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Dive into the research topics where Anna Hampson Lundh is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Hampson Lundh.


Libri | 2008

Information practices in elementary school

Anna Hampson Lundh; Louise Limberg

This article presents a qualitative study that examines the roles of pedagogues in elementary schools with regard to young childrens information literacy. The concept of information literacy is seen from a sociocultural perspective, as a dimension of literacy that varies in different social practices. Further, from this perspective the importance of the mediating functions of tools used in information seeking is stressed. Data was collected from a Swedish village school from one focus group interview and two individual interviews with different kinds of pedagogues. Problem-centred teaching was also observed in five forms with pupils aged 6–8. In the analysis an overarching division or two discourses connected to information literacy emerged. On the one hand, literacy, aesthetic activities and the reading of fiction were the focus and, on the other hand, there was a focus on information literacy, utilitarian information-seeking activities and ICT-tools. It is also shown that information seeking is given a certain meaning in problem-centred activities in elementary school. The authors consider that the discourses found in the empirical material might have implications for the concept of information literacy, if they are explored to a fuller extent.


Proceedings of the American Society for Information Science and Technology | 2012

State of the Art/Science: Visual Methods and Information Behavior Research

Jenna Hartel; Anna Hampson Lundh; Diane H. Sonnenwald; Nancy Foster

This panel reports on methodological innovation now underway as information behavior scholars begin to experiment with visual methods. The session launches with a succinct introduction to visual methods by Jenna Hartel and then showcases three exemplar visual research designs. First, Dianne Sonnenwald presents the “information horizon interview” (1999, 2005), the singular visual method native to the information behavior community. Second, Anna Lundh (2010) describes her techniques for capturing and analyzing primary school childrens information activities utilizing video recordings. Third, Nancy Fried Foster (Foster & Gibbons, 2007) reports how students, staff and faculty members produce maps, drawings, and photographs as a means of contributing their specialist knowledge to the design of library technologies and spaces at the University of Rochester. Altogether, the panel will present a collage of innovative visual research designs and engage the associated epistemological, theoretical, methodological, and empirical issues. All speakers will have 15 minutes and be timed to allow a minimum of 30 minutes for audience questions, comments, and discussion. Upon the conclusion attendees will have gained: knowledge of the state of the art/science of visual methods in information behavior research; an appreciation for the richness the approach brings to the specialty; and a platform to take new visual research designs forward.


History of Education | 2016

Information and experience : audio-visual observations of reading activities in Swedish comprehensive school classrooms 1967–1969

Mats Dolatkhah; Anna Hampson Lundh

Abstract This study investigates reading activities in Swedish primary school classrooms during the late 1960s. Sound and video recordings of 223 Swedish lessons held between 1967 and 1969 are used to analyse the activity of reading as taught and performed. The results indicate that the practice of informational reading, often based on finding predetermined, explicit ‘facts’ in textbooks through individual, silent reading, was common. The practice of experiential reading, based on fiction, imagination and the joy of reading, was not only less common, but also often compromised by instrumental concerns. In the national curriculum of the time, the practice of informational reading was related to study skills and was intended to prepare all pupils for higher-level education. While often appearing over-proportioned, superficial and fragmented, these reading practices were still intentional objects of learning and teaching, and were grounded in the democratic and egalitarian ideals of Swedish post-war educational policy.


Journal of Documentation | 2015

To assess and be assessed : Upper secondary school students’ narratives of credibility judgements

Anna Hampson Lundh; Helena Francke; Olof Sundin

Purpose: The aim of the study is to explore how students construct narratives of themselves as information seekers in a school context where their descriptions of their information activities are a ...


Journal of Librarianship and Information Science | 2008

Constructing librarians' information literacy expertise in the domain of nursing

Olof Sundin; Louise Limberg; Anna Hampson Lundh


Information Research | 2010

Studying information needs as question-negotiations in an educational context: A methodological comment

Anna Hampson Lundh


Mötesplats inför framtiden, Borås 14-15 oktober 2009 | 2009

Informationskompetenser: Om lärande i informationspraktiker och informationssökning i lärandepraktiker

Anna Hampson Lundh; Jenny Hedman


Journal of Documentation | 2016

Reading as dialogical document work : Possibilities for Library and Information Science

Anna Hampson Lundh; Mats Dolatkhah


Information Research: An International Electronic Journal | 2013

Swapping settings: researching information literacy in workplace and in educational contexts

Anna Hampson Lundh; Louise Limberg; Annemaree Lloyd


Library Hi Tech | 2015

The use of digital talking books by people with print disabilities A literature review

Anna Hampson Lundh; Genevieve Marie Johnson

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Nancy Foster

University of Rochester

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