EVALUATING THE EFFECTIVENESS OF INFORMATION LITERACY PROGRAMS IN ACADEMIC LIBRARIES: A CASE OF ISA KAITA LIBRARY KADUNA POLYTECHNIC A CASE OF ISA KAITA LIBRARY KADUNA POLYTECHNIC Section Articles
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Abstract
Information literacy (IL) is a critical skill for students in higher education, enabling them to locate,
evaluate, and use information effectively. Academic libraries play a central role in developing
these competencies through structured IL programs that support academic success and lifelong
learning. This study evaluated the effectiveness of IL programs at the Federal Polytechnic Isa
Kaita library, Nigeria, using a descriptive survey design involving 592 respondents, including
students, faculty, and librarians. Data were collected via structured questionnaires and analyzed
using descriptive statistics. Findings indicate that students demonstrated high competence in
evaluating and applying information resources (Composite Mean = 3.07), though training on
plagiarism and citation was moderate (Mean = 2.81). Faculty recognized the importance of IL for
research and teaching (Composite Mean = 3.05) but showed limited collaboration with librarians,
while librarians exhibited strong commitment to IL instruction (Composite Mean = 3.05),
emphasizing workshops, orientations, and technology-based interventions. The study concludes
that IL programs are valued across the academic community but require improvements in
plagiarism education, faculty-librarian collaboration, and curriculum integration.
Recommendations include enhancing structured training for students, promoting collaborative
teaching, institutionalizing IL in curricula, and providing continuous professional development
for librarians to strengthen program effectiveness and support academic success.