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Canvas Version: InfoPower

Faculty: To add this tutorial to your course as a module, search in Canvas Commons on "SJSU InfoPower Tutorial & Quiz"

Acknowledgements

InfoPower is an adaptation of the Pot of Gold tutorial designed at the University of Notre Dame by Laurie McGowan, Instructional Designer, Tim Jones, UI/Graphic Designer, and Sherri Jones, Head of the User Services Learning & Assessment team for the Hesburgh Libraries. The creators of this tutorial generously allowed us to use their tutorial as a starting place for our own tutorial while allowing us to add, modify, and edit content as necessary.

Pot of Gold was adapted for San Jose State University in 2015 by Ann Agee, Librarian; Silke Higgins, Librarian; Cameron Weigel, Information Technology Consultant; and Jessie Cai, Database/Web Programmer.

Pot of Gold can be viewed at https://library.nd.edu/instruction/potofgold/ . Both Pot of Gold and InfoPower are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. The full text of the license is available at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/us/

Questions about InfoPower can be sent to ann.agee@sjsu.edu.

Student Learning Objectives for the InfoPower Tutorial

Information Cycle

  • The timeline for producing scholarly information
  • The resources available throughout the information cycle
  • The types of information used and produced in different disciplines
  • Identify what type of source is best depending on the information needed
  • Identify the differences between primary and secondary sources

Investigating

  • Learn how to analyze an assignment
  • Know the features of an effective thesis statement

Searching

  • Employ efficient database searching techniques: keyword and subject searches
  • Learn how to join search terms using AND, OR, NOT and their effect on a search
  • Learn how to solve common search problems, such as too few or too many results

Locating

  • Learn how to find the full text of articles from a database
  • Learn how to locate a print book in the library

Evaluating

  • Evaluate information in terms of currency, authority, accuracy, relevance, and purpose.
  • Know the key differences between popular and scholarly resources

Utilizing

  • How to use information ethically
  • How to recognize and avoid plagiarism