic gardens, August 2025
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Reposted by Sheila Webber

Oryntai Oshanova (Head of the UNESCO Chair of Journalism and Communication at Al-Farabi Kazakh National University in Almaty) talking about media literacy in Kazakhstan a very important topic in UK so privileged to get an insight from another country! #WLIC2025 @ifla.org

Webinar: Evidence-based Mindsets in an Era of Information Confusion: An Information Literacy Approach
Purdue University's Institute for Information Literacy has organised a webinar, Evidence-based Mindsets in an Era of Information Confusion: An Information Literacy Approach on 12 September 2025 at 13.00 US Central time (which is 19.00 in the UK, BST). The speaker is Professor William Badke. Thi is part of the Institute's Information and Democracy: Education, Access, Libraries, and Society (ID:EALS) series. "One of the most significant crises in today’s world is information confusion, the inability of many people, including our students, to determine what information is trustworthy and what is not. This has led to wild conspiracy theories, information silos, a distrust of scholarship, and a general sense that we have lost our moorings and no longer can see the shore. "Professor Badke's work with information authority and his interactions with students in 40 years of information literacy credit courses has given him an understanding of the issues and a possible path forward. While he does not claim to have unassailable answers, Professor Badke’s talk will provide some direction to attendees that takes us away from facile answers like “Use a checklist” or “Only access scholarly sources" in order to address the challenges we face in today’s information environment." Registration at https://purdue-edu.zoom.us/meeting/register/Gj9V4ifiT7OPHEGimAcwfQ#/registration More about the Institute and the ID:EALS series: https://lib.purdue.edu/IILP
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