I completely missed the European AllDigital week, which was last week. However, there is a website with some resources, so you many still find it interesting even though the events are past. There is a Stay at home digital toolkit, with some useful links related to digital and media literacy https://alldigitalweek.eu/stay-home-digital-toolkit/ and also a resource list with some links to sources of training, teaching ideas etc. https://alldigitalweek.eu/useful-tools/
Home page is https://alldigitalweek.eu/events/
Photo by Sheila Webber, taken at the VWBPE conference, in Second Life, March 2020.
Pages
▼
Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Monday, March 30, 2020
Webinar: Killer Commands for Effective Information Retrieval
Experienced search expert Karen Blakeman will be presenting a webinar Killer Commands for Effective Information Retrieval at 12.30 UK time on 22 April 2020. It is organised by UKeiG, the UK e-information Group. It is free to all UKeiG and CILIP members. It costs £25 to others.
"The increasing use of AI by the search engines does not always generate better results. This presentation will look at the key commands that are needed to improve relevance, what is still available in the major search tools, and how to use the commands for more effective information retrieval."
To book your place, go to: https://www.cilip.org.uk/events/EventDetails.aspx?id=1345147&group=201314
Photo by Sheila Webber: Cherry Branches, March 2020
"The increasing use of AI by the search engines does not always generate better results. This presentation will look at the key commands that are needed to improve relevance, what is still available in the major search tools, and how to use the commands for more effective information retrieval."
To book your place, go to: https://www.cilip.org.uk/events/EventDetails.aspx?id=1345147&group=201314
Photo by Sheila Webber: Cherry Branches, March 2020
Saturday, March 28, 2020
Effective Professional Development #VWBPE
Another liveblog from the Vitual Worlds Best Practices in Education conference taking place in the 3D VW, Second Life. Becky Adams, University of New Mexico (Elli Pinion in Second Life) talked about You Don’t Have To Go To Space for Effective PD! [Professional Development]. After an introduction, she described her research about professional development for school teachers, which had helped them develop the principles for PD in the photo below. They ran a part-time course, and researched the teachers' perceptions of its impact. The data they collected consisted of interviews, focus groups, reflective journals kept by the teachers and VLE logs.
The results were positive: "There was a significant change in attitude about PD “I find online professional development to be socially engaging,” and “I believe this learning opportunity has affected my classroom” and they reported they spent more time than they had anticipated." The course sounded well-designed, and the students were sharing their experiences and ideas, and trying things out in their work as they went along. Important was that "the PD was meaningful to them, and had continuity; It was convenient, they could do it around their schedules and responsibilities". Having an engaged leader who set the agenda as regards "timing, responsibilities, deadlines and motivation for follow through" was important to the teachers.
Adams also talked about setting up a Community of Practice approach in her university, to develop their ability to teach online. The effective approach was inviting people personally to talk about their experience on a specific theme for 5 minutes. This brought people along and they sometimes brought a friend. She also talked about how they got faculty to engage with a rubric for online courses, by instituting an award for Online Course Best Practices which counted in their yearly evaluations.
Adams identified the key principles for PD on the slide I've posted above, and said how they'd applied them to a course about teaching online: the course was online; "It happened over time [6 weeks], so they could reflect and revisit concepts"; it was interactive; "we had them build their first few modules as they took the class, so they applied what they were learning"; it was meaningful because they were applying what they learned at once; there was just one synchrnous session, so they could plan the learning conveniently to them and they had a tutor who led the class and modeled online teaching.
The recording of her talk is here: https://youtu.be/KenWuuVO5rY
The results were positive: "There was a significant change in attitude about PD “I find online professional development to be socially engaging,” and “I believe this learning opportunity has affected my classroom” and they reported they spent more time than they had anticipated." The course sounded well-designed, and the students were sharing their experiences and ideas, and trying things out in their work as they went along. Important was that "the PD was meaningful to them, and had continuity; It was convenient, they could do it around their schedules and responsibilities". Having an engaged leader who set the agenda as regards "timing, responsibilities, deadlines and motivation for follow through" was important to the teachers.
Adams also talked about setting up a Community of Practice approach in her university, to develop their ability to teach online. The effective approach was inviting people personally to talk about their experience on a specific theme for 5 minutes. This brought people along and they sometimes brought a friend. She also talked about how they got faculty to engage with a rubric for online courses, by instituting an award for Online Course Best Practices which counted in their yearly evaluations.
Adams identified the key principles for PD on the slide I've posted above, and said how they'd applied them to a course about teaching online: the course was online; "It happened over time [6 weeks], so they could reflect and revisit concepts"; it was interactive; "we had them build their first few modules as they took the class, so they applied what they were learning"; it was meaningful because they were applying what they learned at once; there was just one synchrnous session, so they could plan the learning conveniently to them and they had a tutor who led the class and modeled online teaching.
The recording of her talk is here: https://youtu.be/KenWuuVO5rY
Friday, March 27, 2020
#VWBPE - education & civic engagement; virtual conferences and social responsibility
I'm currently attending a conference that's going ahead exactly as scheduled - the Virtual Worlds Best Practices in Education conference, taking place in 3D virtual worlds, particularly Second Life. It's free: participants need to create an avatar and download the Second Life browser (as it doesn't use an ordinary web browser. The conference venues are space-themed (in a virtual world you can fly and defy gravity!) and the first picture is of the main auditorium.
