I am a soon-to-be graduate of the Master of Information Studies (MISt) program at McGill University. My educational background is in foreign languages/linguistics and writing, and my previous work experience includes ESL teaching and academic support roles in higher education. I am very interested in information literacy instruction across all kinds of librarianship.
At this conference, I am presenting preliminary findings and implications from my major research project in the MISt program (supervised by Dr. Joan Bartlett) about post-secondary students' opinions on ideas and practices related to information literacy. Hope to see you there!
Documents
Sessions in which Claire Pienaar participates
Tuesday 16 April, 2024
Following the introduction of the Association of College and Research Libraries’ (ACRL, 2016) Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education, efforts to meaningfully promote and enact the more conceptually oriented form of post-secondary information literacy instruction (ILI) evinced by the document have spread. However, perceptions of the Framework as elitist or inaccessible; the persistence of one-shot sessions as the dominant ILI format; and the difficulty of teaching and learning...
Sessions in which Claire Pienaar attends
Tuesday 16 April, 2024
In the Canadian context, there is a notable dearth of professional literature focusing on racial minority librarians conducted by racial minority librarians. To address this gap, a team of six librarians, representing the Visible Minority Librarians of Canada (ViMLoC) network, undertook a second comprehensive survey in 2021, building on the initial survey conducted in 2013. The 2021 survey, which included data from 162 minority librarians, served as the foundation for three peer-reviewe...
Sex – and media that depicts sex and sexually suggestive subject matter – remains stigmatised in western society. As pornography and sexually explicit material more broadly have become of increasing interest to researchers across several disciplines such as pornography studies and gender and sexuality studies, so too does the demand on institutions and practitioners in libraries, archives, and special collections to provide access to these materials. However, the taboo associated with the sub...
As of April 2022, the National Library of Medicine has converted to automatic indexing for MEDLINE citations thanks to the integration of The Medical Text Indexer (MTI). MTI has been incredibly impactful, with a notable decrease in the time it takes a MEDLINE citation to receive MeSH indexing. However, further work is needed to address some well-documented issues around the indexing genes and chemical compounds and their impact on information retrieval. To investigate these issues, this resea...