Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 23rd Sept 2025, 08:04:56pm CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Date: Monday, 22/Sept/2025
8:00am
-
9:00am
RG-01: Registration
Location: Main Hall
9:00am
-
9:30am
OC_01: Opening Session
Location: MG1/00.04
9:30am
-
10:45am
KN-MON-01: Keynote Speaker
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Serap Kurbanoglu
 

The Dimensions of AI Literacy

Andrew Cox

University of Sheffield, UK

10:45am
-
11:15am
CB-MON-AM: Coffee Breaks
Location: Coffee break
11:15am
-
12:15pm
B1S4_WSa: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

AI Literacy and Your Information Literacy Teaching Practice

Samantha Godbey, Xan Goodman

University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA

11:15am
-
1:20pm
B1S1_PP: AI Integration and Readiness in Higher Education
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Mihaela Banek Zorica
 

Information Literacy and Artificial Intelligence: A Library and Information Science Perspective on Effects, Research Questions, Challenges and Opportunities

Joachim Griesbaum1, Stefan Dreisiebner2, Antje Michel3, Inka Tappenbeck4, Anke Wittich5

1: University of Hildesheim, Germany; 2: Carinthia University of Applied Sciences, Austria; 3: University of Applied Sciences Potsdam, Germany; 4: TH Köln – University of Applied Sciences, Germany; 5: Hochschule Hannover University of Applied Sciences and Art, Germany



From Action to Awareness: Ethical AI Literacy in Higher Education

Monika Krakowska, Magdalena Zych

Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland



AI as a Gamechanger in Norwegian HEI – How are the Institutions Coping?

Ane Landoy1, Karin Cecilia Alexandra Rydving2

1: The Norwegian Directorate for higher education and skills, Bergen, Norway; 2: University of Oslo Library, Norway



“Of course, I can do it – I just don’t want to!”: An Emotional and Structural AI Readiness Scale

Anna Mierzecka1, Małgorzata Kisilowska-Szurmińska1, Marek Deja2, Karolina Brylska1

1: University of Warsaw, Poland; 2: Jagiellonian University, Poland



Beyond AI-literacy. Growing up with an Artificial Lifetime Compeer

Laszlo Z. Karvalics

Institute of Advanced Studies Kőszeg, Hungary

B1S2_PP: AI Trust, Skills, and Graduate Research Applications
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: Susan Kovacs
 

Exploring the Intersection of AI and Data Literacy among Graduate Researchers: A Mixed Methods Study

Tabassum Aslam1, Tibor Koltay2, Syeda Hina Shahid3

1: Lahore School of Economics, Punjab, Pakistan; 2: Eszterházy Károly Catholic University, Eger, Hungary; 3: Towson University, Maryland, USA



Epistemic and Emotional Trust in the Social Framing of ChatGPT

Tess Butler-Ulrich

Ontario Tech University, Oshawa, Canada



Bridging AI and Law: Developing Critical Information Literacy in Legal Curricula

Mystery Beck

University of Portsmouth, UK



AI Literacy in Support of Information Creativity of Doctoral Students

Jela Steinerová

Comenius University in Bratislava, Slovak Republic



Does AI Have Information Literacy Skills? The Relation between Different Categories of Information Literacy

Katalin Varga

University of Pécs, Hungary

B1S3_BP: AI Literacy, Tools & Pedagogical Integration
Location: MG2/01.10
Chair: Heidi Enwald
 

A Transdisciplinary Course on AI Literacy: From Concept to Reality

Anna C. Véron, Marco E. Weber, Gary Seitz

University of Zurich, Switzerland



AI Literacy for Faculty: Librarians as Agents of Responsible AI Adoption

Tatiana Usova

Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar, Qatar



Faculty Views on Generative AI Tools – Case: Primo Research Assistant

Riikka Sinisalo, Essi Prykäri

LUT University, Finland



Generative Artificial Intelligence Skills in Schools: “It is an intelligence that is not natural, but it is created by a different intelligent form of life”

Konstantina Martzoukou, Chinedu Pascal Ezenkwu

Robert Gordon University, UK

B1S4_WS: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
This session features two separate one-hour workshops.

Details for the first can be found above the time slot.

Details for the second just below it.

