Guiding Students from Consuming Information to Creating Knowledge: A Freshman English Library Instruction Collaboration

In this paper we examine how faculty and librarians' own approaches to and attitudes toward library tools, as well as their assumptions about student research practices, impede students' ability to view learning as a recursive, creative, and ongoing inquiry. We propose first that librarian...

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Main Authors: Carolyn B. Gamtso, Susanne F. Paterson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Communications in Information Literacy 2012-01-01
Series:Communications in Information Literacy
Online Access:http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/22457
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spelling doaj-aef42becc3e640eea78637a5894a7a8c2020-11-24T23:51:08ZengCommunications in Information LiteracyCommunications in Information Literacy1933-59541933-59542012-01-015211712610.15760/comminfolit.2012.5.2.107Guiding Students from Consuming Information to Creating Knowledge: A Freshman English Library Instruction CollaborationCarolyn B. Gamtso0Susanne F. Paterson1University of New Hampshire at ManchesterUniversity of New Hampshire at ManchesterIn this paper we examine how faculty and librarians' own approaches to and attitudes toward library tools, as well as their assumptions about student research practices, impede students' ability to view learning as a recursive, creative, and ongoing inquiry. We propose first that librarians and faculty examine the assumptions of knowledge that characterize their respective university constituencies; second that they dismantle some of the disciplinary boundaries that separate these constituencies; third that they collaborate to craft analytical assignments that stress knowledge as process; and fourth that they transform library instruction from tool-based demonstrations to analytical, problem-based learning exercises. Finally, we describe how we have collaborated to craft a Freshman Composition library instruction session that moves beyond developing students' information-gathering expertise by focusing on the development of transferable knowledge and critical thinking skills.http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/22457
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carolyn B. Gamtso
Susanne F. Paterson
spellingShingle Carolyn B. Gamtso
Susanne F. Paterson
Guiding Students from Consuming Information to Creating Knowledge: A Freshman English Library Instruction Collaboration
Communications in Information Literacy
author_facet Carolyn B. Gamtso
Susanne F. Paterson
author_sort Carolyn B. Gamtso
title Guiding Students from Consuming Information to Creating Knowledge: A Freshman English Library Instruction Collaboration
title_short Guiding Students from Consuming Information to Creating Knowledge: A Freshman English Library Instruction Collaboration
title_full Guiding Students from Consuming Information to Creating Knowledge: A Freshman English Library Instruction Collaboration
title_fullStr Guiding Students from Consuming Information to Creating Knowledge: A Freshman English Library Instruction Collaboration
title_full_unstemmed Guiding Students from Consuming Information to Creating Knowledge: A Freshman English Library Instruction Collaboration
title_sort guiding students from consuming information to creating knowledge: a freshman english library instruction collaboration
publisher Communications in Information Literacy
series Communications in Information Literacy
issn 1933-5954
1933-5954
publishDate 2012-01-01
description In this paper we examine how faculty and librarians' own approaches to and attitudes toward library tools, as well as their assumptions about student research practices, impede students' ability to view learning as a recursive, creative, and ongoing inquiry. We propose first that librarians and faculty examine the assumptions of knowledge that characterize their respective university constituencies; second that they dismantle some of the disciplinary boundaries that separate these constituencies; third that they collaborate to craft analytical assignments that stress knowledge as process; and fourth that they transform library instruction from tool-based demonstrations to analytical, problem-based learning exercises. Finally, we describe how we have collaborated to craft a Freshman Composition library instruction session that moves beyond developing students' information-gathering expertise by focusing on the development of transferable knowledge and critical thinking skills.
url http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/22457
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AT susannefpaterson guidingstudentsfromconsuminginformationtocreatingknowledgeafreshmanenglishlibraryinstructioncollaboration
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