Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Institution
- Keyword
-
- Information literacy (7)
- Active learning (5)
- Instruction (5)
- Assessment (4)
- Articulate Storyline (3)
-
- D2L (3)
- Desire2Learn (3)
- E-learning (3)
- Embedded Librarianship (3)
- Information Literacy (3)
- Teaching (3)
- Academic librarianship (2)
- Critical pedagogy (2)
- Informed learning (2)
- Intellectual property (2)
- Partnerships (2)
- Postsecondary (2)
- APA (1)
- Assignment design (1)
- Burnout (1)
- Citations (1)
- Collaboration (1)
- Creative instruction (1)
- Creative teaching (1)
- Critical information literacy (1)
- Critical thinking (1)
- Curriculum development (1)
- Faculty (1)
- Federal Depository Libraries (1)
- Government Documents (1)
- Publication
-
- Libraries Faculty and Staff Presentations (3)
- Oberlin Digital Scholarship Conference (3)
- Transforming Libraries for Graduate Students (3)
- Eric A. Kowalik (2)
- Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy (2)
-
- Library Faculty Publications & Presentations (2)
- Elizabeth Andrejasich Gibes (1)
- Events (1)
- Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works (1)
- Florida Statewide Symposium: Best Practices in Undergraduate Research (1)
- Kim L. Ranger (1)
- Library Instruction West 2016 (1)
- Library Scholarship (1)
- Michael Schwartz Library Publications (1)
- Publications and Research (1)
- Samantha McClellan (1)
- Sarah Wipperman (1)
- Vera J Lux (1)
- Vickie Mix (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 28 of 28
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Making The Ucf Libraries Part Of Your Course, Carrie Moran, Sarah A. Norris, Barbara G. Tierney
Making The Ucf Libraries Part Of Your Course, Carrie Moran, Sarah A. Norris, Barbara G. Tierney
Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works
Plenary presentation given to UCF faculty attending the Center for Distributed Learning's IDL Showcase on November 18, 2016 by Carrie Moran, User Engagement Librarian, Sarah Norris, Scholarly Communication Librarian, and Barbara Tierney, Head of Research & Information Services.
The presentation highlights UCF Libraries services and resources available to faculty teaching courses online at the university.
Developing Teen Health Information Literacy, Sharon A. Weiner, David Walker, Kathryn Dilworth, Lalatendu Acharya, Lisa Kirkham, Bethany Mc, Laura Henzl
Developing Teen Health Information Literacy, Sharon A. Weiner, David Walker, Kathryn Dilworth, Lalatendu Acharya, Lisa Kirkham, Bethany Mc, Laura Henzl
Libraries Faculty and Staff Presentations
This presentation discusses a health information literacy project for teens that was a collaboration between librarians and experts in health communications and school administration. They co-developed and co-taught a required high school health course in Spring 2016 using student-centered active learning techniques. The course project was a “Teen Health” website developed by the students.
Creative Commons: A License To Share, Sarah L. Wipperman
Creative Commons: A License To Share, Sarah L. Wipperman
Sarah Wipperman
Sarah Wipperman will be leading a discussion on Creative Commons (CC) licenses, how to assign them to your work, & how to find CC material –images, texts, & other original works—to use in your own teaching, writing, & scholarship.
Improving Learner Experience Through Creative Library Instructional Design, Mandi Goodsett
Improving Learner Experience Through Creative Library Instructional Design, Mandi Goodsett
Michael Schwartz Library Publications
No abstract provided.
Strengthening Students’ Information Literacy Skills As They Develop Original Research Proposals In A Scientific Process Course, Kimberly A. Reycraft, Nora E. Demers
Strengthening Students’ Information Literacy Skills As They Develop Original Research Proposals In A Scientific Process Course, Kimberly A. Reycraft, Nora E. Demers
Florida Statewide Symposium: Best Practices in Undergraduate Research
Scientific Process is a required course for all undergraduate science majors at FGCU. In this course, students develop original research proposals on topics of their interest. Information literacy skills are critical as students must be able to use multiple sources of information to develop their proposals. Biology and library faculty have collaborated to add instruction and assignments addressing research question development, search strategy, citation management, and more. Our goal is to improve students’ information literacy skills as well as the quality and quantity of citations in their final proposals. We will present on this initiative and our preliminary assessment results.