A brief 5-minute pause separates the two.
12:20pm
-
1:20pm
B1S4_WSb: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

More Than Meets the Algorithm: First-Year Students and the AI Effect on Information

Hanna Nancy Primeau, Katie Blocksidge

The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA

1:20pm
-
2:20pm
LU-01: Lunch
Location: Lunch
2:20pm
-
3:20pm
IN_01: Invited Talk – Christine Gläser
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Fabian Franke
 

Rethinking Space and Services – Academic Libraries as Learning Hubs

Christine Glaser

Hamburg University of Applied Sciences, Germany

3:20pm
-
3:50pm
CB-MON-PM: Coffee Breaks
Location: Coffee break
3:50pm
-
5:30pm
B2S1_PN: Panel
Location: MG1/00.04
 

Family History Literacy: How We Learn from Stories of Adoption and the Indian Boarding School Experience

Loriene Roy1, Maria McCauley2

1: University of Texas at Austin, USA; 2: Cambridge Public Library, USA

B2S2_PP: Critical Approaches to Information and Misinformation
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: Ane Landoy
 
3:50pm - 4:05pm

Decentering Whiteness in Information Literacy through Critical Theories and Methods

Tracey Overbey, Amanda L. Folk

The Ohio State Unviersity Libraries, Columbus, USA



A Rapid Literature Review on Generative AI, Misinformation and the Need for Media, Information and AI Literacy

Johannes Risbakk

Norwegian Directorate for Higher Education and Skills, Norway



The Bulgarian Academic Librarians Perspectives on Mis/Disinformation

Marina Encheva1, Marchela Borisova1, Ioana Crihana2

1: University of Library Studies and Information Technologies, Bulgaria; 2: The National Association of Public Librarians and Libraries in Romania, Romania

B2S3_PP: Media Education and Digital Well-being
Location: MG2/01.10
Chair: Yurdagül Ünal
 

Information and Media Education (IME) in the Age of Generative Artificial Intelligence: Challenges and Perspectives

Yolande Maury

Lille University, France



Educational Futures on Social Media

Stig Børsen Hansen, Martin Rehm, Tove Faber Frandsen

University of Southern Denmark, Denmark



3:50pm - 4:05pm

Exploring the Role of Information Literacy Standards in Addressing Well-Being with Digital Detox Practices

Ana Lúcia Terra

University of Coimbra, CEIS20 – Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies, Portugal



4:05pm - 4:20pm

AI + Age-Friendly Media and Information Literacy: Gerontechnology

Sheila Webber1, Bill Johnston2

1: University of Sheffield, UK; 2: Formerly University of Strathclyde, Scotland

B2S4_WS: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

Hands-on Workshop on Reflective Online Search Education

Luca Botturi1, Elena Battipede1,2

1: Scuola universitaria professionale della Svizzera italiana, Switzerland; 2: University of Lugano, Switzerland

6:00pm
-
8:00pm
WR: Welcoming Reception
Location: Aula, Dominikanerstr. 2.
Date: Tuesday, 23/Sept/2025
8:00am
-
9:00am
RG-02: Registration
Location: Main Hall
9:00am
-
10:15am
KN-TUE-02: Keynote Speaker
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Fabian Franke
 

AI Literacy – Why Basic Understanding of AI Methods is Relevant for Save, Efficient, and Reflected Use of AI-Tools

Ute Schmid

University of Bamberg, Germany

10:15am
-
10:45am
CB-TUE-AM: Coffee Breaks
Location: Coffee break
10:45am
-
11:30am
B3S1_PK: Pecha Kucha
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Denis Kos
 

“Make students leaders of their learning”

Elena Collina, Paola Rescigno

University of Bologna, Italy



Adapting Infosphère: Leveraging an OER Information Literacy Platform

Miriam Petrilli, Vincenzo Palatella

EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland



Citing AI with Zotero: Academic Integrity and Information Literacy

Paschalia Terzi

Georgetown University in Qatar, Qatar



Do AI Research Assistants Live Up to their Hype? An Exploratory Study of Some Freely Available Tools

Luis Machado

Publications Office of the European Union, Belgium



Doctoral Students Getting Support from University Library: Two Courses as Cases from Linköping University

Magdalena Öström, Kerstin Annerbo

Linköping University, Sweden



Information Literacy Tasks in Quebec French Schools: Conception and Validation of a Questionnaire addressing Teachers’ Practices

Joannie Pleau, Anne-Michèle Delobbe, Chantale Laliberté

Université du Québec à Rimouski, Canada

11:30am
-
12:20pm
B3S1_PS: Posters
Location: MG1/02.06
Chair: Denis Kos

📌 16 posters will be presented during this dedicated session.

