From research to practice : the scholarship of teaching and learning in LIS education

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Where to find it

Information & Library Science Library

Call Number
Z668 .G735 2009
Status
Available

Summary

New faculty members after arrive with little experience in teaching or planning for teaching. This book helps overcome that challenge. Many if not most schools of library and information science have many students seeking a second career. The information concerning teaching adult learners will be especially helpful for this age group. Different types of learning can be identified and made clear by thinking systematically about outcomes with strategies. Patterned after the matrix designed by Professor James R. Davis in his book Highly Effective Strategies , this book provides behavioral, cognitive, inquiry, mental models, group dynamics, virtual reality, and holistic strategies. Each is described and explanations are given for hiw it is most effective for developing exercises to instruct, reinforce, and assess specific types of learning. Each strategy also comes with its own appropriate measures of success. Sample materials are included to illustrate these adaptations of the Davis matrix, and materials about specific activities and course outcomes are drawn from the authors' ongoing curriculum audit.

This book provides a structured platform that serves as a model for teaching and assessing student learning in applied LIS Courses. Following Davis's premise that different types of learning can be identified and made clear by thinking systematically about outcomes with strategies, including behavioral, cognitive, inquiry, mental models, group dynamics, virtual reality, and holistic. Each strategy is deemed most effective in developing exercises to instruct, reinforce, and assess specific types of learning. Each strategy comes with its own appropriate measures of success.

With the ALA Committee on Accreditation Standards reflecting the need for student learning outcomes, this book provides both the introduction to this form of evaluation and provides examples of courses using this method of assessment.

Contents

  • Foreword p. v
  • Introduction p. vii
  • Acknowledgments p. xiii
  • 1 Library and Information Studies Students as Adult Learners p. 1
  • 2 Library Education and Training p. 15
  • 3 The Behavioral Strategy p. 33
  • 4 The Cognitive Strategy p. 47
  • 5 The Inquiry Strategy p. 63
  • 6 The Mental Models Strategy p. 77
  • 7 Group Dynamics Strategy p. 95
  • 8 The Virtual Reality Strategy p. 105
  • 9 The Holistic Strategy p. 119
  • Conclusion p. 135
  • Bibliography p. 143
  • Index p. 159

Other details