Govdocs Today: Not Your Grandma’S Ravioli, Vickie L. Mix
Govdocs Today: Not Your Grandma’S Ravioli, Vickie L. Mix
Vickie Mix
Informed Learning, Information Literacy, And Scholarly Communication: Library Pedagogy As A Bridge To The Disciplines, Kim L. Ranger
Informed Learning, Information Literacy, And Scholarly Communication: Library Pedagogy As A Bridge To The Disciplines, Kim L. Ranger
Kim L. Ranger
This paper explores collaboration between librarians and faculty in higher education to construct connections between informed learning theory, information literacy practice, and disciplinary scholarly products to foster reflective and deep engagement with information.
Increasing digital innovations in communication and pedagogy, the need for various literacy capabilities, and the potential wisdom gained from considering diverse methodological perspectives have driven the need for interdisciplinary collaboration (Witt, 2012). There have also been several calls for a relational approach to teaching and learning, changing the roles of librarians (Farrell and Badke, 2015; Gunton et al, 2014; Jaguszewski and Williams, 2013), and scholarship which examines …
Informed Learning, Information Literacy, And Scholarly Communication: Library Pedagogy As A Bridge To The Disciplines, Kim L. Ranger
Informed Learning, Information Literacy, And Scholarly Communication: Library Pedagogy As A Bridge To The Disciplines, Kim L. Ranger
Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy
This paper explores collaboration between librarians and faculty in higher education to construct connections between informed learning theory, information literacy practice, and disciplinary scholarly products to foster reflective and deep engagement with information.
Increasing digital innovations in communication and pedagogy, the need for various literacy capabilities, and the potential wisdom gained from considering diverse methodological perspectives have driven the need for interdisciplinary collaboration (Witt, 2012). There have also been several calls for a relational approach to teaching and learning, changing the roles of librarians (Farrell and Badke, 2015; Gunton et al, 2014; Jaguszewski and Williams, 2013), and scholarship which examines …
Do You Know What They Don’T Know? : How Students Conduct Research, Peggy L. Nuhn, Min Tong
Do You Know What They Don’T Know? : How Students Conduct Research, Peggy L. Nuhn, Min Tong
Georgia International Conference on Information Literacy
When developing student research assignments, many faculty may make the assumption that the current generation of computer-savvy students will intuitively determine how to effectively use library resources, and incorporate that information into a thoughtful and properly cited research paper -- after all, students frequently express a high level of confidence in their research abilities. But is this realistic? Do students understand the difference between a keyword and a subject search and how that understanding can help them? Do students really understand that research is a process rather than a scavenger hunt?
Any faculty member who has received student research papers …
Consulting With Research Groups To Create Project-Specific Data Management Training And Protocols, Megan R. Sapp Nelson, Margaret Phillips
Consulting With Research Groups To Create Project-Specific Data Management Training And Protocols, Megan R. Sapp Nelson, Margaret Phillips
Libraries Faculty and Staff Presentations
How can you use your liaison skills to assist faculty and graduate students to have better data management practices? Repurpose reference interviewing skills to identify current data management practices, perform gap analyses to identify where training might be needed, create learning objectives and assessments using your existing instructional skills, and develop activities using instructional best practices that integrate both information literacy and data information literacy.
At The Intersection Of Technology And Special Collections: A Program Approach To Collaborative Teaching And Student Engagement, Benjamin Panciera, Rebecca Parmer
At The Intersection Of Technology And Special Collections: A Program Approach To Collaborative Teaching And Student Engagement, Benjamin Panciera, Rebecca Parmer
Oberlin Digital Scholarship Conference
Staff from the Linda Lear Center for Special Collections and Archives discussed their participation in a program to facilitate the introduction of new technologies into the classroom. In 2014-2015 they engaged two East Asian history courses in a project to digitize, transcribe, and annotate a 19th century journal detailing the voyage of a young man from Connecticut to Hong Kong. The project was selected as an ideal means to connect students with tools and techniques critical to primary source research and to use emerging technologies to bring archival resources to new audiences.
The Next Thousand Days: Planning For Digital Scholarship Engagement Into The Future, Kris Macpherson
The Next Thousand Days: Planning For Digital Scholarship Engagement Into The Future, Kris Macpherson
Oberlin Digital Scholarship Conference
A discussion that focused on the incorporation of digital scholarship into reference/research and instruction departments, including if/how our new undertakings broaden our mission and learning outcomes, our roles and job descriptions, and the ways we collaborate with other groups in our libraries, IT and across campus. How does the inclusion of DS in campus courses complement, incorporate or compete with information literacy? How do we see ourselves moving forward -- what are we adding and what are we dropping, and how are we retraining ourselves to incorporate digital scholarship into our programs?
