Health Information Literacy and the Experience of 65 to 79 Year Old Australians


Autoria(s): Stoodley, Ian D.; Bruce, Christine S.; Partridge, Helen L.; Edwards, Sylvia L.; Cooper, Helen
Contribuinte(s)

Du, J.T.

Zhu, Q.

Koronios, A.

Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Information literacy is presented here from a relational perspective, as people’s experience of using information to learn in a particular context. A detailed practical example of such a context is provided, in the health information literacy experience of 65–79 year old Australians. A phenomenographic investigation found five qualitatively distinct ways of experiencing health information literacy: Absorbing (intuitive reception), Targeting (a planned process), Journeying (a personal quest), Liberating (equipping for independence) and Collaborating (interacting in community). These five ways of experiencing indicated expanding awareness of context (degree of orientation towards their environment), source (breadth of esteemed information), beneficiary (the scope of people who gain) and agency (amount of activity), across HIL core aspects of information, learning and health. These results illustrate the potential contribution of relational information literacy to information science.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/63744/

Publicador

IGI Global

Relação

DOI:10.4018/978-1-4666-5158-6.ch007

Stoodley, Ian D., Bruce, Christine S., Partridge, Helen L., Edwards, Sylvia L., & Cooper, Helen (2014) Health Information Literacy and the Experience of 65 to 79 Year Old Australians. In Du, J.T., Zhu, Q., & Koronios, A. (Eds.) Library and Information Science Research in Asia-Oceania : Theory and Practice. IGI Global, Hershey, PA, pp. 102-123.

http://purl.org/au-research/grants/ARC/LP100100292

Fonte

School of Information Systems; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #080799 Library and Information Studies not elsewhere classified #Information literacy #Health #Phenomenography #Ageing population
Tipo

Book Chapter