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"Mccarthy, Sandy"
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Building a Bridge: A Review of Information Literacy in Nursing Education
by
Conklin, Jamie L.
,
McGowan, Bethany S.
,
Cantwell, Laureen P.
in
Academic libraries
,
Accreditation
,
Doctoral Programs
2021
Background:
Although information literacy (IL) has been valuable in nursing education, guiding documents from librarianship (e.g., Framework for Information Literacy in Higher Education) remain relatively obscure among nursing faculty. This review analyzes the intersection of IL with nursing and offers analyses for a better understanding of integrating IL into nursing education settings.
Method:
Scholarly literature was searched, and Covidence was used to track themes regarding how (and where) IL literature (n = 179) connects to nursing educational settings.
Results:
Librarians are not involved consistently within nursing education. Research and discussion on IL in nursing are published in librarianship, education, and health sciences literature, and the terminology does not always align across these disciplines.
Conclusion:
Findings indicate an opportunity for librarians to share the Framework and its connections to the research literature with the nursing community. Researchers share suggestions for how common themes, language, and ideas can be shared between librarians and nursing faculty. [J Nurs Educ. 2021;60(8):431–436.]
Journal Article
Preparing and Protecting for Today, Tomorrow, and the Years to Come
2021
Retirement and Personal Protection Strategies Go Hand-in-Hand As a longtime veteran of the financial services industry, I've seen first-hand the energy we've collectively spent educating retirement plan participants about market risk, asset allocation, and the importance of beginning deferrals early. According to HealthView Services, a 65-year-old couple in good health will need $387,644 to pay for healthcare costs for the remainder of their lives. [...]the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services reports that someone turning age 65 today has almost a 70 percent chance of needing some type of long-term care services and support in their remaining years. According to EBRI's 2020 Retirement Confidence Survey, 7 in 10 workers (69 percent) feel confident in their ability to retire comfortably, though only 27 percent feel very confident.
Trade Publication Article
Moving Forward on Financial Wellness
2021
A retirement services executive says employers can help keep Americans on track.
Trade Publication Article