8 results
Search Results
2. Fostering self-reflection on library instruction: Testing a peer observation instrument focused on questioning strategies.
- Author
-
Silberberg, Eric
- Subjects
LIBRARY orientation ,CRITICAL self-reflection ,PEER teaching ,ACADEMIC librarians ,INTROSPECTION ,ACADEMIC libraries ,LIBRARY personnel ,INFERENCE (Logic) ,STUDENT engagement - Abstract
This study demonstrates that a library instruction observation instrument can effectively foster critical self-reflection among academic library faculty and staff on their teaching practices. The paper outlines the instrument's design, which gathers low inference observations on instructors' use of questioning as a pedagogical strategy based on recommendations from the LIS and education literature. To test and refine the instrument's design, the instructors' utilised the instrument to collect data from classes taught by five participating instructors, who, during postobservation interviews, engaged in thoughtful reflections on their class planning, student participation, and teaching philosophy. They also provided valuable critiques of the usefulness of the instrument. Through analysing the observee reflections and the data from the observation instrument, this study aims to provide academic libraries with a method to incorporate an observation instrument in a peer observation program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The development and use of online information literacy activities to engage first year health students during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- Author
-
Siddall, Gillian
- Subjects
ACADEMIC librarians ,STUDENT health ,INFORMATION literacy ,COVID-19 pandemic ,BLENDED learning ,ACTIVE learning - Abstract
The article discusses the development of online tutorials to support the Academic Librarians' information literacy instruction during the first lockdown of the COVID-19 pandemic. The content and development of the activities are presented in relation to information literacy (IL) standards. At the University of Northampton, the first-year students each receive two IL sessions from an Academic Librarian that support their information skills development. The first session focuses on identifying an information need and how to search for relevant information. The second session supports students to understand the referencing process and how to use information ethically. The IL sessions are based on the principles of Active Blended Learning and focus on providing interactive and engaging workshops for students. The activities were designed to support the students on health programmes who began their studies in April 2020 and the students who were receiving their final IL session. The reflections on the IL sessions highlight lessons learnt during the online delivery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. ECIL 2021: The seventh European conference on information literacy.
- Author
-
Schirone, Marco
- Subjects
INFORMATION literacy ,INTEGRITY ,TEACHER development ,AGEISM ,STUDENT attitudes ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,LIBRARY school students ,ACADEMIC librarians - Abstract
The article discusses Seventh European Conference on Information Literacy (ECIL) 2021 which took place online from September 20-23, 2021. It mentions focus on the student's perspective on the development of teaching and learning environments; and also mentions educational architecture of great interest for the library community, especially regarding the pandemic-related increase in hybrid teaching.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Training the trainer to embed IL into curricula: Results from an action research project.
- Author
-
Flierl, Michael, Fundator, Rachel, Reed, Jason B., McGowan, Bethany, Cai, Chao, and Maybee, Clarence
- Subjects
- *
TEACHER development , *ACTION research , *ACADEMIC librarians , *LIBRARIANS' attitudes , *INFORMATION literacy , *CAREER development , *ACADEMIC libraries - Abstract
Academic libraries have long recognised the benefits of integrating information literacy into disciplinary curricula. One model that addresses the common problems of sustainability and scalability of such efforts is the train the trainer model, where academic librarians serve as faculty developers. Improving faculty development efforts requires understanding the methods and strategies of librarians engaged in this work. Using an action research methodology, this paper investigated the experiences of librarians and disciplinary instructors participating in a course redesign program at a large, public university in the midwestern United States, in order to identify effective strategies for engaging with disciplinary instructors about information literacy. Findings include focusing on pragmatic, contextual ways in which students will need to use information in the future, providing professional development opportunities for librarians to further develop faculty development skills, and prioritising strong collaborations between librarians and other academic units. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Giving voice to regional Australian academic librarians: Perceptions of information literacy and information literacy instruction.
