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Teaching Information Literacy Online Thomas P Mackey

Teaching Information Literacy Online By Thomas P Mackey

Teaching Information Literacy Online by Thomas P Mackey


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Summary

As online learning becomes increasingly popular and widespread, librarians and faculty need models for developing information literacy instruction in online environments. This book explores faculty-librarian partnerships for teaching information literacy online. It includes chapters that fuses pedagogical, disciplinary and technological issues.

Teaching Information Literacy Online Summary

Teaching Information Literacy Online by Thomas P Mackey

As online learning becomes increasingly popular and widespread, librarians and faculty need new models for developing information literacy instruction in online environments. In this new book, respected authors Thomas P. Mackey and Trudi E. Jacobson explore innovative faculty-librarian partnerships for teaching information literacy online.
All of the contributions to this edited volume are co-written by faculty-librarian teams, providing a global perspective from the UK's Open University and the University of Manchester, and from a number of US institutions including the University of Central Florida and Indiana State University. Each chapter fuses pedagogical, disciplinary and technological issues, and covers practical approaches to hybrid, blended, open and fully online courses and programs. A number of disciplines are represented at undergraduate and graduate levels, including Business and Accounting, Computer and Library Science, History, English, Women's Studies, Education and Social Work, as well as Curriculum Instruction and Media Studies.
To help readers replicate the models in this book, each chapter has an emphasis on program planning, best practices, potential challenges and effective assessment strategies for improving student learning. Author teams describe technology innovations using reusable learning objects, Web 2.0 tools, learning management systems, open wiki environments, online portals and the virtual world of Second Life.
Through a combination of research and valuable real-life success stories, this cutting-edge new resource will help faculty and librarians foster effective collaborations and provide students with positive online learning experiences.
Readership: Any librarian involved in teaching information literacy and LIS students, researchers and academics.

Teaching Information Literacy Online Reviews

Mackey and Jacobson have assembled a veritable bible on how to do it right by providing eight original models of IL best practices and successful online implementations.

-- Library Journal

Well written, the insights this book provides will stimulate educators and information literacy practitioners, perhaps leading them to reassess how they currently support research and teaching, and reinforce for them some of the key issues and challenges they are facing in terms of collaborative partnerships for online education. It will also resonate with those practitioners involved in flexible and innovative approaches to teaching information literacy, will generate fresh ideas, and might encourage information literacy educators to harness the opportunities and possibilities provided by an array of new technologies.

-- Journal of Information Literacy

The genuine collaborations between faculty and librarians described in each chapter are inspirational, as are the range of online courses that are described. As someone who believed they knew a reasonable amount about this topic, I found much new in this book. The further reading at the end of each chapter was impressive and has led to me exploring numerous avenues.

-- Program

About Thomas P Mackey

Thomas P. Mackey, PhD, is dean at the Center for Distance Learning at SUNY Empire State College in Saratoga Springs, New York. His teaching and research interests include metaliteracy, information literacy, blended, open, and online learning, and social media. He has co-developed a Metaliteracy MOOC with Trudi E. Jacobson and others, is a member of the editorial team for Open Praxis, the international scholarly journal about research and innovation in open, distance, and flexible education, and is a member of the SUNY Faculty Advisory Council on Teaching and Technology and the SUNY Learning Network Advisory Council. He is the co-editor, with Trudi E. Jacobson, of five books about faculty-librarian collaboration and the author of numerous research articles.
Trudi E. Jacobson, MLS, MA, is distinguished librarian and head of the Information Literacy Department at the University at Albany, SUNY, where she teaches undergraduate information literacy courses. Her interests include the use of critical thinking and active learning activities in the classroom, and she was the principal investigator for a recent SUNY Innovative Instruction Technology Grant that created the Metaliteracy Learning Collaborative. She is the co-author, with Lijuan Xu, of Motivating Students in Information Literacy Classes; co-editor, with Thomas P. Mackey, of five volumes that explore information literacy-related collaborations between faculty and librarians; and author of many published articles. She won the 2009 Association of College and Research Libraries Instruction Section's Miriam Dudley Instruction Librarian Award.

