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One size fits all…. or does it? Anne-Marie Deitering, Instruction Services Coordinator Richenda Wilkinson, Reference and Instruction Librarian The Valley Library, Oregon State University Developing scalable information literacy instruction for high enrollment courses
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No one can become information- literate in a one-shot library session. Critical thinking is a skill. It is not enough to learn about it, students need to practice doing it. -- Breivik, 2000 -- van Gelder, 2005
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Large, multi-section courses Reach many students. Cross disciplinary boundaries. Have their own challenges: TA’s and adjuncts. Time and logistics. Variations between classes.
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Original WR 121 collaboration Library research assignments focused on introducing the physical library and basic types of resources. Face-to-face sessions rigidly scheduled. Librarians tried to teach every competency in the library sessions.
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Problems: Timing Busywork Lack of feedback Isolated from the curriculum Too much material Variation between sections
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Embed IL throughout the curriculum & share teaching with the TA’s
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New strategy: Assignments focus on students’ individual topics. Assignments emphasize student thinking & the research process. Face to face instruction provided when students are ready to learn.
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Shared goals are broken down into learning outcomes: Student-centered Learning-focused Based on visible behaviors Measurable
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Creating learning outcomes Follow CBC structure. Start with Action Verbs. Limit to one skill or concept. Specify measurable behaviors. Reflect different levels of student learning.
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Outcomes become activities -- WR 121 Research LOG 6 short assignments.6 short assignments Required by all TA’s. Evaluated by librarians. Worth 10% of the course grade.
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Face-to-face session: Reinforces earlier outcomes. Introduces four new outcomes. Addresses problems. Timed at point of need.
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Measuring student learning Outcomes-based assignment design has built-in assessment.built-in assessment Outcomes defined for the instruction session can be assessed with short exercises, quizzes, etc.
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Develop and revise content with feedback from all partners: Brown bag sessions Satisfaction surveys Email surveys Analyzed graded work
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Instructing the instructor: TA orientation session TA teaching seminar One-on-one meetings between librarian instructor and classroom instructor Brown bag discussion sessions
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What happened? We know more about our students (and sometimes wish we didn’t). Face-to-face instruction is more targeted and relevant. More consistency in the curriculum. Higher satisfaction.
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Unexpected results TA/ Librarian relationships Part time instructors Resource/ idea sharing
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What now for us? Add additional partners. Use in additional contexts. Never-ending tweaking.
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Requires an institutional commitment. Is more manageable when focused on learning outcomes. Requires ongoing attention to the details. To successfully collaborate with large courses:
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Questions? Slides and additional materials are available at: http://osulibrary.oregonstate.edu/staff/deiteringa/loex_2005.html
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