- Author
-
Goodwin, Annette and Afzal, Waseem
- Subjects
ACADEMIC librarians ,INFORMATION literacy ,HIGHER education research ,LIBRARIANS ,LIBRARIANS' attitudes ,POLICY discourse ,CLASSROOM environment - Abstract
Academic librarians deliver information literacy instruction (ILI) to students, engage with a range of stakeholders, and work in a range of learning environments that are continually changing. While past research has focused on the perceptions of librarians regarding their role in ILI, this has not been a significant focus of research in the Australian higher education context. This study set out to explore the perceptions of six practising academic librarians at a regional Australian university, seeking to understand their perceptions of information literacy (IL), their role in ILI and the challenges they face in this role. The participants did not have a consensus on the nature of IL, despite having a clear definition from the institution. Librarians felt they had both an educative and supportive role and that they brought expertise and authority to ILI. Librarians noted that their ILI supported the broader function of the university to meet internal policies and external regulatory requirements. Librarians suggested that an integrated approach to ILI at the institution would improve librarians' agency in supporting students. The analysis of the findings led to the development of a model for the delivery of effective ILI for this institution. The findings of this study contribute to the existing body of IL research by (a) giving voice to the views of academic librarians working in a regional Australian university, and (b) highlighting the challenges that academic librarians face when delivering ILI at their institution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Teaching and its discontents: How academic librarians are negotiating a complicated role.
- Author
-
Julien, Heidi, Gross, Melissa, and Latham, Don
- Subjects
ACADEMIC librarians ,INFORMATION literacy ,COMMUNITY colleges ,LIBRARIANS ,TEACHING methods - Abstract
Teaching is a core role for librarians in academic contexts, although most librarians are not formally prepared to teach and encounter significant challenges in the role, including complex relationships with campus colleagues. The purpose of this research was to explore how community college librarians, an understudied population, understand their teaching role. Online interviews lasting fifteen to seventy-four minutes were conducted with thirty community college librarians who provide information literacy (IL) instruction. Participants were recruited by direct email invitation and were asked questions relating to their instructional practices. Interview transcripts were analysed qualitatively, with a specific focus on participants’ experiences of the teaching role. Participants reported positive relationships with students, and significant challenges in their relationships with disciplinary faculty and administrators. Their lack of formal preparation for the teaching role led to infrequent and informal assessment and evaluation practices. Pre-service education for the teaching role could be strengthened to provide librarians with the skill set and confidence to provide more effective instruction. Instructional quality is critical as the importance of IL is increasingly recognized as key to academic, workplace, and personal success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Unsettling information literacy: Exploring critical approaches with academic researchers for decolonising the university.
- Author
-
Marsh, Frances
- Subjects
INFORMATION literacy ,CRITICAL literacy ,ACADEMIC libraries ,DECOLONIZATION ,ACADEMIC librarians ,CRYSTALLINE lens ,COLONIES - Abstract
In the past seven years, student-led decolonisation movements have taken root in UK universities. Decolonising the university is an intellectual project, asking critical questions about the content of curricula, disciplinary canons and pedagogical approaches. It is simultaneously a material one, challenging the colonial legacies that manifest in institutional spaces, cultures and financial decisions, students' experience and staff labour conditions (Cotton, 2018, p. 24). Academic libraries have recognised their role in addressing how 'coloniality survives colonialism' (Maldonado-Torres, 2007, p. 243), in particular through the diversification of collections and resources. However, libraries have neglected to interrogate their educational potential for decolonisation, specifically in exercising information literacy (IL) teaching and approaches. This qualitative research examines IL through a decolonial lens with an eye to both its colonial attributes and its potential for decolonising the curriculum. Interviews with five academic researchers are used to explore the potential for critical information literacy (CIL) in decolonial work and ask what IL might look like from a decolonial perspective. The findings of the interviews are structured according to Icaza and Vázquez's framework of three core processes for decolonising the university; they reveal that CIL might usefully facilitate positionality, practice relationality and consider transitionality. In turn, these findings lead to a set of recommendations for unsettling IL and generating the potential for decolonisation. The relationship between CIL and decolonising the curriculum is as yet unexplored and academics' engagement with and opinions on CIL have rarely been examined. This research therefore offers some novel contributions for IL practitioners and researchers in relation to both teaching/learning and research. It also contributes some points of departure for a more a powerful and holistic decolonial pedagogy in the university. A more fitting approach than traditional IL, critical information literacy can become a key part of scaffolding a decolonising approach to learners' navigation of information and processes of knowing. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.