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Owing to the scope and pace of change, society has become increasingly knowledge-based so that higher learning and research now act as essential components of cultural, socio-economic and environmentally sustainable development of individuals, communities and nations. In this environment, it is essential that higher learning and knowledge creation involve effective partnerships among academic and non-academic learning institutions and communities to create and apply learning and knowledge with stakeholders that are managing and creating sustainable development initiatives. Growing concern regarding the importance of the contribution that higher education institutions make to society has aroused increasing debate about their relevance and credibility amid escalating social problems. An underlying premise of community engagement is the understanding that not all knowledge and expertise resides in the academy, and that both expertise and great learning opportunities in teaching and scholarship also reside in non-academic settings.

This conference will explore how LIS educators and researchers can develop curricula, programs, and research activities that enable active partnerships with communities and civil society to manage and create change. How can LIS programs increase opportunities for experiential, service oriented, and community engaged student learning? How can we develop further collaboration between LIS programs and their larger communities (local, regional/ state, national, global) for the mutually beneficial exchange of knowledge and resources in a context of partnership and reciprocity?

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Wednesday, January 18 • 2:00pm - 3:30pm
Session 2.1 A Juried Paper: Community informatics in an aging society: Studying public libraries and senior centers to understand the digital literacy of older adults

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The information society is also an aging society. This means that as information technology becomes woven into the fabric of daily life, the median age of humanity continues to rise. The participation of this growing population of older adults in the information society is often seen in the popular press and even in scholarship as dependent on their ability to cope with their supposedly declining minds and declining bodies. This paper reframes this phenomenon by studying older adults in the communities where they live.

Speakers
avatar for Noah Lenstra

Noah Lenstra

Associate Professor, Library and Information Science (LIS) Department, University of North Carolina-Greensboro
Noah Lenstra is an associate professor of Library & Information Science at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, where started Let's Move in Libraries in 2016. He received his M.S. and PhD in Library & Information Science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He... Read More →


Wednesday January 18, 2017 2:00pm - 3:30pm EST
Georgia 2/3