🔗 Access the full list of posters, sorted by theme and order of presentation.

12:45pm
-
1:45pm
LU-02: Lunch
Location: Lunch
1:45pm
-
3:25pm
B4S1_PN: Panel
Location: MG1/00.04
 

Humans in the Loop: Advancing Metaliteracy for Generative AI Learning Environments

Thomas P. Mackey1, Brenda Van Wyk2, Megan Eberhardt-Alstot3, Kristine N. Stewart4, Kristen Schuster5, Matt Moyo6

1: Empire State University, USA; 2: University of Pretoria, South Africa; 3: Pepperdine Graduate School of Education and Psychology, USA; 4: Zayed University, United Arab Emirates; 5: University of Southampton, UK; 6: North-West University, South Africa

B4S2_PP: Teaching Assessment and Academic Writing Support
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: Loriene Roy
 
1:45pm - 2:00pm

Crossing Information Literacy Thresholds: A New Model for Bridging the Novice-Expert Research Gap

Amanda L. Folk

The Ohio State University Libraries, Columbus, USA



2:00pm - 2:15pm

Chatbots and Information Literacy: Comparing Two Groups of Teacher Education Students

Ellen Nierenberg

University of Inland Norway, Norway



Measuring Teacher Educators’ Information Problem Solving: A Situational Judgement Test

Klaas-Jan Lammers1, Jos van Helvoort2, Iwan Wopereis3, Nynke Bos1

1: Inholland, the Hague, The Netherlands; 2: Independent Researcher, Delft, The Netherlands; 3: Open Universiteit, Heerlen, The Netherlands



Promoting Academic Writing: An Investigation into Pedagogical Practices of University Teachers

Tatiana Sanches1, Carlos Lopes2, Maria Luz Antunes3

1: UIDEF, Instituto de Educação, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal; 2: APPsyCI, Ispa-Instituto Universitário, Lisboa, Portugal; 3: Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa (ESTeSL), Lisboa, Portugal

B4S3_PP: Innovative Pedagogical Frameworks and Collaborative Learning
Location: MG2/01.10
Chair: Jela Steinerová
 
1:45pm - 2:00pm

Academic Librarians Enhancing Information Literacy through the use of Contemplative Pedagogies

Paulina Rousseau

University of Toronto Scarborough Library, Canada



A Pedagogy of Transparency: The Potential of the Transparency in Learning and Teaching Framework

Alexander John Deeke

University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, USA



Seamless Transitions: Enhancing Information Literacy through Collaborative Professional Development

Katie Strand, Jen Kirk, Paul Daybell

Utah State University, Logan, USA



Fostering Information Literacy in Multicultural Classrooms: A Case Study from Athens

Georgia Katsira1,2, Alexandros Koulouris1

1: University of West Attica, Greece; 2: Athens College, Greece

B4S4_BP: Equity, Inclusion & Ethics in Information Literacy
Location: MG1/02.05
Chair: Yolande Maury
 

AI Ethics, Disability, and Information Literacy: The Promise and Peril

Daniel Ireton, Angie Brunk

Kansas State University Libraries, USA



Building Inclusive Futures: Graduate Student Perspectives on Preparation for the Library and Information Science Field

Leslin H. Charles, Lily Todorinova

Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey, USA



Empowering Librarians to Combat Disinformation: A Training Framework for Public Libraries

Juliane Stiller, Violeta Trkulja

Grenzenlos Digital e.V., Germany



Giving TikTok a Home to Advance Digital Media Literacy

Gretel Juhansoo

Baltic Engagement Centre for Combating Information Disorders; University of Tartu



Encouraging Students’ Information Literacy through Embodied Experience of a Library

Adrienne Warner

University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, USA

3:55pm
-
4:55pm
B5S4_WSa: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

Empowering Teachers, Learners, and Librarians with Meta-Scientific Literacies

Maria Steger1, Hara Brindesi2

1: EduNet Europe, Germany; 2: Eugenides Foundation, Greece

3:55pm
-
6:00pm
B5S1_PP: Health Literacy and Specialized Knowledge Practices
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Anna Mierzecka
 
3:55pm - 4:10pm

Health Literacy among Patients in Romania and the Need for Future Involvement of Libraries

