Information literacy for art and design students

Today I presented our library’s courses to our deans and rector at the Oslo National Academy of the Arts. As head of the library I have been in charge of developing courses suitable to our students and research fellows’ needs (or at least, we think they are).

At the present, we offer 3 different courses:

  1. A mandatory Introduction Course
  2. Information Literacy 1: Academic Integrity
  3. Information Literacy 2: Different citation styles + Endnote

The curriculum is very much like the one being offered at other higher education libraries: Getting to know the library catalogue, collections, databases, copyright issues, plagiarism, citing other authors properly, and how to use different citation styles (APA, Harvard, Chicago, etc), plus how to use Endnote.

I have noticed that the students who write theoretical papers have improved their skills in these areas significantly after we started offering these courses. But what about those of our students (the majority) who write art texts, make art and design objects, and do not do “research” in the more traditional definition of the word: What do they need? Does the library manage to provide them with adequate courses, tailored to their specific needs?

These are just some reflections I’ve made today, so I decided to do a couple of quick searches to see whether there has been done any serious research on art students’ information literacy needs. (And, of course, there has!) Here are my first findings (to be studied later):