Monday, December 08, 2025

Recent articles: Collaborating on teaching IL for marketing; IL in journalism; Citizen diplomats

a grey woolly cap has been put on the top of a railing with a large building in the background

- McGowan, B.S. (2025). Cultivating citizen diplomats: information diplomacy as pedagogy in contested information environments. Information and Learning Sciences [early online publication]. https://doi.org/10.1108/ILS-01-2025-0001 (open access)

- Bates, M., & Whitver, S. M. (2025). Negotiating discomfort: Learning from teaching library instruction in unfamiliar contexts. The Reference Librarian, 1–21. https://doi.org/10.1080/02763877.2025.2583122 (priced) 

- Mross, E.L., & Bartholomew, d. (2025). A Joint Effort: Librarians and Faculty Teaching Undergraduate Students Marketing Research Skills Using an Information Literacy Instruction Approach. Pennyslvania Libraries: Research & Practice, 13(2), https://doi.org/10.5195/palrap.2025.316 (open access) "This case study details a semester-long research project using an embedded information literacy instruction (ILI) approach using a two-part library instruction series. This program helped students learn how to conduct marketing research using licensed and free business intelligence resources in an introduction to marketing course to complete a semester-long, two-part marketing plan. ... The embedded librarian approach contributed to grade increases between parts one and two of the assignment."
Photo by Sheila Webber: lost cap, November 2025: part of the lost item series

Friday, December 05, 2025

The information literacy of Christmas Puddings

three christmas puddings with foil tops on the pudding basins

It's that time of year, and I was searching for my mother's Christmas Pudding recipe (which I archived on this blog in 2015): googling information literacy christmas pudding. Seeking the link I wanted, my eye was caught by the "AI overview", which, to my surprise, had attempted to cobble together something about information literacy as applied to Christmas Puddings.
Can I do better than Google Gemini? I rather think I can!

Christmas puddings: through the lens of the ACRL Information Literacy Framework
All quotations in blue are from the Framework

two holly leaves and berry
Authority Is Constructed and Contextual
Here we have to consider both the pudding itself and the recipe. So, who is an authority for recipes? There are several candidates: celebrity chefs (high citation counts), recipes from the earliest days of festive puddings (historical accuracy), the first hit you get when searching christmas pudding recipes (algorithmic calculation), your mother's recipe (she's your mother).
Now, ACRL tells us that we must "view authority with an attitude of informed skepticism and an openness to new perspectives, additional voices, and changes in schools of thought." Therefore we ought to look at other people's mothers' recipes, recipes that have none of the ingredients you'd expect to find in a pudding, dubious-looking recipes from the 1960s, and the last recipe to be posted on tiktok. However, at the end of the day, "the information need may help to determine the level of authority required." I want a recipe that will deliver a pudding I know I like to eat, so my mother's recipe it is.
It will be a similar process in deciding "who is the authority who decides that this is the best pudding?" If they are a jury member at the International Taste Institute they must know a thing or two about good food, as must the head buyer responsible for seasonal desserts at a leading supermarket chain. The Consumers' Association is bound to have conducted tests, with proper criteria and everything and with my expert googling powers I can identify the "Christmas puddings: ranked" articles in all media outlets and see which is consistently top.
Once again, though, information literates "recognize that unlikely voices can be authoritative, depending on need." Thus, deficient though I am in any cookery qualification, I determine that the ultimate authority for judging "is this pudding nice?" is - me.

two holly leaves and berry

Research as Inquiry
Information literate learners "appreciate that a question may appear to be simple but still disruptive and important to research". Therefore they will find the question "What is a Christmas pudding, anyway?" meaningful and worthy of inquiry. In pursuing this, they will "maintain an open mind and a critical stance" (is it even a pudding?), "demonstrate intellectual humility" (admit they know nothing of the history of cooking) and "seek appropriate help when needed" (what does Wikipedia say about puddings?)

