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Call for Feedback on the Framework for Visual Literacy draft

  • 1.  Call for Feedback on the Framework for Visual Literacy draft

    Posted Jun 09, 2021 03:05 PM
      |   view attached

    *apologies for cross-posting*

     

    Request for Feedback

    We are currently seeking feedback on the Framework for Visual Literacy (PDF attached). We are asking you to consider how you might use this document. We would also like to understand how it could be improved to better align with your needs. We thank you in advance for your input to ensure this document is thoughtful and useful.

     

    Find the draft in various formats to facilitate accessibility and feedback options at the Task Force website: http://acrlvltf.org/feedback

    Survey Link: https://oakland.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_0xmt6A1JzKVq6I6

    Please return the survey by July 7, 2021.

     

    Background

    In 2009, a group of librarians interested in quality research and instructional image content formed the Image Resources Interest Group within the Association of College & Research Libraries (ACRL) to focus on the particular affordances and challenges of visual information. That same year, the inaugural Visual Literacy Task Force was formed to craft a set of standards that would complement the now rescinded 2001 ACRL Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education (Information Literacy Standards). The resultant standards, the 2011 Visual Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education (Visual Literacy Standards)  highlighted ways in which visuals are distinct from other information types.

    In the years following the publication of the Visual Literacy Standards, librarians began to engage with threshold conceptsmetacognition, and metaliteracies, reflected in the 2016 ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education (Framework), which replaced the Information Literacy Standards. Ongoing critical conversation continues to shape how learners are taught to create, use, share, and assess information in the twenty-first century. Addressing these shifts, ACRL assembled several task forces in 2018 to develop Framework Companion Documents and update disciplinary literacy standards documents. In this spirit, the current Visual Literacy Task Force was formed by the Image Resources Interest Group to update the 2011 Visual Literacy Standards.

     

    At the outset, we acknowledged that visual literacy and related terminology remained difficult to define due to variations in use and meaning across disciplines. We also recognized that mapping to the Framework would be a challenging exercise. Success would require the participation of thoughtfully engaged stakeholders. Therefore, we began by conducting an IRB-approved qualitative research study[i]. From fall 2019 to spring 2021, we interviewed a broad community of practitioners and scholars, including architecture and planning librarians. Participants were asked to define visual literacy, identify necessary skills and competencies for their discipline, and discuss what they perceived as challenges and opportunities.

     

    By coding the interviews, we identified four themes that serve as the backbone for the current Visual Literacy Framework Companion Document draft. These themes are:

    • Perceive visuals as communicating information;
    • Participate in a changing information landscape;
    • Practice visual discernment and criticality; and
    • Pursue social justice through visual practice.

     

    Again, participants will find the draft in various formats to facilitate accessibility and feedback options on the Task Force website: http://acrlvltf.org/feedback.  If you have any questions, please contact us at vltfacrl@gmail.com

     

    Current Task Force Members

    • Millicent Fullmer (co-chair), University of San Diego
    • Tiffany Saulter (co-chair), Deque Systems, Inc.
    • Stephanie Beene, University of New Mexico
    • Katie Greer, Oakland University
    • Maggie Murphy, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
    • Sara Schumacher, Texas Tech University
    • Dana Statton Thompson, Murray State University
    • Mary Wegmann, Sonoma State University

    Past member:

    • Kathy Edwards, Clemson University (2018-2019)

    [i] IRB #00001310 was coordinated through the University of San Diego. Co-Principal Investigators were Millicent Fullmer and Dana Statton Thompson. Co-Investigators were Stephanie Beene, Sara Schumacher, Katie Greer, Maggie Murphy, and Mary Wegmann.



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    Sara Schumacher
    Architecture Image Librarian
    Architecture Library
    Texas Tech University Libraries
    sara.schumacher@ttu.edu
    806.834.1245
    Pronouns: she, her, hers
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