Arkansas State University, Credo Bring Information Literacy Resources to High School Students
Arkansas State University is partnering with information skills solutions provider Credo to deliver information literacy resources to Arkansas students in grades 7 through 12.
The "Literati High School Partnership," formally unveiled yesterday, will "provide research instruction to high school students to help prepare them for college success, even before they arrive on a campus," according to Credo. Under the terms of the arrangement, Arkansas students will receive access to Credo's School Core Content Collection. That includes "more than 400 e-book titles and millions of reference entries. The collection offers students in grades 7 to 12 a wealth of insightful content covering topics related to secondary school studies, such as biology, physics, mathematics, social sciences, world cultures, world history and more."
"This is the perfect way for the librarians at the Dean B. Ellis Library to expand our work with area high schools," said Jeff Bailey, Library Director at Arkansas State University's Dean B. Ellis Library, in am prepared statement. "At the high school level, the teachers and students are gaining access to all of the great Credo content and support that will help students earn higher grades, graduate and get accepted into college. At the college level, Arkansas State University will have incoming freshmen from those high schools who are better prepared, require less remediation, and are more likely to graduate. Plus, those students already will be familiar with using Literati to help them complete their assignments."
"Programs such as this one will help students hit the ground running once they arrive on campus so they're not overwhelmed by the college academic experience," said Ian Singer, Credo's chief content officer, also in a prepared statement. "We are excited about the potential here, plus we're looking forward to working with Jeff and the team at Arkansas State University. Of great significance, we will be interested in tracking how the students who had access to Literati performed versus those students who didn't."