Article in liber quarterly · October 004 doi: 10. 18352/lq. 7780 · Source: oai citations 45 reads 6,104 authors: Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects



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CONCLUSION 
The new educational paradigm has created the need for a reconceptualisation of the roles 
and responsibilities of librarians. In this context, information literacy has become an 
issue in many academic libraries and much work has been undertaken to deliver 
information literacy education. Information literacy initiatives in HE have taken a variety 
of forms, but there are trends towards the integration of information literacy into subject 
areas. Successful initiatives report on effective partnership between library and faculty, 
integrated ‘information literacy’ programmes, the integration of the potential of modern 
ICT and the use of active learning methods. However, implementation and delivery of 
information literacy education depends on many factors: national as well as institutional 
policy, teaching and learning approaches, understandings and attitudes of faculty and 
students, and resources (budget, staffing, facilities, and time). 
REFERENCES 
ACRL: 
Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education. 
Chicago : 
Association of College and Research Libraries, 2000. 
http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards/informationliteracycompetency.htm 
ACRL: Characteristics of Programs of Information Literacy that illustrate Best Practices: 
A Guideline. Best Practices Initiative. Institute for Information Literacy. American 
Library Association, June 2003. 
http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards/characteristics.htm
ALA: 
Final Report
. Chicago : American Library Association’s Presidential Committee 
on Information Literacy, 1989. 
http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlpubs/whitepapers/presidential.htm 
Asher, C.: “Separate But Equal: librarians, academics and information literacy”. 
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34(2003)1, 52-55.
Audunson, R. & R. Nordlie: “Information Literacy: the case or non-case of Norway?”
 
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Behrens, S. J.: “A Conceptual Analysis and Historical Overview of Information 
Literacy”. 
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Boekhorst, A.K.: “Becoming information literate in the Netherlands”. 
Library Review

52(2003)7, 298-309. 
Breivik, P.S.: “Politics for Closing the Gap”. In: 
Integrating Library Use Skills into the 
General Education Curriculum,
ed. Pastine, M.
 
London: Haworth, 1989. 


General Introduction to the Role of the Library for University Education 
 
 
 
302
Breivik, P.S. & G.E. Gee: 
Information Literacy: revolution in the library
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Macmillan, 1989. 
Breivik, P.S. & D.L. Jones: “Information literacy: liberal education for the information 
age”. 
Liberal Education
, 79(1993)l, 24-9.
Brittingham, B.: “Higher Education Processes”, (1994). http://www.heproc.org/ 
Brophy, P.: The Library in the Twenty-first Century: new services for the information 
age. London: Library Association Publishing, 2001. 
Bruce, C.: “Faculty-Librarian Partnerships in Australian Higher Education: critical 
dimensions”. 
Reference Services Review
, 29(2001)2, 106-15. 
Bruce, H. & M. Lampson: “Information Professionals as Agents for Information 
Literacy”. 
Education for Information
, 20(2002)2, 81-107. 
Bunzel, J. & R. Poll: “German Academic Libraries: tradition and change”. 
Journal of 
Academic Librarianship
, 28(2002)6, 418-425.
Castells, M.: (1996). The Rise of The Network Society: vol.1 of the information age: 
economy, society and culture. Oxford: Blackwell. 
CETUS: 

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