Internet Learning Volume 5, Number 1, Fall 2016/Winter 2017 | Page 43

instructor interactivity by encouraging the frequency of content, increasing social presence and engagement, and providing frequent feedback. Too often educators are implementing technologies into their instruction without an honest understanding of how they can facilitate student learning. Understandably, we all know the investment in time in exploring new pedagogies and technologies to increase our instructional effectiveness is immense. However, if we do not take the time, it may have an inverse impact on student outcomes, including satisfaction and learning. 2 How do you feel universities are doing with attending to developing students’ information literacy skill sets? I feel that university libraries, historically, are doing good work in attending to developing students’ information literacies, yet it is crucial in this century to consider the importance of other literacies. Information literacies need to be taught hand in hand with digital literacies. In the last couple decades, we have seen a surge in literacies that educators and employers have identified as important. Many times these are referred to as 21st century literacies. They include digital, technology, visual, and information literacies. Social media can help build many of these literacies. However, we need to not only teach students how-to’s, but we need to provide them with a greater Internet Learning 42 understanding of how their behaviors impact societal structures and vice versa. In leading the digital futures planning at my institution several years ago, faculty expressed there was a gap in developing students’ digital literacy skills. In our work, we discovered two different aspects of digital literacy. One aspect focuses on the idea that students needed to know how to use technology and associated digital tools to find, evaluate, share, and create information, and the other aspect focuses on the need for our students to be critical consumers of these same tools. With the quick-moving development of new technologies every day that are open and free to individuals, it is important for students to understand the implications of their use in their own lives and on society as a whole. Students chose to use certain hardware and software or apps. They now have to consider the security, digital identity, behavioral data and analytics, information sharing and creation, consumerism, political activism, and many more aspects. These issues are beyond the traditional thought of teaching students how to use technology to perform tasks, such as locating reliable information or communicating with the instructor. I would argue that it is important that these skill sets are implemented across the curriculum, including the incorporation of critical and postmodern theoretical approaches around information and technology. In my courses, I work to ensure that learning objectives, assessments, and activities consider the development of these literacies among undergraduate students.