two holly leaves and berry
Information Has Value
As we all know, information has "several dimensions of value, including as a commodity, as a means of education, as a means to influence, and as a means of negotiating and understanding the world." The information contained in my mother's Christmas Pudding recipe can educate you about what a woman born in the 1920s thought should go into a Christmas Pudding (it is not, for example, vegetarian). It could be valuable if you use the recipe to produce the expensive commodity of Fortnum & Mason's' luxury pudding for non-vegetarians and make a tidy profit. You may think there is social capital in proving that your mother could cook. Also, "Experts understand that value may be wielded by powerful interests in ways that marginalize certain voices": so they will know that Elon Musk's (2025) Super-duper seasonal recipes book is not value for money, ignoring, as it does, the Christmas Pudding recipes of ordinary working people.

two holly leaves and berry
Scholarship as Conversation
"Communities of scholars, researchers, or professionals engage in sustained discourse with new insights and discoveries occurring over time as a result of varied perspectives and interpretations."
Indeed, debates about what should go in a Christmas pudding, what recipes are used in different countries, how you cook it (steamed, boiled or microwaved?), what it symbolises etc. etc. rage, in humble kitchens and in the ivory towers of academe. See, for example, Brieger et al. (2014), Chevalier (2018), Williams (1897), or Young (2005).
Should one even be eating this embodiment of one's colonial past? Discuss.

two holly leaves and berry
Information Creation as a Process
It certainly is! You can't just think up a successful recipe without going through a process. You have to "look to the underlying processes of creation as well as the final product to critically evaluate the usefulness of the information." Critical questions are "Did this cook actually taste the pudding?" and "Is this pudding recipe just a random collection of ingredients suggested by AI?"
You would expect the recipe creator to "value the process of matching an information need with an appropriate product", for example, it needs some spice and they select (say) cinnamon, rather than jalapeno pepper. They would also be able to "articulate the capabilities and constraints of information developed through various creation processes" and thus rank a recipe developed through thoughtful addition of ingredients and judicious tasting of the end products higher than a vaguely-worded recipe that now and then produced something edible.
You also need to "look beyond format when selecting resources to use": yes, usually you always use videos for recipe guides, but perhaps you could, after all, benefit from my mother's Christmas Pudding recipe, even though it's just written down.

two holly leaves and berry
Searching as Strategic Exploration
Information literate people will "determine the initial scope of the task required to meet their information needs." The recipe they use will be determined by questions like: What size of pudding do I want? Will I be serving it to vegan friends? How far am I prepared to go in terms of exotic ingredients? Can I be bothered with steaming?
They will "identify interested parties, such as scholars, organizations, governments, and industries, who might produce information about a topic" (see above)  and then "determine how to access that information" (shall I buy a cookery book? shall I go straight to a trusted source like this or this? what about Youtube?). Using "different types of searching language" (Christmas, Xmas, Figgy) one will "recognize the value of browsing and other serendipitous methods of information gathering" (scroll through all the photos of puddings to spot the yummiest).
However, you also need to "know when [you] have enough information to complete the information task".
Perhaps I'll just follow my mother's Christmas pudding recipe, after all.

Good information literate eating! If you found this even vaguely amusing you might like the SCONUL 7 Pillars of chocolate literacy which is shorter and probably wittier.

Images
Photo of Christmas puddings potted up ready for steaming by Sheila Webber, taken November 2025.
Holly image by Ted Balmer on Unsplash

References
Brieger, D. G., Amir, A. B., Punch, G. J., Lim, C. S. H., & Toh, J. (2014). What proof is in your Christmas pudding? Is caring under the influence possible? Medical Journal of Australia, 201(11), 702-704. https://doi.org/10.5694/mja14.01478
Chevalier, N. (2018). Iconic dishes, culture and identity: The Christmas pudding and its hundred years’ journey in the USA, Australia, New Zealand and India. Food, Culture & Society, 21(3), 367–383. https://doi.org/10.1080/15528014.2018.1451042
Musk, E. (2025). Super-duper seasonal recipes. [This is misinformation, but I think you knew that.]
Williams, E.E. (1897, December). Our Christmas plum puddings. Windor Magazine, 7, 64-68. https://www.victorianvoices.net/ARTICLES/Windsor/Windsor1898A/W1898-PlumPudding.pdf
Young, P. (2005). Economy, Empire, Extermination: The Christmas Pudding, the Crystal Palace and the Narrative of Capitalist Progress. Literature & History, 14(1), 14-30. https://doi.org/10.7227/LH.14.1.2 [It is about Dicken's story, but includes a pudding recipe, I think that counts.]

