The Imagine, Innovate, Inspire focus of this national
conference hits the nail on the head! I came away invigorated with new ideas and
affirmation for some initiatives I'm working on. All of the sessions I attended were in either
the Assessment or Teaching & Learning track. Thursday
began with “The one-Shot Mixtape: Lessons for Planning, Delivering, and
Integrating Instruction.” This
presentation was based on the article “Notes from the Field: 10 Short Lessons
on One-Shot Instruction” in Communications
in Information Literacy 6(1). This session confirmed that information
literacy is a campus issue, not a library issue; something we are in the heart
of at SMSU. This article is a must-read.
“Making IL Relevant: Creating Engaging IL Experiences for Students”
was a well-done presentation that focused on the collaboration between
librarians and a Public Health faculty member. The faculty member kicked off
the presentation, and together the panel (which included 2 librarians, the
faculty member, and a student) walked through the library sessions, their
purpose, and the assessment measures used. This started as a grant that incentivized
the faculty to collaborate with the library on an information literacy initiative.
Something we could try using Endowed Funds?
Three contributed papers made up the next session: “Melding
the Nitty Gritty of Critical Thinking and Information Literacy into English
Developmental and Composition Classes,” “Information Literacy as a Formative Force,”
and “The
Almost Experts: Capstone Students and the Research Process.” I took away a nugget from each 20-minute
presentation!
“Inspiring Our Newest Students: The Role of the Library in the First
Year Experience” rounded out day 1 of the conference. Many ideas were
shared by the presenters, as well as via the audience. Some ideas we already
have in place (such as the ever-popular fortune cookies), but many more we
could explore. Lack of staffing is our biggest hurdle to implementing some of
the great ideas shared at this session. Reference to the University of
Minnesota study about the impact of library use on GPA and retention was made
throughout the presentation.
While assessment was discussed in some of the sessions I
attended on Thursday, Friday morning brought me to my first assessment-focused
session: “Creating a Culture of Assessment: Determinants of Success.” Not that we need another committee, but the
idea of having an “Information Literacy Council” with representatives from
around the campus appealed to me. As noted earlier, IL isn’t a Library-focused
topic, but rather a college one, and more stakeholders should be intimately involved
in the discussion about how to incorporate, assess, etc., IL competencies
throughout the curriculum.
The three tools highlighted in “Methods Behind the Instructional
Madness: Assessing and Enhancing Learning Through Portfolios, Mapping, and
Rubrics” provided options for librarians conducting assessment. This
presentation fostered many great ideas for better utilization of our IL rubric!
I will definitely spend some time
reviewing this presentation.
Due to the tremendous number and variety of sessions, I only
attended one roundtable at the conference and it was about “Teaching Summon: The Impact of
Discovery Services on Library Instruction.” The moderator provided a
selected bibliography to refer back to, and the discussion was a lively one
with some at the table already using a discovery tool while others saw it on
the horizon. One of the positives shared
by the moderator was that not having to teach the individual mechanics of each
database allowed for the librarian to talk about the content of results
relatively quickly (i.e., source evaluation, scholarly vs. popular, etc.). There seemed to be consensus at the table
that upper division students continued to need targeted instruction on
subject-specific databases, and that a discovery tool wouldn’t always suffice
for discipline research.
The second set of contributed papers I attended was “How is This Different From Critical
Thinking?: The Risks and Rewards of Deepening Faculty Involvement in an Information
Literacy Rubric,” Becoming an Assessment Leader: Collaborating for Campus Wide
Information Literacy Assessment,” and “Just-in-Time Instruction, Regular
Reflection, and Integrated Assessment: A Sustainable Model for Student Growth.”
Each group spoke for 20 minutes, and provided lots of “food for thought” as we continue
to tackle a campus-wide IL initiative.
Poster sessions
were interspersed throughout Thursday and Friday. The depth and breadth of the
poster sessions was truly amazing. There is so much research being done in
libraries throughout the country; it is inspiring. I have many handouts and links I need to go
back and explore!
“The Flipped Classroom in the Library: Integrating Formal and Informal
Learning Spaces” kicked off my Saturday morning. Much talk about the
need for the Library to be a partner and collaborate with other entities on
campus was interspersed throughout the presentation. The focus was on space
utilization more so than library instruction, but the endeavor brought an active
learning space into the libraries at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Apparently I saved the best for last, as the final session I
attended was my favorite: “Building an Instruction Arsenal: Using
Standardized Elements to Streamline Class Planning and Ease Student Learning
Assessment Across the Curriculum.” This one hit home as it aligns with
what we are working to implement with our library instruction sessions. Their
work in scaffolding and establishing student learning outcomes parallels our intentions
here. Whew! Nice to hear about their
success and see we’re on a good track!
The conference ended with Keynote Speaker Maria Hinojosa who was inspiring through her
passion, her stories, and her work. She has a great message about humanity and reminded
us to “see each other.”
Next ACRL Conference is scheduled for March 25-28, 2015, in Portland,
Oregon...hope to be there!
1 comment:
Looks like a great conference that you attended in Indianapolis with such timely topics like flipped classrooms. You will probably be able to use ideas from the last session for your instruction at SMSU! Thanks for sharing.
Marcia
Post a Comment