Octavia-Luciana Madge

University of Bucharest, Romania



Cancer Patients’ Shared Experiences: A Study of Social Media Posts

Tove Faber Frandsen, Martin Rehm, Stig Børsen Hansen

University of Southern Denmark, Denmark



4:10pm - 4:25pm

Co-producing Research Priorities for Health Literacy with Marginalised Communities

Pamela Ann McKinney, Laura Sbaffi, Andrew Cox, Peter Bath

University of Sheffield, UK



Law Students’ Knowledge Practices: Construction of Cognitive Authority in Challenging Digital and AI Environment

Dejana Golenko1, Alica Kolarić2, Ivana Martinović3

1: University of Rijeka, Rijeka, Croatia; 2: University of Zadar, Zadar, Croatia; 3: J. J. Strossmayer University of Osijek, Croatia



Media Repertoires and Digital Literacy in Online Safety: A Study of Thai Older Adults

Natnaree Wongmith

Office of The National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission, Thailand

B5S2_DF: Doctoral Forum
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: Sheila Webber
Chair: Monika Krakowska
Chair: Bill Johnston
 

People’s Online Information Habits about Indoor Air Quality (IAQ): A Critical Literature Review

Lucija Dodigović

Institute for Anthropological Research, Zagreb, Croatia



Female Engineering Students’ Information Experiences: Preliminary Findings from a PhD Study

Laura Woods

University of Sheffield, UK



Information Behavior in the Context of Climate Change: Sociodemographic Aspects Using the RISP Model

Michaela Málková

Charles University, Czech Republic



Mapping the Field of Artificial Intelligence Literacy: A Systematic Literature Review

Nikica Gardijan

University of Zagreb, Croatia



Large Language Models for the Automated Detection and Classification of Media Bias and Propaganda to Foster Media Literacy among News Audiences

Tim Menzner

University of Coburg, Germany

B5S3_BP: Teaching Methods & Student Empowerment in IL
Location: MG2/01.10
Chair: Tatiana Sanches
 

Bridging the Gap – An Attempt to Empower Students’ Academic Information Literacy

Mas Karin Gustafsson, Sandra Nelson

Karlstad University, Sweden



Developing Students’ Information Literacy with Wikipedia and AI

Glenn Koelling, Adrienne Warner

University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, USA



Enhancing Student Motivation through Reflective Self-Assessment

Pia-Maria Kristina Niemitalo1, Linda-Marie Evertson2

1: University of Vaasa, Finland; 2: Åbo Akademi University, Finland



You’ve Got to Fight for Your Right to Learn Together: Research Days Empower High-school Learners to Navigate Information Literacy

Jenni Sandra Jacobs, Joshua Salmans

Texas Tech University, USA



Wikipedia and AI: Teaching Academic Competency

James Scholz1, Kiersten Leigh Cox2

1: Tennessee State University, USA; 2: University of South Florida, USA

B5S4_WS: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
This session features two separate one-hour workshops.

Details for the first can be found above the time slot.

Details for the second just below it.

A brief 5-minute pause separates the two.
5:00pm
-
6:00pm
B5S4-WSb: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

Scaffolding AI Literacy in Higher Education: Practical Strategies and Tools

Hanna Nancy Primeau, Amanda Larson

The Ohio State University, USA

Date: Wednesday, 24/Sept/2025
8:30am
-
9:00am
RG-03: Registration
Location: Main Hall
9:00am
-
10:15am
KN-WED-03: Keynote Speaker
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Sonja Špiranec
 

What is Even Real Anymore? – The Case for Personal Agency Being at the Forefront of What it Means to be Literate

David White

University of the Arts London, UK

10:15am
-
10:45am
CB-WED-AM: Coffee Breaks
Location: Coffee break
10:45am
-
11:45am
B6S4_WSa: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

An Innovative Approach Using Picture Books to Empower Critical Information and Digital Literacy in Primary School Education

Dora Sales1, Serap Kurbanoğlu2, İpek Şencan2, Sarah Pavey3, Stéphane Goldstein4, Konstantina Martzoukou5, Heidi Enwald6

1: University Jaume I, Spain; 2: Hacettepe University, Turkey; 3: SP4IL, UK; 4: InformAll,UK; 5: Robert Gordon University, UK; 6: University of Oulu, Finland

10:45am
-
12:50pm
B6S1_PP: Student Perceptions and Self-Assessment in AI Learning
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Clarence Maybee
 

The Use of ChatGPT by University Students as a Tool for Self-Training in Information Literacy

María Pinto, David Caballero-Mariscal, Rosaura Fernández-Pascual, David Guerrero Quesada

