加拿大主要城市图书馆的算术规划:一项探索性研究

Andrea Budac, Céline Gareau-Brennan, David Mucz, Michael B. McNally, Dinesh Rathi
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引用次数: 1

摘要

加拿大政府认为计算能力是工作、学习和生活的基本技能。图书馆历来是扫盲的捍卫者;然而,图书馆在培养计算能力方面的作用尚未得到充分研究。具体来说,在研究公共图书馆提供的算术课程方面存在一个关键的差距。这项探索性研究考察了加拿大五个主要城市公共图书馆(卡尔加里公共图书馆、埃德蒙顿公共图书馆、蒙特兰塔公共图书馆、渥太华公共图书馆和多伦多公共图书馆)的计算课程的现状,以了解它们提供的计算课程的类型和种类。节目播出频率、受众年龄、节目内容是本文研究的重点。研究人员通过从这五家图书馆的网站上搜集节目信息,检查了1166个节目列表。数据是在2015年12月的第二周收集的,并依赖于图书馆网站上的编程描述。结果显示,共有65个项目(占总项目的5.6%)涵盖了与计算相关的技能。总的来说,在示例中的所有库中,学习算术概念的选项非常有限。卡尔加里提供的以儿童为中心的计算课程最多,而多伦多提供的以成人为中心的计算课程最多。“Math/mathematics”是描述与计算相关的程序最常用的术语。这项探索性研究强调了对公共图书馆算术编程进行更大调查的必要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Numeracy Programming at Major Canadian Urban Libraries: An Exploratory Study
The Government of Canada identifies numeracy as a foundational skill for work, learning, and life. Libraries have historically been champions of literacy; however, the role of libraries in developing numeracy skills is understudied. Specifically, there is a critical gap in studying numeracy programs offered by public libraries. This exploratory study examines the state of numeracy programming at five major urban public libraries in Canada (Calgary Public Library, Edmonton Public Library, Bibliothèques de Montréal, Ottawa Public Library, and Toronto Public Library) to understand the types and varieties of numeracy programs that they offer. The frequency of programs, the intended age range, and the program content are the main foci of this paper. The researchers examined 1166 program listings by scraping programming information from the five libraries’ websites. The data was collected for the second week of December 2015 and relied on programming descriptions from libraries' websites. Results showed that a total of 65 programs (5.6% of total programs) covered numeracy related skills. Overall, the options to learn about numeracy concepts were very limited at all of the libraries in the sample. Calgary offered the highest number of children-focused numeracy programs, while Toronto offered the greatest number of adult-focused numeracy programs. “Math/mathematics” was the most common term used to describe numeracy-related programs. This exploratory study underscores the need for greater investigation of numeracy programming in public libraries.
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