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Technology & Information Literacy Instruction: A Model for Active Learning Environments Jeremy W. Donald, MSLS Faculty Technology Liaison Trinity University San Antonio, TX

Technology & Information Literacy Instruction: A Model for Active Learning Environments

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A presentation given as part of a Texas Library Association webinar: “Innovative Approaches in Partnerships between Academic Librarians and Faculty,” Feb. 2010. Presents a model for designing information literacy instruction to maximize active learning.

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Page 1: Technology & Information Literacy Instruction: A Model for Active Learning Environments

Technology & Information Literacy Instruction:

A Model for Active Learning Environments

Jeremy W. Donald, MSLSFaculty Technology LiaisonTrinity UniversitySan Antonio, TX

Page 2: Technology & Information Literacy Instruction: A Model for Active Learning Environments

From George M. Piskurich, Rapid Instructional Design, 2nd ed. Pfeiffer, 2006:

“The quality and success of your instruction

can be measured by the activities

you develop for it.”

Page 3: Technology & Information Literacy Instruction: A Model for Active Learning Environments

Summary:

Knowledge-type information (facts, wisdom, demonstrations) is BEST DELIVERED OUTSIDE THE CLASSROOM via technology.

Use class time to substantially address ONLY the 1-2 most challenging learning outcomes.

Class time is BEST USED for HANDS-ON EXPERIMENTATION WITH TOOLS and GUIDED REFLECTION on the results of that experimentation. 

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Coverage of Key IL Concepts (some remedial)

Challenging Technologies

Engaging Activities

50 Minutes!

The “Old” Model

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1 minute

25 minutes

2 minutes

9 minutes

13 minutes

Completed before ILI

Up until due date

A “New” Model for the 50 min. Library One-Shot

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Learning Management System/LibGuide:

•Library Pre-Assignment     •Tutorials     •Pretest/Survey 

Visit to class when assignment is introduced:

•Explain your role•Sketch the research workflow

                     

  

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•Describe your role again &

provide contact info, office hours

•Goals for the session (should

be the same as the students'!)

•Session outline and materials

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•What do we need to know to be able start experimenting?

• What IL criteria do we need to learn and then apply to our active learning?

•What are the relevant systems (e.g., fielded search, peer review, bills vs. laws)?

Page 9: Technology & Information Literacy Instruction: A Model for Active Learning Environments

Laboratory: "...to allow experimentation, testing, and hands on experience. Level of structure can vary"

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Behavior Modeling: Ask students to share the results of their experimentation, and you/they model the application of the criteria introduced earlier.

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From your list of outcomes, ask students to self-assess what they learned. Encourage them to address perceived gaps with...

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…office hours, research appts, peer tutors, LibGuides, post/self-instruction, tutorials, Help Desk...

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IL outcomes for an Intro to Neuroscience course

Students will be able to…• Look up a famous neuroscientist in

print and online subject encyclopedias and biographical databases

• Identify and locate three key works/contributions by this author

• Determine the impact of these works on the relevant scientific literature

• Create a bibliography of sources used

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Subject Encyclopedias & Library Databases

Citation Manager

Library Catalog & ILL

Citation Tracking

2 3 4 1

Online Tutorial

Online Tutorial

7 minutes in class

12 minutes in class

1-2 min. in class

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Drawbacks of This Model

• No thundering applause at end of class• Teaching faculty made anxious by your refusal to

simply talk & demonstrate searching for 45 minutes

• Legs get sore from providing guide-on-the-side assistance to practically every student during long activity segment

• Cynical students feel cheated of opportunity to complain about boring, repetitive “library day”

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Questions?

Activity for Librarians:• www.trinity.edu/jdonald/Instructional_Design_Activity.doc