University of Granada, Spain



Self-Assessment of the Polish Students’ Artificial Intelligence Literacy in the Context of AI-Generated Content Detection

Paulina Motylińska, Anna Pieczka-Węgorkiewicz

University of the National Education Commission, Poland



Students’ Perceptions of Information Literacy Skills: New Perspectives through a Portuguese Experience with PILS

Tatiana Sanches1, Carlos Lopes2, Maria Luz Antunes3

1: UIDEF, Instituto de Educação, Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal; 2: APPsyCI, Ispa-Instituto Universitário; 3: Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa (ESTeSL)



Bridging the Gap: How Information Practices Shape Students’ Help-Seeking Strategies

Nadezda Firsova

Czech National Library of Technology, Czech Republic



Emotional Labour in the Classroom: A Scoping Review of Instruction in Academic Libraries

Karen Marie Øvern1, Hege Kristin Ringnes2, Elena Springall3

1: Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway; 2: Oslo Metropolitan University, Norway; 3: University of Toronto, Canada

B6S2_PP: Student Self-Efficacy and Academic Support Systems
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: Ana Lúcia Terra
 

Being Information Literate or Having Academic Integrity

Hilary Yerbury1, Nicole Johnston2, Maureen Henninger1, Danielle Degiorgio2

1: University of Technology Sydney, Australia; 2: Edith Cowan University, Australia



Generative AI Literacy among Economics Students: Experiences, Attitudes, and Academic Librarian Support

Ivan Čolakovac, Iva Barković, Davor Vlajčić

University of Zagreb, Croatia



Validating Design Principles for Teaching Information Problem Solving in Higher Education: A Library Professionals’ Perspective

Josien Boetje1,2, Stan Van Ginkel2, Matthijs Smakman2, Erik Barendsen2,3, Johan Versendaal2, Esther Zeedijk2

1: Open University of the Netherlands, the Netherlands; 2: HU University of Applied Sciences Utrecht (Hogeschool Utrecht), the Netherlands; 3: Radboud University, the Netherlands



Visualizing Information Literacy

Elizabeth Gross1, Ashley Crane2, Heather Adair2

1: Sam Houston State University, USA; 2: Texas A & M University, USA



Information Literacy on the Edge: Exploring the Needs of Doctoral Students

Pavla Vizváry

Masaryk University, Czech Republic

B6S3_BP: Program Design, Governance & Library Services
Location: MG2/01.10
Chair: Angela Repanovici
 

How Do We Want IL Governance? The Organizational Structures for the Promotion of Information Literacy at German University Libraries

Fabian Franke1, Naoka Werr2

1: University Library Bamberg, Germany; 2: Hochschule für den öffentlichen Dienst in Bayern, Fachbereich Archiv- und Bibliothekswesen, Munich, Germany



Insights and Future Directions: Course Program Development at HSU Library

Karina Lubig1,2, Saskia Stahmer1,2

1: Helmut-Schmidt-University, Germany; 2: University of the Armed Forces Hamburg, Germany



Libraries as Hybrid “Third Spaces”: A Speculation

Ruth Wallach, Deborah Holmes-Wong

University of Southern California, Los Angeles, USA



No Student Feedback? No Problem: Alternative Approaches for Gathering Programmatic Assessment Information

Hannah Gascho Rempel

Oregon State University, Corvallis, USA



When the Faculty are our Students: Exploring the Integration of Information Literacy after an Intensive Faculty Development Workshop

Katie Blocksidge, Amanda L. Folk, Jane Hammons, Hanna Primeau

The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA



Service Model for Promoting Information Literacy and Open RDI at Laurea University of Applied Sciences

Aino Emilia Helariutta, Maija Liisa Merimaa, Minna Elina Marjamaa

Laurea University of Applied Sciences, Finland

B6S4_WS: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
This session features two separate one-hour workshops.

Details for the first can be found above the time slot.

Details for the second just below it.