Enriching Student Learning With Data Visualization, Adam Konczewski, Louis Johnston, Diana Symons, Bennett Frensko
Enriching Student Learning With Data Visualization, Adam Konczewski, Louis Johnston, Diana Symons, Bennett Frensko
Oberlin Digital Scholarship Conference
In this workshop, participants were led through our collaborative process: how we divided up tasks; identified appropriate learning objectives; crafted assignments; selected data sets; and decided on software (Tableau). We discussed what’s worked, what still needs tweaking, and how we plan to expand data visualization support to faculty members in other departments. Participants left this session with a better understanding of how they can support data visualization in the classroom, and we’ll provide lists of resources and training opportunities that will help them get started.
Teaching Or Tyranny: Class And Course Guides, Nancy W. Noe
Teaching Or Tyranny: Class And Course Guides, Nancy W. Noe
Library Instruction West 2016
The adoption of LibGuides by numerous Libraries has given rise to the creation of a multitude of class or course guides within the system. Librarians have become enamored of such pages and spend hours developing pages for a number of classes. Many of these guides are then used in actual library instruction, or embedded into learning and course management systems as substitutes for face-to-face sessions. Upon examination, however, the vast majority of these class and course guides simply replicate a version of subject guides. Do these pre-determined lists of databases and ready-made widgets really offer students the opportunity to develop …
Desert Or Oasis: Reflecting On Teaching And Tweaking A Discovery Layer., Vera J. Lux, Amy F. Fyn, Robert J. Snyder
Desert Or Oasis: Reflecting On Teaching And Tweaking A Discovery Layer., Vera J. Lux, Amy F. Fyn, Robert J. Snyder
Vera J Lux
Converging On Nutrition Education Competencies: Aligning Library Instruction With Undergraduate Pre-Professional Program Requirements, Lee Ann Fullington, Margrethe Horlyck-Romanovsky, Susan Jakuboski
Converging On Nutrition Education Competencies: Aligning Library Instruction With Undergraduate Pre-Professional Program Requirements, Lee Ann Fullington, Margrethe Horlyck-Romanovsky, Susan Jakuboski
Publications and Research
No abstract provided.
Combining Faculty, Instructional Design, And Library Services To Provide Students A Framework For Information Evaluation, Linda Leake, Samantha Mcclellan
Combining Faculty, Instructional Design, And Library Services To Provide Students A Framework For Information Evaluation, Linda Leake, Samantha Mcclellan
Samantha McClellan
The creation of the course-embedded Critical Thinking & information Evaluation Module series resulted from the need for undergraduate students to start their academic careers with a framework for evaluating information. Pulling from the Paul-Elder Critical Thinking Framework and focusing abstract information literacy concepts on the commonly-used resources of Wikipedia, Google, and scholarly journal articles, the presenters will delve into module creation to implementation of these modules and discuss the logistics of this process to guide other faculty-librarian-instruction designer collaborations.
One Tutorial, Two Universities: How Technology Can Be Adapted To Meet The Needs Of Multiple Libraries, Eric A. Kowalik, Valerie Beech, Betsy A. Williams, Rita Kohrman
One Tutorial, Two Universities: How Technology Can Be Adapted To Meet The Needs Of Multiple Libraries, Eric A. Kowalik, Valerie Beech, Betsy A. Williams, Rita Kohrman
Eric A. Kowalik
Leveraging Articulate Storyline And An Lms To Go Beyond The One Shot Il Session, Eric A. Kowalik, Elizabeth Andrejasich Gibes, Valerie Beech
Leveraging Articulate Storyline And An Lms To Go Beyond The One Shot Il Session, Eric A. Kowalik, Elizabeth Andrejasich Gibes, Valerie Beech
Elizabeth Andrejasich Gibes
Leveraging Articulate Storyline And An Lms To Go Beyond The One Shot Il Session, Eric A. Kowalik, Elizabeth Andrejasich Gibes, Valerie Beech
Leveraging Articulate Storyline And An Lms To Go Beyond The One Shot Il Session, Eric A. Kowalik, Elizabeth Andrejasich Gibes, Valerie Beech
Eric A. Kowalik
Classroom Space, In The Library, Stephanie Margolin
Etds And The Landscape Of Open Access Publishing, Gail Mcmillan
Etds And The Landscape Of Open Access Publishing, Gail Mcmillan
Transforming Libraries for Graduate Students
Countering anecdotal evidence and calming fears about publicly accessible ETDs—electronic theses and dissertations, McMillan will present a variety of perspectives based on current data. She has led international surveys and gathered data from publishers and journal editors about their policies regarding ETDs. To these she will add data about ETD initiatives based on graduate school and university library activities.
