Issue 123
Term 4 2022
The Information Fluency Framework
New South Wales has recently introduced a new framework to support information literacy. SCIS speaks to Department of Education Library Coordinator Carmel Grimmett about how this framework may prove useful for library staff across the country.
The Information Fluency Framework (IFF) is a new tool for teacher librarians in primary and secondary settings. The IFF is the primary source of information outcomes and processes for teacher librarians in the NSW Department of Education to use together with Information skills in the school as a support document to the library policy.
What is the Information Fluency Framework?
Information fluency is the ability to critically think while engaging with, creating and utilising information and technology, regardless of the information platform or medium. (IFF p. 4)
The IFF was formulated in response to an identified need to support students to develop skills required for global citizenship. The Framework was developed collaboratively between 2018 and 2021 by a large group of teacher librarians working in the NSW Department of Education.
The skills in the IFF are (mainly) found in the general capabilities, which are now incorporated into every learning area syllabus. The Information Fluency Framework provides a structure for teacher librarians and teachers to use so they can work collaboratively to develop these skills in students. (IFF p. 5)
Structure
The IFF is a series of statements arranged along a progression from Early Stage 1 to Stage 6. It is divided into five elements:
- Social
- Literate
- Innovative
- Critical
- Ethical
These are referred to by the acronym ‘SLICE’. These elements encourage teacher librarians to develop learning tasks from a range of viewpoints and explore them with their students.
Each of the elements is divided into strands which position students as consumers or creators of information (You can find an accessible version of the chart below on a separate page).
Uses of the Information Fluency Framework
I was one of a small group of primary and secondary teacher librarians who participated in an IFF pilot project in Term 2, 2021. My positive experience prompted me to seek out the voices of others who participated in the pilot project. The results were published in the online education journal Scan.
While there is no prescribed way to approach the IFF, there are many valid ways to use this flexible tool to support library programs. As a publicly available document, the IFF is free for all teacher librarians to use regardless of their educational setting. Here are some suggested ways to begin using the IFF:
- Try exploring the IFF through a Stage checklist (see next page). The Stage checklists are available as an appendix to the IFF.
- If you like starting from scratch, try the elements as a guide to the process. If you start with the Social element you can model best practice by considering the interests of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander community as you commence your planning.
- If you have an existing unit which you would like to review, you can do so by using the Stage checklists to audit your document, ticking off outcomes to gauge whether there are elements missing from your program. If the unit includes assessment tasks, start by matching those to IFF outcomes and work out into other areas of the unit.
- If you are compiling a LearnPath or LibGuide, the IFF can guide your selection of resources for inclusion in the guides and highlight areas where those perspectives are missing.
- Here’s a challenge – find a text for which you need to write some learning resources. Examine the text for themes or sections that align with the five elements of the IFF. Use the IFF outcomes for inspiration and focus as you design the learning resources.
- Using picture books with sophisticated themes is a powerful teaching practice to engage older students. There are loads of great curriculum-linked teaching resources based on picture books available as Shared Practice and Resource Kits (SPaRKs) on the Scan website. You can find them here:https://education.nsw.gov.au/teaching-and-learning/professional-learning/scan/past-issues/sparks. Perhaps these resources will SPaRK your imagination!
Social Learning Progression
The IFF outcomes are aligned with sub-elements, which fit within each strand. This shows the Social element for the students as consumers strand:
Learning Stage | K | S1 | S2 | S3 | S4 | S5 | S6 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. Appreciate and resolve diverse perspectives |
IFFKS.1.1 |
IFF1S.1.1 |
IFF2S.1.1 |
IFF3S.1.1 |
IFF4S.1.1 |
IFF5S.1.1 |
IFF5S.1.1 |
2. Understand how information is affected by cultural knowledge beliefs and practices |
IFFKS.1.2 |
IFF1S.1.2 |
IFF2S.1.2 |
IFF3S.1.2 |
IFF4S.1.2 |
IFF5S.1.2 |
IFF6S.1.2 |
3. Empathise across cultures |
IFFKS.1.3 show an awareness of the feelings, needs and interests of others |
IFF1S.1.3 imagine and describe their own feelings if they were put in someone else's place |
IFF2S.1.3 imagine and describe the feelings of others in a range of unfamiliar contexts |
IFF3S.1.3 |
IFF4S.1.2 |
IFF5S.1.3 |
IFF6S.1.3 |
Stage 3 checklist
Checklists for each stage are found in the appendix to the IFF. This is the Stage 3 checklist.
S | L | I | C | E |
---|---|---|---|---|
Social | Literate | Innovative | Critical | Ethical |
IFF3S.1.1 describe various perspectives on an issue |
IFF3L.1.1 independently locate and access information or literary texts and viewpoints |
IFF3I.1.1 pose questions to expand and interpret information |
IFF3C.1.1 discuss emotions and thoughts in response to different information sources |
IFF3E.1.1 explain what constitutes an ethical decision and how it might be reached |
IFF3S.1.2 describe and compare a range of cultural stories, events, artefacts and communication methods |
IFF3L.1.2 interpret and analyse information and ideas, comparing texts on similar topics or themes, including multimedia texts |
IFF3S.1.2 expand on known ideas to create new ideas or understandings |
IFF3C.1.2 use evidence to choose a course of action or reach a conclusion |
IFF3E.1.2 discuss the consequence of different actions in relation to information use |
IFF3S.1.3 describe the situations of others in local, national and global contexts |
IFF3L.1.3 compare and contrast information between texts |
IFF3C.1.3 identify and clarify relevant information and opinions and prioritise ideas |
||
IFF3S.2.1 cooperatively develop information / knowledge using group expertise |
IFF3L.2.1 compose texts for a range of purposes by selecting and discarding ideas to make texts suitable for familiar audiences and purposes |
IFF3I.2.1 create and refine ideas and possibilities, suggesting alternative solutions |
IFF3C.2.1 construct and demonstrate an idea |
IFF3E.2.1 identify what constitutes an ethical decision and how it might be reached when creating information |
IFF3S.2.2 discuss the value of diverse perspectives and describe a point of view that is different to their own |
IFF3L.2.2 plan and deliver presentations, incorporating learned content and appropriate visual and multimodal elements |
IFF3I.2.2 assess and test options to pout ideas into action |
IFF3C.2.2 use cause-effect statements to explain a claim, conclusion or outcome |
IFF3E.2.2 identify the consequences of ethical decision-making in relation to information creation |
IFF3S.2.3 identify a community need or problem and consider ways to act to address it |
IFF3S.2.3 identify a community need or problem and consider ways to act to address it |
IFF3S.2.3 identify a community need or problem and consider ways to act to address it |
IFF3E.2.3 apply rights and responsibilities when creating information |
Opportunities to collaborate
The IFF represents an opportunity to build on the work of a collaborative group of teacher librarians. I encourage you to seek out a colleague and collaborate as you explore the IFF. Let the Framework guide you to trial new teaching strategies so your students meet IFF outcomes. Perhaps using the Framework will bring a new focus to your programming.
References
Grimmett, C. (2021). Trialling the Information Fluency Framework: A report from the pilot schools. Scan, 40(9).
NSW Department of Education (2021). Information Fluency Framework.