Thursday, December 04, 2025

Digital empowerment for lifelong learning and transformative andragogy (DELTA) for adult educators

several messy looking plant pots on a wondowsill on cracked tiles and a kitchen glimpsed behind

In October 2025 the UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning (UIL), in partnership with Shanghai Open University (SOU) published the DELTA (Digital Empowerment for Lifelong Learning and Transformative Andragogy) Framework which "aims to enhance adult educators’ digital competencies and foster inclusive, lifelong learning opportunities for all."
It is "a dynamic set of competencies and capacity building resources designed to strengthen digital practice across four key domains: Instructional practice; Digital empowerment; Media and information literacy; Transformative practice"
"The DELTA Framework is the result of a two-year, collaborative process involving international experts and technical working groups from nine countries." (quoted from here).

UNESCO Institute for Lifelong Learning & Shanghai Open University. (2025). Digital empowerment for lifelong learning and transformative andragogy (DELTA) for adult educators: introduction to the DELTA framework and resources. Document code: 978-92-820-1260-4 https://unesdoc.unesco.org/ark:/48223/pf0000396041
UIL and SOU have also developed "a suite of capacity-building resources and self-learning modules, available as Open Educational Resources (OERs)" which you can access on the UIL Learning Hub (you have to register). https://learninghub.uil.unesco.org/enrol/index.php?id=74
Photo by Sheila Webber: a jumbled windowsill, October 2025

Wednesday, December 03, 2025

New articles: IL in Workplace; Schools; Curriculum mapping; Supporting communities; Teaching through popular culture

some yellow gingko leaves which have fallen onto a polished wooden bench with some slate wall visible at the top
The latest issue of open access Journal of Information Literacy (Vol. 19 No. 2, 2025) is available. The articles are:
- Mapping the core dimensions of information literacy in the critical and workplace domain A thematic analysis by Dijana Å obota
- Integrating service-learning into information literacy education A case study from the Philippines by Ana Mae Cantel, Eun Youp Rha,
- Toward a coherent framework for school-based information literacy Delphi-based expert perspectives on competence and implementation by Ivana Martinović
- Reflection as a means to assess information literacy instruction by Natalia Kapacinskas, Veronica Arellano Douglas, Erica Lopez, Mea Warren
- Teaching critical information literacy through popular culture A media studies approach using the Oz texts by Daniel Williford
- Using Nuthall’s ideas to conceptualise and support children’s information needs by Andrew Shenton
- Information literacy without walls Comparative insights from India’s implementation and Greece’s emerging approaches by Nihar K Patra, Panorea Gaitanou
- Curriculum mapping for identifying and assessing information literacy teaching in humanities and social sciences libraries by Paul Cooke
Go to https://journals.cilip.org.uk/jil/issue/view/55
Photo by Sheila Webber: gingko leaves on a bench, November 2025

Tuesday, December 02, 2025

Webinar: New Voices in Information Literacy Research

in the foreground a canal bank with a tree at the side and in front canal with dark shapes of trees etc. on the other side and the low sun is shing at us
On 15 December 2025at 12noon-13.00 GMT (UK time) there is a free webinar New Voices in Information Literacy Research. It is hosted by Alison Hicks and presents MA dissertation research from three recent graduates.
- Jake Hoosan (Manchester Metroplitan University, UK): Information Literacy Education in UK Public Libraries.
- Jiayin Yu (University College London, UK): How students identify and respond to AI hallucinations: A qualitative study using Dervin’s sensemaking theory.
- Xinyi Wang (University College London, UK): What Makes Physicians Take Charge? The Role of Information Literacy.
Registration required: go to https://www.tickettailor.com/events/cilipinformationliteracygroup/1966426
Photo by Sheila Webber: dusk, Amsterdam, November 2025

Sunday, November 30, 2025

UNiTE to end digital violence: why digital safety is a gender and public health imperative in emergencies

advert for the event saying UNiTE to end digital violence: why digital safety is a gender and public health imperative in emergencies 1 December 2025 at 13.00-14.30 CET and also giving speaker names as detailed in the blog post

