Folk,
A. (2019). Reframing Information Literacy as Academic Cultural Capital:
A Critical and Equity-Based Foundation for Practice, Assessment, and
Scholarship. College & Research Libraries, 80(5), 658. https://doi.org/10.5860/crl.80.5.658
Within the past decade, academic librarianship has increased its
focus on critical librarianship and assessing student success, as well
as undergoing a complete reconceptualization of information literacy.
However, our assessment and scholarship related to information literacy
and student success largely neglects the persistent racial and
social-class achievement gaps in American higher education. This article
draws upon a critical social theory commonly used in higher education
research—cultural capital—to consider the ways in which information
literacy as threshold concepts may enable or constrain success for
students whose identities higher education has traditionally
marginalized. Finally, Estela Mara Bensimon’s equity cognitive frame is
introduced to consider the ways in which we can ground our practice,
assessment, and scholarship in our professional values of equity and
inclusion.
via https://www.univie.ac.at/voeb/blog/?p=49579
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