Table of Contents

Foreword - Terry Anderson
Preface

  • Trends in Online Learning
  • Information Literacy Online
  • Book Organization
  • Online Learning at Your Institution
  • Acknowledgments

PART I: BLENDED AND HYBRID LEARNING 1. Shakespeare Is Not a One-Shot Deal: An Open Wiki Model for the Humanities - John Venecek and Katheryn Giglio

  • Introduction
  • Recent Literature
  • Information Literacy at the University of Central Florida
  • Interdisciplinary Perspective
  • Collaboration in the Humanities
  • Project Overview
  • Program Planning
  • Learning Outcomes
  • Assessment of Online Learning
  • Text and Image
  • Conclusion

2. Reusable Learning Objects: Developing Online Information Literacy Instruction through Collaborative Design - Matthew C Sylvain, Kari Mofford, Elizabeth Lehr, and Jeannette E Riley

  • Introduction
  • Related Literature
  • Institutional Context
  • Interdisciplinary Context
  • Discussion of Faculty-Librarian Collaboration
  • Program Planning
  • Online Learning Model
  • Impact on Student Learning
  • Assessment of Online Learning
  • Conclusion

3. Framing Multiliteracies: A Blended and Holistic Approach to Digital Technology Education - Andrew Whitworth, Ian Fishwick, and Steve McIndoe

  • Introduction
  • Related Literature
  • The Institutional Context of the University of Manchester
  • Disciplinary Perspective
  • Discussion of Faculty and Librarian Collaboration
  • Program Planning
  • Online Learning Model
  • Impact on Student Learning
  • Assessment of Online Learning
  • Conclusion

4. Finding Your Fate: The Evolution of a Librarian-Faculty Collaboration to Bring History Online - Kristina DuRocher and Lisa Nichols

  • Introduction
  • Related Literature
  • Institutional Context at Morehead State University
  • Disciplinary and Interdisciplinary Perspective
  • Discussion of Faculty-Librarian Collaboration
  • Challenges of the Online Collaboration
  • Program Planning
  • Online Learning Model
  • Impact on Student Learning
  • Assessment of Online Learning
  • Conclusion

PART II: OPEN AND ONLINE LEARNING 5. Supported Open Learning: Developing an Integrated Information Literacy Strategy Online - Clarissa Gosling and Ingrid Nix

  • Introduction
  • Related Literature
  • Institutional Context
  • Disciplinary Perspective
  • Discussion of Faculty-Librarian Collaboration
  • Program Planning
  • Online Learning Model
  • Impact on Student Learning
  • Assessment of Online Learning
  • Conclusion

6. Information-Literate Avatars: Resource-Based Learning in Second Life - Jenna Kammer and Tracey Thompson

  • Introduction
  • Related Literature
  • Institutional Context
  • Interdisciplinary Perspective
  • Faculty-Librarian Collaboration
  • Project Planning
  • Resource-Based Learning in a Blended Environment
  • Impact on Student Learning
  • Assessment of Online Learning
  • Conclusion

7. Information Literacy by Design: Recalibrating Graduate Professional Asynchronous Online Programs - David Lavoie, Andrew Rosman, and Shikha Sharma

  • Introduction
  • Related Literature
  • Institutional Context
  • RELM: An Interdisciplinary Model for Instructional Design
  • Program Planning
  • Conceptual Underpinnings of RELM
  • Instructional Design Process Resulting from RELM
  • Librarian Role in Information Literacy
  • Impact on Student Learning: Example of Model Applied to Two Courses
  • Assessment of Online Learning
  • Conclusion

8. Working Outside the Org Chart: A Faculty-Librarian Partnership to Design an Online Graduate Course - Susan M. Frey and Rebecca L Fiedler

  • Introduction
  • Related Literature
  • Institutional Context at Indiana State University
  • Interdisciplinary Perspectives
  • Faculty-Librarian Collaboration
  • Course Planning and Online Learning Model
  • Assessment of Online Learning
  • Conclusion

Afterword

Additional information

GOR006602430
9781856047678
1856047679
Teaching Information Literacy Online by Thomas P Mackey
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Facet Publishing
20110224
226
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

Customer Reviews - Teaching Information Literacy Online