Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Information literacy (9)
- Active learning (2)
- Archives (2)
- Assessment (2)
- Collaboration (2)
-
- Course design (2)
- Data information literacy (2)
- Information Literacy (2)
- Libraries (2)
- Partnerships (2)
- Publishing (2)
- Scholarly communication (2)
- Undergraduate research (2)
- 1903 (1)
- Archival collections (1)
- Archival literacy (1)
- Business librarianship (1)
- Cape Peninsula University of Technology (1)
- Committee (1)
- CrowdAsk (1)
- Crowdsourcing (1)
- Curriculum (1)
- Curriculum mapping (1)
- Data consumption (1)
- Data credibility checklist (1)
- Data curation (1)
- Data education (1)
- Data literacy (1)
- Data management (1)
- Employment (1)
- Publication
- Publication Type
Articles 31 - 38 of 38
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Why Are We Doing This? The Role Of Personal Relevance In Developing Biological Information Literacy Using Cyber Peer-Led Team Learning, Jeffrey D Radloff, C Maybee, Maribeth Slebodnik, Nancy Pelaez
Why Are We Doing This? The Role Of Personal Relevance In Developing Biological Information Literacy Using Cyber Peer-Led Team Learning, Jeffrey D Radloff, C Maybee, Maribeth Slebodnik, Nancy Pelaez
IMPACT Symposium
Student-centered learning necessitates that students engage with an array of materials to develop their own understandings, often requiring students to find and critically engage with biological information. This project describes a course (BIOL 131; Biology II: Development, Structure and Function of Organisms) that utilizes cyber Peer-led Team Learning (cPLTL) as a student-centered approach to enhance students’ biological information literacy. Emphasizing the social aspects of learning, students work together in small groups led by a peer mentor using online meeting software. Scaffolded across the first half of the semester, students were given information literacy focused questions as part of a weekly …
A Service Learning Experience For Pharmacy Students Involving Unwanted Medication Collection, Patricia L. Darbishire
A Service Learning Experience For Pharmacy Students Involving Unwanted Medication Collection, Patricia L. Darbishire
IMPACT Symposium
This poster outlining a serve learning experience of students in Purdue’s pharmacy program was presented at the IMPACT Symposium 2014.
Cgt 256: User-Centered (Re)Design, Mihaela Vorvoreanu
Cgt 256: User-Centered (Re)Design, Mihaela Vorvoreanu
IMPACT Symposium
The poster presented at the IMPACT Symposium 2014 outlines the redesign of of CGT 256: User Centered Design.
Bcm10001 Introduction To Construction Management, Daphene Koch
Bcm10001 Introduction To Construction Management, Daphene Koch
IMPACT Symposium
The poster presented at the IMPACT Symposium 2014 outlines the redesign of BCM 10001 (Introduction to Construction Management).
Qualitative, Tiered, Iclicker Recitation Introductions, David Blasing, Andrew Hirsch, Rebecca Lindell
Qualitative, Tiered, Iclicker Recitation Introductions, David Blasing, Andrew Hirsch, Rebecca Lindell
IMPACT Symposium
Interactively engaging students can significantly help them understand key concepts [Hake 1998]. Additionally, students are most likely to recall the first five minutes of a presentation [Burns 1985]. Capitalizing on both of these, we altered the beginning of PHYS 272 (ELECTRIC AND MAGNETIC INTERACTIONS) recitation to include a series of qualitative, “tiered,” iClicker questions that interactively engage students and socratically teach fundamental principals in electricity and magnetism.
The series begin with a question that most students comfortably and correctly answer. Successive questions increase in difficultly and the series stops with most students struggling to identify the correct answer. Along the …
Edps 265: The Inclusive Classroom, Jasmine Begeske
Edps 265: The Inclusive Classroom, Jasmine Begeske
IMPACT Symposium
EDPS 265: The Inclusive Classroom is a foundational, large enrollment lecture course and is taught in a lecture hall with a stadium style seating arraignment. This configuration results in a course that is not student-centered, promotes one-way communication and hinders cooperative learning. Education courses should be structured so that the course in itself is instructive. This course teaches interventions for reaching all students, using techniques that engage students in the learning process. The structure of this course, the physical space and the format should model best practices in the classroom. I will implement and evaluate student-centered instructional strategies and technologies …
Mgmt 175: Information Strategies For Management Students (Spring 2013 Cohort), Ilana Barnes, Hal Kirkwood, Mary Dugan
Mgmt 175: Information Strategies For Management Students (Spring 2013 Cohort), Ilana Barnes, Hal Kirkwood, Mary Dugan
IMPACT Symposium
Our poster will focus on the process of creating and maintaining a technology-enabled flipped classroom to enable information. In the 2013 school year, a team of librarians in the Parrish Library for Management and Economics transformed a business information literacy course from a traditional lecture, 40-student, computer-lab class into multiple sections of a flipped, 70 student, computer-less class in order to meet the request of the department that the successful course be required for all 500 students. It may be particularly useful for instructors who have struggled with how to deliver literacy instruction uniformly across large populations (such as the …
Threshold Concepts: Challenges & Possibilities For Library Instruction, Clarence Maybee, Andrea Baer
Threshold Concepts: Challenges & Possibilities For Library Instruction, Clarence Maybee, Andrea Baer
Libraries Faculty and Staff Presentations
This presentation was given at the 2014 UnConference hosted by the Academic Libraries of Indiana’s Information Literacy Committee. It outlined the Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education being drafted by the Association of College and Research Libraries. The presentation specifically focused on the 6 proposed threshold concepts described in the draft Framework, and discussed challenges and opportunities of applying threshold concepts to the design of information literacy instructional efforts.