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The Teaching Library: Approaches to Assessing Information Literacy Instruction
 
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The Teaching Library: Approaches to Assessing Information Literacy Instruction [Hardcover]

Scott Walter (Author)

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Book Description

0789031493 978-0789031495 August 31, 2007
Get the information needed to advocate for the significance of your library!

How do you make the case that your library is a valuable instruction center? The Teaching Library helps librarians assess data on information literacy instruction programs so that they can better support the teaching role of the academic library in campus settings. This practical, professional resource features case studies from across the United States and Canada—in both public and private institutions—that offer a variety of evaluation methods. Here are the latest, easy-to-adopt ways of measuring your library’s direct contribution to student learning, on-campus and off.

With a unique multifaceted approach to questions of assessment, The Teaching Library is an important resource that not only offers the latest techniques, but answers the larger question of how to make use of this data in ways that will best advocate information literacy instruction programs. From creating a multidimensional assessment to turning an initiative into a program to teaching and learning goals and beyond, this invaluable text covers many of the core issues those in this rapidly-evolving field must contend with. These contributions reinforce the importance of the learning that takes place in the classroom, in the co-curriculum, the extra-curriculum, and the surrounding community.

Some of the key topics covered in The Teaching Library are:
  • assessment practices such as 360° analysis, attitudinal, outcomes-based, and gap-measured
  • integrating the teaching library into core mission, vision, and values statements
  • presenting the message of a library’s value to internal audiences of colleagues
  • building momentum—and maintaining it
  • tying information literacy assessment to campus-wide assessment activities
  • identifying and reaching end-of-program learning outcomes
  • assessing the impact of the one-shot session on student learning
  • information literacy instruction and the credit-course model
  • promoting instruction among Library and Information Science educators
  • and many more!
The essays in The Teaching Library offer viable and practical ways for librarians to demonstrate their direct contribution to student learning in ways consistent with those accepted as valid across the campus.

An important resource for academic librarians and Information Science professionals, The Teaching Library is also a useful tool for those in the campus community concerned with developing, funding, and continuing successful library programs—professional staff such as alumni directors; faculty and educators looking to make students more successful; and researchers.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

A VALUABLE volume for all instruction librarians. . . . Provides A SOLID MIX OF THEORY AND PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS to help instruction programs formulate or enhance their assessment activities. -- Elizabeth Blakesley Lindsay, MLS, MA, Assistant Dean for Public Services and Outreach, Washington State University Libraries

Fills a critical need for quality, in-depth consideration of assessment of information literacy instruction (ILI) in higher education. . . . IT OFFERS A SMORGASBORD OF STRATEGIES designed to help librarians build support for ILI. . . . The variety of assessment techniques described encourages librarians not only to reflect upon recent experience and adjust their instructional programs accordingly, but also to present convincing data on learning outcomes to curriculum planners and administrators. This rich collection will help practicing instructional librarians and their constituents strengthen their educational programs and develop students' information literacy/fluency skills in the best manner possible. -- Patrick Ragains, MA, MLS, Business and Government Information Librarian, University of Nevada, Reno

Novices in the assessment of information literacy instruction can benefit from the lessons learned by the contributors of this work who describe their efforts to integrate information literacy into campus curriculum and culture, use multiple assessment methods, or apply assessment results to improve instructional programs. . . . Gives insight into librarians' attempts to assess the impact of information literacy instruction using a number of tools including surveys, tests, focus groups, gap measures, research logs, and bibliographies. Perhaps most importantly, the collected works demonstrate that large or small, complex or simple, the assessment of information literacy instruction nearly always yields results that can be applied to improve the quality of academic library instructional programs. -- Megan Oakleaf, PhD, MLS, Assistant Professor, School of Information Studies, Syracuse University

Particularly noteworthy are three chapters that describe fairly comprehensive and truly curriculum-integrated assessment plans and processes at Wartburg College, Oregon State University and University of Central Florida where the common denominators are clear articulation of the library's teaching role in its mission and vibrant partnerships with departmental faculty for instructional planning and assessment. . . . DOES A GOOD JOB of describing how some large university and small liberal arts college libraries have re-thought their instructional roles and how they have partnered with other stakeholders to use assessment to improve learning. -- Bonnie Gratch Lindauer, MLS, MPA, Coordinator of Library Instructional Services, City College of San Francisco

About the Author

Scott Walter, PhD, MLS, is Associate University Librarian and Professor of Library Administration at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. A former Assistant Dean of Libraries for Information and Instructional Services at the University of Kansas, Dr. Walter has published articles in numerous journals including Information Technology & Libraries, Reference Services Review, The Reference Librarian, and Reference & User Services Quarterly. He is the co-editor of Information Literacy Instruction for Educators: Professional Knowledge for an Information Age and co-author of Instructional Improvement Programs.

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