A brief 5-minute pause separates the two.
11:50am
-
12:50pm
B6S4_WSb: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

Bridging the Digital Divide: A Practical Workshop on Digital Inclusion in Adult Education

Violeta Trkulja, Juliane Stiller

Grenzenlos Digital e.V., Germany

12:50pm
-
1:50pm
LU-03: Lunch
Location: Lunch
1:50pm
-
2:50pm
B7S4_WSa: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

Using Board Games for Teaching and Assessing News Literacy Skills

Serap Kurbanoğlu1, Jasmina Ninkov2, Bojan Kundacina2, Orçun Madran1, İpek Şencan1

1: Hacettepe University, Ankara, Türkiye; 2: Belgrade City Library, Serbia

1:50pm
-
3:55pm
B7S1_PP: Library Digital Transformation and AI Integration
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Laszlo Z. Karvalics
 

Librarians Attitudes Towards AI: AI-enhanced Metadata Creation and Management as New Challenges in Workplace Information Literacy

Małgorzata Kisilowska-Szurmińska1, Anna Mierzecka1, Ying-Hsang Liu2, Natalia Strąk1

1: University of Warsaw, Poland; 2: Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany



Artificial Intelligence and Bulgarian Libraries: Practices, Perceptions, and Opportunities for Optimization

Gergana Valentinova Yancheva, Detelina Lyubomirova Vitanova

University of Library Studies and Information Technologies, Bulgaria



French University Library “AI Explorers”: A Longitudinal Study of The Process of Integrating AI into Information Literacy Initiatives

Susan Kovacs1, Valentine Favel-Kapoian2

1: ENSSIB, France; 2: University Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Lyon, France



Repositioning Public Libraries to Meet the Demands of the AI Era

Ioana Cornelia Cristina Crihană

The National Association of Public Librarians and Libraries in Romania, Romania

B7S2_PP: Interactive Technologies and Game-Based Learning
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: René Martin Schneider
 

Humanities, Humanism and Ethics in a Digital Context: Challenges for Digital Literacy Research and Learning

Paula Ochoa1, Ana Novo2, Leonor Gaspar Pinto1

1: Universidade Nova, CHAM, Portugal; 2: Universidade Aberta, CIDEHUS-UÉ, Portugal



“Help RobAI Fix Its System Bug”: An Escape Game Assisting Teaching AI Literacy

Zuza Wiorogórska1, Tatiana Sanches2, Zuzanna “Zu” Sendor3

1: University of Warsaw, Poland; 2: Universidade de Lisboa, Portugal; 3: University of Warsaw Library, Poland



Exploring Games for Learning Transliteracy: TLIT4U Project Findings

Giulia Conti1, Marina Encheva2, Francesco Zanichelli3, Anna Maria Tammaro3

1: Università di Modena e Reggio, Italy; 2: University of Library Studies and Information Technologies, Sofia, Bulgaria; 3: Università di Parma, Italy



Fostering Reflective Learning through Visual Search Stories

Luca Botturi1, Giovanni Profeta1, Elena Battipede1,2, Mirna Saad1,2, Deirdre Fels3, Petra Mazzoni1, Franziska Baier-Mosch4, Martin Hermida5, Carolin Hahnel3, Silvia Giordano1

1: Scuola universitaria professionale della Svizzera italiana, Switzerland; 2: University of Lugano, Switzerland; 3: Ruhr University Bochum, Germany; 4: DIPF | Leibniz Institute for Research and Information in Education, Germany; 5: Schwyz University of Teacher Education, Switzerland



Enhancing Museum Education and Widening Inclusion through Emerging Technologies

Merle Laurits, Sirje Virkus

Tallinn University, Estonia

B7S3_BP: Advanced Research, Evaluation & Lifelong Learning
Location: MG2/01.10
Chair: Ann De Meulemeester
 

A New Model for Teaching Information Literacy and Academic Writing

Helene N. Andreassen, Inga Bårdsen Tøllefsen, Torstein Låg

UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Norway



Evaluating Information in a Changing Landscape: Creation of an Evaluation Tutorial

Gemmicka Piper, Khrisma McMurray, M. Sara Lowe

Indiana University Indianapolis, USA



Ten Years of Information Literacy for Doctoral and Postdoctoral Researchers at the EUI: Statistics and Lessons Learned

Federica Signoriello

European University Institute, Italy



The Evolution of an Information Literacy Course for International Dentists Over Seven Years

Sean Michael Stone, Sopanis Cho

Indiana University School of Dentistry, USA



When More is Not Less: Incorporating Systematic Literature Review (SLR) Strategies in Information Literacy Education

Joost Daniël Driesens

University of Groningen, The Netherlands

B7S4_WS: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
This session features two separate one-hour workshops.

Details for the first can be found above the time slot.

Details for the second just below it.

