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Information Literacy in Medical Education: Relationships with Conceptions of Learning and Learning Methods

Advances in Library Administration and Organization

ISBN: 978-0-7623-1411-9, eISBN: 978-1-84950-484-3

Publication date: 17 July 2007

Abstract

This paper reports on part of a dissertation project on the relationships between learning methods and students’ information behavior in Finland. In this qualitative study, information behavior is studied in the contexts of a problem-based learning curriculum and a traditional curriculum. In 1998, 16 theme interviews were conducted at the Tampere University Medical School, which applied the problem-based learning curriculum and 15 interviews at the Turku University Medical School, in which the traditional curriculum with an early patient contact program was implemented. The focus of this paper is on the concept of information literacy as a part of the students’ information behavior and its relationships with students’ conceptions of learning. The findings indicate that students’ information literacy is developed, on the one hand, through active use of information and sources in connection with real information needs, and, on the other hand, through an educational context which offers opportunities to get different viewpoints on issues. Following the same tendency, the more developed conceptions of learning were mostly held by the students belonging to the problem-based group with simple or developed skills in information literacy, although there were exceptions from this pattern.

Citation

Eskola, E.-L. (2007), "Information Literacy in Medical Education: Relationships with Conceptions of Learning and Learning Methods", Garten, E.D., Williams, D.E., Nyce, J.M. and Talja, S. (Ed.) Advances in Library Administration and Organization (Advances in Library Administration and Organization, Vol. 25), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 203-238. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0732-0671(07)25010-2

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited