june08b.indd ACRL standards and guidelines Information literacy standards for anthropology and sociology Approved by the ACRL Board, January 2008 by the ALA/ACRL/ANSS Instruction and Information Literacy Committee Task Force on Information Literacy Standards Information literacy related to specifi c disci­plines involves defining an information need in the context of the discipline, fi nding and evaluating the kinds of data, materials, and information required to research a subject in that field, and using and synthesizing the in­ formation to accomplish assigned and creative tasks, add to knowledge, and participate in the discourse of that discipline. Similar to other social sciences in some respects, anthropol­ ogy and sociology pose particular challenges for the researcher stemming from their unique attributes as scholarly disciplines. For example, when anthropology students write about people in other culture areas, they need to fi nd and understand the context for ethnographies in addition to other kinds of writings. When sociol­ ogy students research such topics as immigra­ tion or inequality, they need both theoretical works and social science data from appropriate sources, and they need skills to interpret the data. When students in either discipline do fi eld research with human subjects, or when they examine the results of this kind of research, they need certain evaluative approaches to help them understand and accurately describe the context, ethics, and limitations of the end product. The ACRL Information Literacy Com­ petency Standards document www.ala.org /ala/acrl/acrlstandards/standards.pdf defi nes information literacy in higher education and presents broadly applicable indicators and stu­ dent learning outcomes. The ANSS (Anthropol­ ogy and Sociology Section) Information Literacy Standards for Anthropology and Sociology Stu­ dents, although based on the ACRL document, has the perspective of the research processes, knowledge base, methodologies, and search tools used in anthropology (including its four fields of cultural, biological, and linguistic an­ thropology, and archaeology) and sociology (including criminology and demography). The ANSS IL standards describe what students need to do in order to be effective researchers in these fields and the key behaviors for success that information literate students demonstrate. The main purposes of the ANSS IL standards are to: • provide a common ground for faculty to work with librarians in helping students become more critical researchers and to offer faculty a basis for integrating the outcomes into their courses • help librarians design the content of instruction for students and plan information literacy initiatives in anthropology and sociol­ ogy • make possible an evaluation of the in­ formation literacy skills of anthropology and sociology students by providing standards and competencies to assess The standards and the key behaviors build from basic to advanced. The ethical compo­ nents of the research activities described are integrated into each of the four main standards, rather than presented in a separate standard as in the ACRL document. With this approach, ethics emerge in the context of what must be learned and enacted. In investigative method­ 342C&RL News June 2008 http:www.ala.org ologies such as participant observation, inter­ viewing, and visual anthropology, for example, the ethical considerations are crucial before the research even begins and continue through the reporting of results. The examples of sources and research situations provided throughout the document are intended to spark ideas and make concrete what the standards mean in the two disciplines. Standard One—Know what kind of information is needed What the student needs to do: 1. Define and articulate the information need. Key behaviors for success: a. Identifies and describes a manageable research topic or other information need ap­ propriate to the scope of research questions in anthropology and sociology, using discipline­ specific terminology, methods, and contexts. b. Reads background sources in anthropol­ ogy and sociology to increase familiarity with the topic. Examples: Encyclopedia of Social Issues; Encyclopedia of Cultural Anthropology; Sage Encyclopedia of Social Science Research Methods. c. Identifies and lists key concepts, terms, social theories, culture groups, places, and names related to the topic in preparation for searching for information on it. Examples: uses the discipline­focused encyclopedias, Thesaurus of Sociological Indexing Terms, and Outline of Cultural Materials of the Human Relations Area Files (HRAF). d. Reevaluates the nature and extent of the information need to clarify, revise, or refi ne the question after some initial research, read­ ing, interviews, and work with data and/or a population have taken place. 2. Select the most appropriate investigative methods for researching the topic. Key behaviors for success: a. Identifies and evaluates anthropological and sociological qualitative and quantitative research methodologies applicable to the project that will provide the kind of data or informa­ tion needed. Examples: fi eldwork, participant observation, data analysis, interviews, survey research, literature review, software for lin­ guistic text analysis, and spatial databases for archaeology. Ethical, sociocultural, and legal dimen­ sions and behaviors: b. Discusses and demonstrates an under­ standing of institutional policies related to human subjects research, including access to subjects, informed consent, and institutional review board requirements. c. Identifies and discusses privacy, confi ­ dentiality, security, and other ethical issues related to the research methodology employed in accordance with principles in the American About the standards The ANSS Instruction and Information Literacy Committee’s Task Force on IL Stan­ dards (Patti S. Caravello, Triveni Kuchi, and Susan Macicak) completed and submitted a final draft in January 2007, after over two years of work on the standards. This work included reviewing the literature, analyz­ ing the disciplinary issues, sharing drafts with sociology and anthropology faculty, discussions and e­mail communications with members and representatives of the American Sociological Association (ASA) and American Anthropological Association (AAA), and attendance by Task Force mem­ bers at conferences of these organizations to gather input. The valuable feedback of many faculty members is reflected in the document. A draft was endorsed by the ASA in August 2006. The ANSS Executive Committee endorsed the revised draft at the ALA Midwinter Conference in January 2007. The ACRL Board approved the document in January 2008. Special thanks go to Carla Howery and Ed Kain of the ASA and Stacey Lathrop of the AAA for their support and publicizing of the standards draft. June 2008 343 C&RL News Anthropological Association Code of Ethics or the American Sociological Association Code of Ethics. 3. Identify a variety of formats and sources in which anthropological and sociological information may appear. Key behaviors for success: a. Describes how information used in anthropology and sociology is formally and informally produced and disseminated. Ex­ amples: the U.S. Census, ethnographies, fi eld notes, artifacts, data sets, conference papers, gray or fugitive literature, scholarly Web sites, and peer reviewed scholarly articles. b. Recognizes that anthropological and sociological knowledge is organized in cer­ tain ways and in various formats which may influence how it is accessed and evaluated. Examples: scholarly journals, popular press, conference proceedings, museums, article da­ tabases, data archives such as those available via the Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR), Web sites, and multimedia sources. c. Differentiates between primary and secondary sources in anthropology and soci­ ology, recognizing the use and value of each type. Examples: (Primary sources) The use of field notes in writing ethnography, the use of site reports in archaeological analysis, and the value of raw data in constructing information and writing a sociological analysis. (Secondary sources) The value of books for an author’s viewpoint or synthesis, and the use of reference lists in scholarly articles. d. Recognizes that existing information can be combined with original thought, ex­ perimentation, and/or analysis to produce new information and insights into society, social phenomena, aspects of culture, and social theories. 4. Consider the costs and benefits of acquir­ ing the needed information. Key behaviors for success: a. Determines the availability of needed information and broadens the search beyond local resources to obtain materials not at one’s own library or institution or online. Examples: borrows material on interlibrary loan; uses resources at other locations including abroad; and obtains images, videos, text, or sound. b. Defi nes a realistic overall plan and time­ line to acquire the needed information, do the field work, analyze data, or learn new skills. Ethical, sociocultural, and legal dimen­ sions and behaviors: c. Identifies and discusses issues related to free vs. fee­based access to information, including pertinent inequalities of access in the U.S. and abroad. Standard Two—Access needed information eff ectively, effi ciently, and ethically What the student needs to do: 1. Select the most appropriate sources and databases for accessing and obtaining the needed information. Key behaviors for success: a. Identifies and selects article databases, library catalogs, data sets, and other sources most appropriate to the information need. Examples: discipline­specific databases such as Anthropology Plus, AnthroSource, eHRAF, Sociological Abstracts, Social Sciences Citation Index, Population Index, Family & Society Stud­ ies Worldwide, Annual Review of Anthropology, Annual Review of Sociology, National Criminal Justice Service Abstracts, Ethnic NewsWatch, Bibliography of Data­Related Literature; local library catalogs; American Factfi nder for U.S. Census data; the NORC General Social Survey and others from the ICPSR; and research guides for anthropology and sociology on academic library Web sites. b. Distinguishes between databases that provide up to date indexing of a variety of journals, book chapters, dissertations, and conference proceedings in anthropology and sociology (such as those listed in Two 1.a), da­ tabases that provide the online text of journals from many disciplines but which are typically limited in date and/or scope for anthropology and sociology (examples: JSTOR, Expanded Academic ASAP, Google Scholar), and the com­ 344C&RL News June 2008 panies, organizations, or systems that simply license the databases or online text of journals (examples: CSA, EBSCO, Sage). Accesses scholarly materials published in non­traditional ways. Examples: peer­reviewed journals freely available on the Web found in the Directory of Open Access Journals; preprint and postprint collections on university Web sites (e.g., eScholarship Repository of the Cali­ fornia Digital Library and other open access sites); reliable data sets and archaeological site reports that are freely available on the Web. Understands when it is appropriate to use Web search engines to supplement anthropol­ ogy, sociology, and other social science da­ tabases, and distinguishes between the types of sources one can expect to find with these different tools. Understands when Web search engines are not the appropriate means for fi nd­ ing the type of information needed. Examples: Uses Google UncleSam to search for government obesity statistics; uses Google to locate examples of policies on different social networking sites; uses Sociological Abstracts to find scholarly ar­ ticles and checks Google Scholar for additional materials; does not simply collect Web sites on a topic when the need is for scholarly and au­ thoritative information, but searches for articles and books in appropriate databases and catalogs (such as in Two.1.a). Ethical, sociocultural, and legal dimen­ sions and behaviors: e. Knows about and complies with laws and university rules on access to information resources, and storage and dissemination of text, data, images, field notes, and visual and audio works. 2. Construct, implement, and refi ne well­ designed search strategies that use a variety of methods to fi nd information. Key behaviors for success: a. Uses appropriate sociological and an­ thropological terminology for searching data­ bases, recognizing the different effects of using keywords, synonyms, and vocabulary from the database’s own particular list of subject indexing terms. b. Creates and uses effective search strat­ egies in multiple anthropology and sociol­ ogy databases (examples in Two.1.a) using advanced search features, such as Boolean operators, truncation, and proximity searches; refines searches as needed later in the process to obtain additional or missing information. c. Searches for and finds books, scholarly journals, and sources appropriate to the in­ quiry, such as surveys, interviews, text from online communities, multimedia sources, and data; and seeks out knowledgeable individuals in the library, academic department, and com­ munity as part of the research plan. 3. Keep track of the information and its sources. Key behaviors for success: a. Produces accurate citations and refer­ ence lists using the documentation style of the American Anthropological Association, the American Sociological Association, or the American Psychological Association. b. Records systematically all pertinent citation information for future reference. Ex­ amples: uses a citation management system such as EndNote or RefWorks, a Word fi le, or note cards. Ethical, sociocultural, and legal dimen­ sions and behaviors: c. Knows when citation of sources is nec­ essary in order to respect authors’ intellectual property rights and accurately indicate where the words and ideas of others have been used. Standard Three—Evaluate information and its sources critically; Incorporate selected information into knowledge base and value system What the student needs to do: 1. Summarize the main ideas to be extracted from the information gathered and synthesize main ideas to construct new concepts. Key behaviors for success: a. Selects the main ideas from texts (books, scholarly articles, interview transcripts, eth­ June 2008 345 C&RL News nographies, etc.), chooses concepts to restate in his/her own words, and identifi es verbatim material that can be appropriately quoted. b. Recognizes interrelationships among concepts, social theories, fi eld observations, and other data and combines them into poten­ tially useful primary statements with supporting evidence. c. Utilizes technologies (such as audio or visual equipment, spreadsheets, and statistical and software packages) for studying the interac­ tion of ideas and other phenomena. Examples: uses software to analyze migration patterns or census data; uses equipment to record or listen to videos and sound recordings of populations studied. 2. Apply appropriate criteria for evaluating both the information and its source. Key behaviors for success: a. Examines and compares information from various sources in order to ascertain the reli­ ability, validity, accuracy, authority, timeliness, and point of view or bias of a given source. Examples: Compares the information in a Wiki­ pedia article to the information from a scholarly encyclopedia that has an authoritative editorial board; describes the relative value of different kinds of Web sites (e.g. corporate, scholarly, personal) or different kinds of articles (popular, news, scholarly) on the same topic, in terms of authority and content. b. Recognizes that a large quantity of data­ base search results or information signifi es noth­ ing about their quality, and that it is necessary to evaluate the suitability of sources for the project. Example: Hundreds of news articles from Ethnic NewsWatch might be less valuable for a given term paper than a handful of scholarly journal articles from AnthroSource. c. Seeks differing viewpoints in alternative databases, books, Web sites, and articles, always evaluating the source of the information or argu­ ment, and determines whether to incorporate or reject viewpoints encountered. d. Analyzes the structure and logic of sup­ porting arguments or methodology within an anthropology or sociology framework, under­ stands what constitutes valid evidence in the discipline, analyzes the reasonableness of the conclusions, and recognizes prejudice, decep­ tion, or manipulation. e. Recognizes the cultural, physical, or other context within which the information was cre­ ated and accessed, and understands the impact of context on interpreting the information. Examples: questions and understands whether the researcher had full access to pertinent government sources or to the population studied, whether the researcher encountered censorship or culturally imposed limitations in asking questions or gathering information, for whose benefit the research was produced, and which data or viewpoint might be missing from the analysis. Ethical, sociocultural, and legal dimen­ sions and behaviors: f. Identifies and discusses issues related to censorship and freedom of speech in the U.S. and in countries/cultures being studied. g. Identifies and discusses issues related to privacy and security of information. Examples: cases in which field notes can be subpoenaed or government funding organizations can de­ mand primary research data. h. Identifies and discusses the social conse­ quences of new forms of information technol­ ogy. Examples: problems of unequal access to information, the uses and meaning of online communities, and the Internet as a tool for doing ethnography. 3. Compare new knowledge with prior knowledge to determine the value added, contradictions, or other unique characteristics of the information and take steps to reconcile differences. Key behaviors for success: a. Maintains a record of the information seeking process in order to explain and evalu­ ate the research conducted. b. Determines whether the information that was collected satisfies the research need, and selects information that provides evidence for the topic, integrates new information, and draws conclusions based upon information gathered. 346C&RL News June 2008 c. Seeks expert opinion through interviews, e­mail, etc. with anthropology and sociology faculty and practitioners, and subject­area spe­ cialists in the library to validate suffi ciency and interpretation of the information. d. Reformulates initial query if necessary based on findings, and reviews and extends search strategies for additional concepts or broader synthesis. Examples: searches databases in related fields such as linguistics, education, political science, ethnomusicology, biology, geography, ethnic or local area studies, and psychology. Standard Four—Use information eff ectively and ethically to accomplish a specifi c purpose What the student needs to do: 1. Apply new information and research re­ sults to the planning, creation, and revision of a particular project, paper, or presentation. Key behaviors for success: a. Organizes and integrates content, quota­ tions, and paraphrasing in a manner that sup­ ports the purposes and format of the product or presentation. Examples: prepares outlines, oral reports, drafts, videos; uses presentation software; and manipulates/transfers digital text, images, and data for the presentation or product. b. Reflects on past successes, failures, and alternative strategies for integrating new and prior information and creating the presenta­ tion. Example: rewrites the text of an original presentation on Navaho weaving to make it more accessible to a general audience, add­ ing sound files and images to augment the content. Ethical, sociocultural, and legal dimen­ sions and behaviors: c. Demonstrates an understanding of what constitutes plagiarism and does not represent work attributable to others as one’s own. d. Represents team member contributions in collaborative projects accurately. 2. Communicate the project, paper, or pre­ sentation effectively to others. Key behaviors for success: 1. Chooses a communication medium, format, and style that best supports the pur­ poses of the product or performance and the intended audience. Example: integrates maps, photos of artifacts, and texts of fi eld diaries into a PowerPoint package on a specific archaeological site for a class presentation or to mount on the Internet to educate local residents about a salvage project involving a new highway. 2. Uses a range of formats and technologies, incorporating principles of design and com­ munication, in presenting a research project. Example: creates a study of Polynesian music integrating sound bites and links to photo­ graphic images from HRAF and contemporary performances. Ethical, sociocultural, and legal dimen­ sions and behaviors: 3. Demonstrates an understanding of intel­ lectual property, copyright, and fair use of copyrighted material. Obtains and posts neces­ sary permissions from authors and organizations where needed to use copyrighted material in writing or presentations. 4. Shares the product of the research, e.g., the report, data, or ethnography, with groups and sponsors in keeping with ethical principles of the AAA or ASA. Selected bibliography Information Literacy-General 1. Association of College and Research Libraries. “Characteristics of Programs of In­ formation Literacy that Illustrate Best Practices: A Guideline.” 2003. http://www.ala.org/ala/ acrl/acrlstandards/characteristics.htm, Ac­ cessed January 12, 2008. 2. ———. “Information Literacy Compe­ tency Standards for Higher Education.” 2000. http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards /informationliteracycompetency.htm, Ac­ cessed January 12, 2008. 3. Association of College and Research Libraries. “Objectives for Information Literacy Instruction: A Model Statement for Academic Librarians.” 2001. http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl June 2008 347 C&RL News http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards http://www.ala.org/ala /acrlstandards/objectivesinformation.htm, Accessed January 12, 2008. 4. Elmborg, James K. “Information Literacy and Writing across the Curriculum.” Reference Services Review 31, no. 1 (2003): 68­80. 5. ———. “Critical Information Literacy: Implications for Instructional Practice.” The Journal of Academic Librarianship 32, no. 2 (2006): 192­199. 6. Grafstein, Ann. “A Discipline­Based Approach to Information Literacy.” Journal of Academic Librarianship 28, no. 4 (2002): 197­204. 7. Owusu­Ansah, Edward K. “Information Literacy and Higher Education: Placing the Academic Library in the Center of a Com­ prehensive Solution.” Journal of Academic Librarianship 30, no. 1 (2004): 3­16. 8. ———. “Information Literacy and the Academic Library: A Critical Look at a Con­ cept and the Controversies Surrounding It.” Journal of Academic Librarianship 29, no. 4 (2003): 219­41. 9. Simmons, Michele Holschuh. “Librar­ ians as Disciplinary Discourse Mediators: Using Genre Theory to Move toward Critical Information Literacy.” portal: Libraries and the Academy 5, no. 3 (2005): 297­311. 10. U.S. National Commission on Librar­ ies and Information Science. “The Informa­ tion Literacy Life Cycle: Stages, Resources, Tools, Contexts & Outcomes.” Working Draft, 2002. http://www.nclis.gov/libinter/ infolitconf&meet/InformationLiteracyStage sResponsibilities&OutcomesMatrix.pdf, Ac­ cessed January 12, 2008. Anthropology and Sociology 1. American Anthropological Association. “Code of Ethics of the American Anthro­ pological Association.” Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association, 1998. http://www.aaanet.org/committees/ethics/ ethicscode.pdf, Accessed January 12, 2008. 2. American Sociological Association. “Code of Ethics and Policies and Procedures of the ASA Committee on Professional Ethics.” Washington, D.C.: The American Sociological Association, 1999. http://www.asanet.org /galleries/default­fi le/Code%20of%20Ethics. pdf, Accessed January 12, 2008. 3. Burawoy, Michael. “Combat in the Dis­ sertation Zone.” American Sociologist 36, no. 2 (2005): 43­56. 4. Dodgen, Lynda, Sarah Naper, Olia Palmer, and Adrian Rapp. “Not So Sili: So­ ciology Information Literacy Infusion as the Focus of Faculty and Librarian Collaboration.” Community & Junior College Libraries 11, no. 4 (2003): 27­33. 5. Grauerholz, Liz, and Sharon Bouma­ Holtrop. “Exploring Critical Sociological Thinking.” Teaching Sociology 31, no. 4 (2003): 485­96. 6. Grey, Mark A. , Robert A. Hackenberg, and Donald D. Stull. “The Case against Ac­ creditation and Certification of Applied An­ thropology.” Practicing Anthropology 13, no. 3 (1991): 21­22. 7. Hilbert, Richard A. “Some Critical Re­ marks on Competency Based Education and the ASA Declaration on Teaching.” Humanity & Society 5, no. 2 (1981): 184­90 8. Hill, Robert, Mary Granica, Lenora Bohren, and Peter Van Arsdale. “On Certifi cation, Accredi­ tation, Standards and the Academy.” Practicing Anthropology 14, no. 1 (1992): 2, 27­29. 