Workshops Toolkit: Tailoring Learning To Schedules And Needs, Zachary W. Elder
Workshops Toolkit: Tailoring Learning To Schedules And Needs, Zachary W. Elder
Transforming Libraries for Graduate Students
George Washington University Libraries were tasked with transforming support for graduate students while taking into account increasing numbers of online students, off-campus programs, and students working full-time. In addition, due to librarian turnover and other factors, we needed to accomplish our goal with a reduced workforce and without reducing services and instruction to our undergraduate population. Our solution focuses our graduate instruction on in-person workshops and digital objects (research guides and “How-Do-I?” videos), along with a “toolkit” with scripts, handouts, presentations, and outlines so that, while one librarian may be the expert (e.g. citation management), any librarian can have the …
Transforming Services: A Year Of Investigating User-Centered Marketing Strategies And Information Literacy Programming For Graduate Students, Lisa M. Martin, Porcia N. Vaughn
Transforming Services: A Year Of Investigating User-Centered Marketing Strategies And Information Literacy Programming For Graduate Students, Lisa M. Martin, Porcia N. Vaughn
Transforming Libraries for Graduate Students
The University of Houston (UH) is a Carnegie-designated Tier One public research university that strives to serve more than 7,000 graduate and professional students. Graduate students have been historically underserved by the UH Libraries, however, in recent years the Libraries have made expanding services to graduate students a strategic initiative. UH Library administration has designated targeting specific user groups, including graduate students, with revitalized marketing and innovative programing a high priority.
Two project teams were established within the Liaison Services Department to investigate the role of liaison services in graduate education. Project Team 1 investigated best practices for marketing existing …
Demonstrating The Value Of Critical Information Literacy: Csusb's Online Critical Information Literacy Laboratory For Faculty, Gina Schlesselman-Tarango
Demonstrating The Value Of Critical Information Literacy: Csusb's Online Critical Information Literacy Laboratory For Faculty, Gina Schlesselman-Tarango
Library Faculty Publications & Presentations
Presentation given as part of Best Practices, session 2. Addresses California State University San Bernardino's online toolkit for teaching and learning, the Critical Information Literacy Laboratory for Faculty.
Critical Pedagogy And Social Justice, Gina Schlesselman-Tarango
Critical Pedagogy And Social Justice, Gina Schlesselman-Tarango
Library Faculty Publications & Presentations
Presentation given as part of the Southern California Instruction Librarians (SCIL) interest group panel "How do we advocate for underrepresented students?: A panel on how critical pedagogy and social justice value the student experience."
Program Level Assessment In The Library: Impact Of Information Literacy Instruction On English Composition And Speech Communications Courses At College Of Dupage, Jennifer Kelley
Library Scholarship
This presentation introduces an ongoing study evaluating how the College of DuPage Library’s Information Literacy Instruction Program contributes to students meeting institutional General Education Information Literacy outcomes. Via a cross-sectional exploratory survey, faculty teaching English Composition II and Fundamentals of Speech Communications will provide subjective understanding of information literacy and fact-reporting on use of information literacy services provided by the library. Results will impact the direction of the library’s information literacy instruction program and shape assessment of student learning.
Developing A Practical Framework For Information Literacy Program Evaluation, Paul Bracke, Clarence Maybee, Sharon Weiner
Developing A Practical Framework For Information Literacy Program Evaluation, Paul Bracke, Clarence Maybee, Sharon Weiner
Libraries Faculty and Staff Presentations
This presentation was given at the Library Assessment Conference held from October 31–November 2, 2016 in Arlington, VA. The Purdue University Libraries, like many academic libraries, face increased expectations for demonstrating their value and impact. The Libraries launched a project to advance an outcomes-based, mission-centric framework for evaluating its information literacy programing. The methods for developing this framework consist of four steps: 1) focus groups with librarians to gain a more comprehensive understanding of existing assessment practices, 2) analysis of focus group findings, characterizing current assessment practices, 3) a gap analysis, comparing focus group findings to the information literacy mission …