A brief 5-minute pause separates the two.
2:55pm
-
3:55pm
B7S4_WSb: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

Gossip as Information Literacy Praxis

David A. Hurley, Liz Cooper, Glenn Koelling

University of New Mexico, USA

3:55pm
-
4:25pm
CB-WED-PM: Coffee Breaks
Location: Coffee break
4:25pm
-
6:05pm
B8S1_PN: Panel
Location: MG1/00.04
 

Developing an International Research Agenda for Information Literacy

Sheila Webber1, John Budd2, Bill Johnston3, Karen Kaufmann4, Clarence Maybee5

1: University of Sheffield, UK; 2: University of Missouri, USA; 3: Formerly University of Strathclyde, UK; 4: University of South Florida, USA; 5: Purdue University, USA

B8S2_PP: Data Management and AI Research Tools
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: Mathew Moyo
 

Mindful Data Stewardship – Concepts, Implementation, and Return of Experience

René Martin Schneider

Haute Ecole de Gestion de Genève, Switzerland



Data Literacy in Focus: Using the Learning Objective Matrix to teach Research Data Management

Franziska Altemeier1, Juliane Jacob2, Jorge Murcia Serra3

1: Leibniz-Informationszentrum Technik und Naturwissenschaften, Hannover, Germany; 2: University Hamburg, Germany; 3: University Library Mannheim, Germany



Students’ Self-Efficacy in Information Creation: Insights from AI Management and Strategic Literacy Integration

Maria Pinto, Rosaura Fernandez Pascual, David Caballero Mariscal

University of Granada, Spain



4:25pm - 4:40pm

Artificial Intelligence and Workplace Transformation: A McLuhan Tetrad Analysis

Dijana Šobota1, Michael George2, Denis Kos1

1: University of Zagreb, Croatia; 2: St Thomas University, Fredericton, Canada

B8S3_PP: Research Workflows and Publication Patterns
Location: MG2/01.10
Chair: Loriene Roy
 
4:25pm - 4:40pm

Global Publication Patterns in Information Literacy Research, 2020-2024

Samantha Godbey, Starr Hoffman

University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USA



Empowering Information Literacy through Learning Nuggets on Toolification of Scientific Workflows

Anna Buerklen, Ulrike Golas, Johanna Groepler

Technische Universität Berlin, Germany



AI Taxonomies for Research Writing: Information Literacy in Prompt Engineering

Maurice Lee Hines, Victoria Wanjala Maseghe

Northwestern University in Qatar, Qatar

B8S4_WS: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

Identifying Outdated Notions in Research Assignments and Information Literacy Instruction

Adrienne Warner1, Jane Hammons2, Glenn Koelling1

1: University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, USA; 2: The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA

Date: Thursday, 25/Sept/2025
8:30am
-
9:00am
RG-04: Registration
Location: Main Hall
9:00am
-
10:00am
IN-02: The information literacy landscape in Germany – challenges, best practices, and trends
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Fabian Franke
 

The Information Literacy Landscape in Germany – Challenges, Best Practices, and Trends

Nicolas Kusser1,2, Sabine Rauchmann1,3

1: Gemeinsame Kommission Informationskompetenz von dbv und VDB, Germany; 2: Universitätsbibliothek Augsburg, Germany; 3: Universität Hamburg, Bibliothek der Fakultäten WISO und BWL, Germany

10:00am
-
10:30am
CB-THU-AM: Coffee Breaks
Location: Coffee break
10:30am
-
12:10pm
B9S1_PP: Professional Competencies and Community Engagement
Location: MG1/00.04
Chair: Konstantina Martzoukou
 

Intellectual Property Rights and AI-Generated Patents: Romania vs. Norway

Angela Repanovici1, Gabriela Ivanus2, Ane Landoy3

1: Transilvania University, Romania; 2: Transilvania University, Romania; 3: The Norwegian Directorate for higher education and skills, Bergen, Norway



How to Promote Everyday Information Literacy Differently?