9. Hohm, Charles F., and William S. John­ son. Assessing Student Learning in Sociology. 2nd. ed, ASA Resource Materials for Teaching. Washington, D.C.: The American Sociological Association, 2001. 10. Kain, Edward L. “Building the So­ ciological Imagination through a Cumula­ tive Curriculum: Professional Socialization in Sociology.” Teaching Sociology 27, no. 1 (1999): 1­16. 11. Kain, Edward L., Theodore C. Wage­ naar, and Carla B. Howery. “Models and Best Practices for Joint Sociology­Anthropology Departments.” 1­24: American Sociologi­ cal Association, Academic and Professional Affairs Program, 2006. http://www.asanet. org/galleries/Governance/Sociology%20and %20Anthropology%20Joint%20Departments. pdf, Accessed January 12, 2008. 12. Keith, Bruce. “Taking Stock of the Discipline: Some Reflections on the State of 348C&RL News June 2008 http://www.asanet http:http://www.asanet.org http://www.aaanet.org/committees/ethics http://www.nclis.gov/libinter American Sociology.” American Sociologist 31, no. 1 (2000): 5­14. 13. Killian, Lewis M. “Can Sociology Afford Certifi cation? No!” Humanity & Society 11, no. 3 (1987): 390­94. 14. Lowry, Janet Huber, Carla B. How­ ery, John P. Myers, Harry Perlstadt, Caroline Hodges Persell, Diane Pike, Charles H. Pow­ ers, Shirley A. Scritchfild, Cynthia M. Siemsen, Barbara Trepagnier, Judith Ann Warner, and Gregory L. Weiss. “Creating an Effective As­ sessment Plan for the Sociology Major.” New York: The American Sociological Association. ASA Task Force on Assessing the Under­ graduate Sociology Major, 2005. http://www. asanet.org/galleries/APAP/Assessment%20Fi nal%20Copy%202005.pdf, Accessed January 12, 2008. 15. McKinney, Kathleen, Carla B. Howery, Kerry J. Strand, Edward L. Kain, and Catherine White Berheide. “Liberal Learning and the Sociology Major Updated: Meeting the Chal­ lenge of Teaching Sociology in the Twenty­ First Century.” New York: The American Sociological Association. ASA Task Force on the Undergraduate Major, 2004. http://asanet. org/galleries/default­file/Lib_Learning_FI­ NAL.pdf, Accessed January 12, 2008. 16. Perlstadt, Harry. “Accreditation of Sociology Programs: A Bridge to a Broader Audience.” Canadian Journal of Sociology 23, no. 1 (1998): 195­207. 17. ———. “Bringing Sociological Theory and Practice Together: A Pragmatic Solution.” Sociological Perspectives 41, no. 2 (1998): 268­71. 18. Rice, Patricia and David W. McCurdy, eds. Strategies in Teaching Anthropology. 2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentiss Hall, 2002. 19. Segal, Daniel A., and Sylvia J. Yanagi­ sako, eds. Unwrapping the Sacred Bundle : Reflections on the Disciplining of Anthropol­ ogy. Durham: Duke University Press, 2005. 20. Trotter, Robert T. Anthropology for Tomorrow: Creating Practitioner­Oriented Applied Anthropology Programs. Washington, D.C.: American Anthropological Association, 1988. 21. Trotter, Robert T., Nathaniel Tashima, and Cathleen Crain. “The Case for Accredita­ tion of Training Programs.” Practicing Anthro­ pology 13, no. 3 (1991): 2, 20­21. 22. Van Willigen, John. “Development of Training Standards: The Necessary Step.” Practicing Anthropology 13, no. 3 (1991): 23. 23. ———. “Recommendations for Train­ ing and Education for Careers in Applied Anthropology: A Literature Review.” Human Organization 38, no. 4 (1979): 411­16. Information literacy resources in other disciplines 1. ACRL Education and Behavioral Sci­ ences Section Social Work/Social Welfare Committee. “Information Competencies for Social Work Students.” http://www. ala.org/ala/acrlbucket/ebss2/social/swk­ pyramid/pyramid.cfm, Accessed January 12, 2008. ACRL Law & Political Science Section Education Task Force. “Political Science Research Competency Guidelines Draft.” 2007. http://www.ala.org/ala/acrlbuckets/ lpss/politicalsciencerese1.doc, Accessed January 12, 2008. 2. ACRL Literatures in English Section Ad hoc Committee on Literary Research Compe­ tencies. “Research Competency Guidelines for Literatures in English.” 2006. http://www.ala. org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards/researchcompen­ tenciesles.cfm, Accessed January 12, 2008. 3. ACRL/STS Task Force on Informa­ tion Literacy for Science and Technology. “Information Literacy Standards for Science and Technology.” 2006. http://www.ala. org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards/infolitscitech.cfm, Accessed January 12, 2008. 4. Cary, Paul; Sampsel, Laurie J. “Infor­ mation Literacy Instructional Objectives for Undergraduate Music Students: A Project of the Music Library Association, Bibliographic Instruction Subcommittee.” Notes 62, no. 3 (2006): 663­79. 5. Grant, Maria, and Marlowe Berg. “Infor­ mation Literacy Integration in a Doctoral Pro­ gram.” Behavioral & Social Sciences Librarian 22, no. 1 (2003): 115­28. June 2008 349 C&RL News http://www.ala http://www.ala http://www.ala.org/ala/acrlbuckets http://www http://asanet http://www