Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment Design

Assignment design provides a potential niche for librarians to fill in improving research assignments and in providing opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration on teaching, but this can be difficult work to claim as librarians. In the 2016-2017 academic year, a team of three librarians at U...

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Main Authors: Rachel Wishkoski, Kacy Lundstrom, Erin Davis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Communications in Information Literacy 2018-01-01
Series:Communications in Information Literacy
Online Access:https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/27562
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spelling doaj-219a4e9235074b38a62eb45e062d25b62020-11-24T21:59:12ZengCommunications in Information LiteracyCommunications in Information Literacy1933-59541933-59542018-01-0112216619210.15760/comminfolit.2018.12.2.7Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment DesignRachel Wishkoski0Kacy Lundstrom1Erin Davis2Utah State UniversityUtah State UniversityUtah State UniversityAssignment design provides a potential niche for librarians to fill in improving research assignments and in providing opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration on teaching, but this can be difficult work to claim as librarians. In the 2016-2017 academic year, a team of three librarians at Utah State University, a mid-size research university, piloted an assignment design workshop for faculty. Based on a model developed by the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA), our workshop’s core component was a structured, librarian-facilitated small group discussion among three to four faculty members from a range of academic departments. Interdisciplinary conversation about teaching research skills thrived in these discussions (called “charrettes”), with librarians uniquely positioned to encourage knowledge sharing in service of student learning and success. This article presents three iterations of our workshops as a case study in information literacy intervention outside traditional classroom instruction sessions, extending and redefining the role of the academic librarian as a partner in teaching and learning.https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/27562
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rachel Wishkoski
Kacy Lundstrom
Erin Davis
spellingShingle Rachel Wishkoski
Kacy Lundstrom
Erin Davis
Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment Design
Communications in Information Literacy
author_facet Rachel Wishkoski
Kacy Lundstrom
Erin Davis
author_sort Rachel Wishkoski
title Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment Design
title_short Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment Design
title_full Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment Design
title_fullStr Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment Design
title_full_unstemmed Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment Design
title_sort librarians in the lead: a case for interdisciplinary faculty collaboration on assignment design
publisher Communications in Information Literacy
series Communications in Information Literacy
issn 1933-5954
1933-5954
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Assignment design provides a potential niche for librarians to fill in improving research assignments and in providing opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration on teaching, but this can be difficult work to claim as librarians. In the 2016-2017 academic year, a team of three librarians at Utah State University, a mid-size research university, piloted an assignment design workshop for faculty. Based on a model developed by the National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA), our workshop’s core component was a structured, librarian-facilitated small group discussion among three to four faculty members from a range of academic departments. Interdisciplinary conversation about teaching research skills thrived in these discussions (called “charrettes”), with librarians uniquely positioned to encourage knowledge sharing in service of student learning and success. This article presents three iterations of our workshops as a case study in information literacy intervention outside traditional classroom instruction sessions, extending and redefining the role of the academic librarian as a partner in teaching and learning.
url https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/27562
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