Laurine Oldenburg

University of Hildesheim, Germany



10:30am - 10:45am

Information Literacy as a Collaborative Process: Evaluating a Journalist in Residence Program in Two French Public Libraries

Susan Kovacs1, Angèle Stalder2

1: ENSSIB, Villeurbanne, France; 2: University Jean Moulin Lyon 3, Lyon, France



10:45am - 11:00am

Digital Competence and Information Literacy for Librarians in Europe: NEDLib Project Results

Marina Encheva

University of Library Studies and Information Technologies, Bulgaria

B9S2_PP: Design Principles and Collaborative Learning Models
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: Almuth Gastinger
 

Combining Information Literacy and Metaliteracy to Advance Transnational Group Learning about AI. Learning Process and Learning Outcomes, Results from a Case Study

Joachim Griesbaum1, Stefan Dreisiebner2, Emina Adilović3, Justyna Berniak-Woźny4, Subarna Bhattacharya5, Jini Jacob6, Tom Mackey7, Tessy Thadathil6

1: University of Hildesheim, Germany; 2: Carinthia University of Applied Sciences, Austria; 3: University of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina; 4: SWPS University Kraków, Poland; 5: Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology, Bhubaneswar, India; 6: Symbiosis College of Arts & Commerce, Pune, India; 7: Empire State University, SUNY, New York, USA



RAG in Research: Evaluating AI-Driven Literature Search Tools

Pontus Juth

KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden



Artificial Intelligence in the Workplace: Trade Union Experiences and Perceptions and the Role for Critical Artificial Intelligence Literacy

Dijana Šobota1, Stéphane Goldstein2

1: University of Zagreb, Croatia; 2: InformAll, UK



Enhancing Health Literacy through Expert Collaboration: A Community Engagement Approach

Ann De Meulemeester, Muguet Koobasi, Nele S. Pauwels

Ghent University, Belgium

B9S3_WS: Workshop
Location: MG2/01.10
 

Emotions as Motivators: Designing Instruction to Support the Research Behaviors of First-Year Students

Katie Blocksidge, Hanna Primeau

The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA

B9S4_WS: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

Am I Fooled? Do I Fool Others?

Kaisa Puttonen1, Hanna-Riina Aho2

1: Laurea University of Applied Sciences, Finland; 2: Centria University of Applied Sciences, Finland

12:10pm
-
1:10pm
LU-04: Lunch
Location: Lunch
1:10pm
-
2:50pm
B10S1_PN: Panel
Location: MG1/00.04
 

Academic Librarians’ Responses to Mis/Disinformation: A Cross-Country Study

Laura Saunders1, Joumana Boustany2, Karolina Brylska5, Mariangela Fujita4, Maureen Henninger10, Nicole Johnston10, Tjaša Jug9, Denis Kos3, Anna Mierzecka5, Angela Repanovici11, İpek Şencan6, Dijana Šobota3, Sonja Špiranec3, Katarina Švab9, Ana Lucia Terra7, Polona Vilar9, Pavla Vizváry8, Hilary Yerbury10

1: Simmons University, USA; 2: Gustave Eiffel University, France; 3: University of Zagreb, Croatia; 4: São Paulo State University, Brazil; 5: University of Warsaw, Poland; 6: Hacettepe University, Turkey; 7: University of Coimbra, Portugal; 8: Masaryk University, Czech Republic; 9: University of Ljubljana, Slovenia; 10: University of Technology Sydney, Australia; 11: Transilvania University of Brasov, Romania

B10S2_BP: Innovative Approaches to Information Literacy: Practice-Based Perspectives
Location: MG2/00.10
Chair: Orcun Madran
 

IL and AI: Library Services, Developments, Challenges, and Cooperations

Fabian Franke

University Library Bamberg, Germany



To Use or Not to Use? Potentials And Pitfalls of Using AI-Tools in (Literature) Research – An Interactive Workshop for PhD Students

Johanna Gröpler, Armin Glatzmeier

Free University Berlin, Germany



Students Benefit from Digital Accessibility

Kaisa Puttonen

Laurea University of Applied Sciences, Finland



Promoting Reading at a Technical University

Ika Jorum, Viveka Norström

KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden



Transposing Traditional Teaching to Information and AI Literacy – Intense Collaboration between the University Library Zurich and the Faculty of Veterinary Medicine

Barbara Schneider, Christine Verhoustraeten

University Library Zurich, Switzerland

B10S3_WS: Workshop
Location: MG2/01.10
 

An Information Literacy Taxonomy: A New Tool for Developing IL Learning Outcomes

Katie Blocksidge, Jane Hammons, Hanna Primeau, Amanda L. Folk

The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA

B10S4_WS: Workshop
Location: MG1/02.05
 

MIKS Survey 2025 on Media and Information Literacy among German Students: Insights, Discussion and Learnings of the Leuphana Pilot Study

Erik Senst

Media and Information Centre of the Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany

3:00pm
-
4:00pm
OC-THU-00: Closing Ceremonie
Location: MG1/00.04