Only just been alerted to this free webinar from the World Health Organization on 1 December 2025 at 13.00-14.30 CET (which is 12 noon - 13.30 GMT). UNiTE to end digital violence: why digital safety is a gender and public health imperative in emergencies.
Speakers are: Dr Stella Chungong, Director, Department of Health Emergency Preparedness & Chair, WHE Gender Working Group; Dr Eugene Kongyuy, Deputy Director of Humanitarian Response Division to represent the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA); Ms Reem Alsalem, UN Special Rapporteur for Violence Against Women, its causes and consequences; Dr Kai Von Harbou, Unit Head, Community Protection & Resilience, WHO Surviving Digital Violence; Dr Millie Phiri, journalist, researcher and author on digital violence; Ms Sohaila Shamseldeen, Youth and Development Coordinator, Etijah
"This event highlights the need to integrate digital safety into humanitarian health responses, emphasizing its importance for emergency preparedness, protection, and resilient health systems. Objectives: 
- Raise awareness of digital and technology-facilitated violence (TF-VAWG) as a rising public health and protection issue in health emergencies; 
- Highlight impacts of digital violence on access to essential services, staff safety, risk communication and community engagement (RCCE), mental health and psychological services (MHPSS), and trust in emergency response systems; 
- Provide evidence-informed recommendations for integrating digital safety into emergency preparedness, response, and resilient health systems; 
- Elevate survivor-centered, rights-based, and gender-responsive approaches in digital health and humanitarian operations. 
Further details (including registration link) at https://www.who.int/news-room/events/detail/2025/12/01/default-calendar/who-epi-win-webinar-unite-to-end-digital-violence-why-digital-safety-is-a-gender-and-public-health-imperative-in-emergencies

Teaching with Twenty-Four Hours’ Notice

a milestone saying London 6 miles and behind it some autumn undergrowth

An interesting blog post reflecting on the experience of preparing a presentation at short notice: 
Roberts, M. (2025, November 20). Teaching with Twenty-Four Hours’ Notice [blog post]. ACRLog. https://acrlog.org/2025/11/20/teaching-with-twenty-four-hours-notice/
Photo by Sheila Webber: milestone in autumn, October 2025

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Digital Literacy in the k12 Classroom

the top part of York Cathedral tower against a grey sky and with some autumn leaves framing part of the photo

The next LIS Pedagogy Chat is on 5 December 2025 at 14.00 EST (which is 19.00 GMT). The topic is Digital Literacy in the k12 Classroom, introduced by Neha Thakkar (Illinois State Board of Education, USA), followed by discussion. 
LIS Pedagogy Chat
is a community of practice for academics and professionals who teach in library and information science.
Register at https://www.lispedagogychat.org/schedule-registration
Photo by Sheila Webber: York Minster, later October 2025

Friday, November 28, 2025

Webinar: Intercultural perspectives on information literacy and meta literacy

photo of a metal-based model of the city of Bamberg showing streets and buildings
The 7th online conference on Intercultural perspectives on information literacy and meta literacy takes place free, online on 11 December 2025 at 14.00-17.45 Central European Time (one hour ahead of GMT).
This is an outcome from the ongoing international collaboration (Intercultural Perspectives on Information Literacy and Metaliteracy), with students from Austria, Germany, India, Poland and the USA presenting the results of their research on six topics about the influence of AI.
There is also a keynote from Dr. Nicola Marae Allain on Mindful Metaliteracy in the Age of Generative AI: Attention, Reflection, and Human Agency
Go to https://ipil.blog.uni-hildesheim.de/2025/11/10/online-conference-in-december-2025/
Photo by Sheila Webber: model of Bamberg, on a pillar in Bamberg: memories of the European Conference on Information Literacy; there was a presentation about this ongoing IPILM project which I blogged here.

