Promising Practices in Instruction of Discovery Tools
Libraries are continually changing to meet the needs of users; this includes implementing discovery tools, also referred to as web-scale discovery tools, to make searching library resources easier. Because these tools are so new, it is difficult to establish definitive best practices for teaching th...
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Communications in Information Literacy
2013-01-01
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doaj-405196d67e5f485296e83aa83f8f533e2020-11-24T21:51:53ZengCommunications in Information LiteracyCommunications in Information Literacy1933-59541933-59542013-01-0171668010.15760/comminfolit.2013.7.1.135Promising Practices in Instruction of Discovery ToolsStefanie Buck0Christina Steffy1Oregon State UniversityJoseph F. McCloskey School of Nursing at Schuylkill HealthLibraries are continually changing to meet the needs of users; this includes implementing discovery tools, also referred to as web-scale discovery tools, to make searching library resources easier. Because these tools are so new, it is difficult to establish definitive best practices for teaching these tools; however, promising practices are emerging. A promising practice is "a program, activity, or strategy" that shows early promise for being effective in the long term and generalizable across institutions (Dare Mighty Things, n.d.). The researchers used three methods to develop a list of promising practices for teaching discovery tools— a review of the current literature on the tools, a survey for practicing instruction librarians, and interviews with teaching librarians. More research and assessment is needed to determine whether these promising practices are in fact best practices for teaching discovery tools.http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/22428 |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Stefanie Buck Christina Steffy |
spellingShingle |
Stefanie Buck Christina Steffy Promising Practices in Instruction of Discovery Tools Communications in Information Literacy |
author_facet |
Stefanie Buck Christina Steffy |
author_sort |
Stefanie Buck |
title |
Promising Practices in Instruction of Discovery Tools |
title_short |
Promising Practices in Instruction of Discovery Tools |
title_full |
Promising Practices in Instruction of Discovery Tools |
title_fullStr |
Promising Practices in Instruction of Discovery Tools |
title_full_unstemmed |
Promising Practices in Instruction of Discovery Tools |
title_sort |
promising practices in instruction of discovery tools |
publisher |
Communications in Information Literacy |
series |
Communications in Information Literacy |
issn |
1933-5954 1933-5954 |
publishDate |
2013-01-01 |
description |
Libraries are continually changing to meet the needs of users; this includes implementing discovery tools, also referred to as web-scale discovery tools, to make searching library resources easier. Because these tools are so new, it is difficult to establish definitive best practices for teaching these tools; however, promising practices are emerging. A promising practice is "a program, activity, or strategy" that shows early promise for being effective in the long term and generalizable across institutions (Dare Mighty Things, n.d.). The researchers used three methods to develop a list of promising practices for teaching discovery tools— a review of the current literature on the tools, a survey for practicing instruction librarians, and interviews with teaching librarians. More research and assessment is needed to determine whether these promising practices are in fact best practices for teaching discovery tools. |
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http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/22428 |
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