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Keeping up with ... AI Ethics

on a white background there ae overlapping circles in tones of green and blue
The latest in ACRL's Keeping up with ... series is Keeping up with ... AI Ethics. As usual it is just a few pages, summarising issues and with references/links.
Go to https://www.ala.org/acrl/publications/keeping_up_with/ai_ethics
Image created by Sheila Webber using Midjourney AI, November 2025

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

AI Competencies for Academic Library Workers

ACRL (Association of College & Research Libraries) has published AI Competencies for Academic Library Workers following approval by the ACRL Board of Directors in October 2025. Go to https://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/ai?_zs=SUvvg1&_zl=RQfQA
Another AI-related read is:
Ball, E. (2025, October 20). Teaching AI as an Anti-AI Librarian. ACRLog.  https://acrlog.org/2025/10/20/teaching-ai-as-an-anti-ai-librarian
Photo by Sheila Webber: fallen gingko leaves, Amsterdam, November 2025

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Call for Proposals: IS Teaching Methods 2026 Virtual Forum

The doorway of some flats and there is a bicycle proppsed against the wall and a little cabinet with books in it

The ACRL Instruction Section Teaching Methods Committee has a call for proposals for a presentation at their 2026 Virtual Forum. "The hour-long forum will be held in spring with the exact date to be determined based on availability of the speaker(s)." Deadline for proposals is 5 January 2026.
It will consist of a 45-minute presentation followed by 15-minute Q&A. The event is free to participants. The presentation should "showcase innovative teaching methods, assessment, and theoretical approaches. Past topics include critical race pedagogy, gendered labor and instruction, visual literacy, and assessment."
Past events are listed on the Instruction Section website.
Only one proposal will be selected. The proposal form is at https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLScbkIIKU4ZDMTaD11vsxSZ3syY4GMfzjDtHWTT3cnHocrF-6Q/viewformPhoto by Sheila Webber: take a book, Amsterdam, November 2025

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Call for nominations of Online Learning Objects

The ACRL Instruction Section wants nominations of Online Learning Objects which "may include online modules/tutorials, videos, podcasts, or other relevant media created or substantially updated within the past five years".
This is for the Featured Online Learning Objects (FOLO) project (which replaces the previous PRIMO project) which highlights high quality online IL learning materials. Nominations are due by 11 January 2026.
Go to https://acrl.ala.org/IS/is-committees-2/committees-task-forces/folo/
Photo by Sheila Webber: late autumn branches, Amsterdam, November 2025

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Last chance for LILAC conference bursaries!

LILAC logo saying LILAC the information literacy conference with an abstract lilac blocky part circle
The Academic and Research Libraries Group (ARLG) is funding 2 bursaries for the LILAC conference, one for a Further Education libraran and one for a Higher Education librarian. Closing date is 21 November 2025.
The bursaries will include three days at the conference and social events. They also include up to £250 in expenses for reasonable travel and accommodation. To apply for the ARLG bursaries you must be a current CILIP member - if selected, you will be asked to provide your membership details to confirm this.
You apply via the LILAC conference website https://www.lilacconference.com/register You need to register for the LILAC conference site (or login if you are already registered - if you attended LILAC in the past few years you will be already registered).
(1) Register / Login
(2) Select MY ACCOUNT
(3) Scroll down the page to "Bursary applications are now open and will close on 21 November 2025" where the individual bursaries are listed.

Call for proposals: Critical Approaches to Libraries Conference

Two figures made in red like giant plasticine one with something on its head and a smaller one running behind and this is in a small grassy park with autumn trees

There is a call for proposals for the 2026 Critical Approaches to Libraries Conference (CALC) which will take place online during the week beginning 11 May 2026. CALC has a two-part process with the stage 1 (which is the call open now) reserved for sessions led by presenters who experience under-representation and/or marginalisation in libraries, academia or traditional library conferences.
The closing date for stage 1 proposals is 19 December 2025 at 23.59 GMT (UK time).
A second unreserved call for proposals will open in January 2026.
There is more information at https://sites.google.com/view/calcconference/call-for-papers including a guide to writing proposals and the form to submit session proposals.
There is a short explanation about the scope of the conference at https://sites.google.com/view/calcconference/about/what-is-critical-library-practice
Questions or queries can go to calcconference@gmail.com
Photo by Sheila Webber: Frederik Hendrikplantsoen in Amsterdam, November 2025