However, you can also watch many of the sessions by following the links from here: https://www.vwbpe.org/watch It continues tomorrow.
This is the 13th VWBPE. I don't usually liveblog it, since it is about education rather than information literacy, but under the current circumstances I would blog a couple of sessions today and tomorrow.The 2nd, appropriately, is on virtual conferences,
Firstly, though, today's keynote was from Professor Michael Thomas, Liverpool John Moores University on Virtual Worlds and Social Justice: An Impact and Civic Engagement Agenda. His abstract is here. The recording is embedded below. Thomas wanted to make us to become more aware of critical and historical perspectives on learning technologies. He identified some of the issues in higher education, such as marketisation and causalisation, that have had an impact on the online learning agenda.
Thomas highlighted the Guinevere and Camelot projects (on language learning in virtual worlds) as focusing on pedagogies and teachers (rather than technology). He cited Stephen Bax as positioning online educators as difficultators, which encourages educators to take a critiquing approach, rather than accepting that education has become a "product". The current crisis (with educators suddenly forced to go online) can be seen a an opportunity to reflect as well as to act. We can question things we have taken for granted (e.g. travelling to work) and look at education through lenses such as sustainability and inclusivity.
Thomas talked about the current requirement for "social distancing" which means physical social distancing. Those in tertiary education could be said to already practice social distancing, in being removed from civic engagement: when they are engaged, there is often a focus on economic benefits. He also mentioned a recent call for papers on virtual worlds and impact which had disappointingly few proposals to do with civic impact. Thomas referred to the discussion around MOOCs, which had initially been talked up as a way of reaching less advantaged people, but the statistics showed MOOCs were used extensively by those with existing qualifications etc. The way in which computers have been used in classrooms has also been critiqued, as have generalisations about "digital natives" who, in fact, vary in their economic and social ability to participate in the digital.
He quoted Jody Greene as saying " Teaching center staff who have been shouting into the wind about the benefits of learning communities can’t help but smile as the entire collegiate instructional workforce scrambles to find the nearest Hangout or Zoom teaching happy hour.”
Now that a lot of resistence to online working has, in the current crisis, been swept away, it is important to look at the implications for pedagogy, and develop pedagogy critically. He referred to Higgins et al.s' (2012) metanalayis which reveals what is familiar to me from other systematic or insightful research i.e. that the "success" of online teaching and learning is not a matter of receipes but depends on the nature of teachers, learners, context and pedagogy.
Thomas referenced Giroux in warning against having online learning appropriated by a neoliberalist agenda. He felt that there were signs of hope e.g. suggesting that ranking universities in terms of how they meet the UN's Sustainable Development Goals. Thomas challenged delegates to reflect on virtual worlds education in relation to civic engagement and sustainable development. He further posed teh questions "Given the recent embrace of ‘online learning’, how will (VW) education change as a result? Will it revert to what it was before? (students and teachers may perceive the recent online turn as a failure). Or will it be changed by the experience?" His talked was followed by a lively discussion in text chat and voice.
Linda Wylie, with her talk Virtual conferences and social responsibility, was addressing the issue of face to face conferences and social responsibility, and in particular talked about the Virtual International Day of the Midwife, a virtual conference she is involved with.
She started by talking about the various studies that have revealed the carbon footprint of universities in terms of international travel. Wylie felt that, yes, this was socially irresponsible and inequitable. She, like the previous speaker, identified that the current situation may be changing people's minds about virtaul working and conferencing. However there may be "professional fear" of virtual working that persists despite this, including in her own area, the health sector.
Wylie mentioned lack of social interaction and networking being seen as barriers to virtual interaction, but she pointed out that this interaction does not always happen at face to face conferences either. There was agreement from those in the audience that virtual conferences can also provide opportunities to get to know people (particularly in 3D worlds where you can express your personality via your avatar). Wylie emphasised that virtual conferences can reduce the carbon footprint, although f2f conferences themselves could be made more sustainable (e.g. more regional conferences, streaming in remote presenters, thinking about the sustainability of refreshments, accompanying virtual communities, having less swag - though the library world isn't exactly heavy on swag, I think the healthcare one may still be).
Wylie then went on to talk about the Virtual International Day of the Midwife online conference. The event is a 24 hour event (on 5 May 2020), so it is celebrated worldwide, with a simple approach so that it is accessible to those with low tech. It includes a student stream. They use BigBlueButton as a platform and support novice online presenters - Wylie stressed how this can still be scarey for people who aren't used to it.
The link to her talk is here https://youtu.be/sg2mNRSpsIA
However, you can also watch many of the sessions by following the links from here: https://www.vwbpe.org/watch It continues tomorrow.
This is the 13th VWBPE. I don't usually liveblog it, since it is about education rather than information literacy, but under the current circumstances I would blog a couple of sessions today and tomorrow.The 2nd, appropriately, is on virtual conferences,
Firstly, though, today's keynote was from Professor Michael Thomas, Liverpool John Moores University on Virtual Worlds and Social Justice: An Impact and Civic Engagement Agenda. His abstract is here. The recording is embedded below. Thomas wanted to make us to become more aware of critical and historical perspectives on learning technologies. He identified some of the issues in higher education, such as marketisation and causalisation, that have had an impact on the online learning agenda.
Thomas highlighted the Guinevere and Camelot projects (on language learning in virtual worlds) as focusing on pedagogies and teachers (rather than technology). He cited Stephen Bax as positioning online educators as difficultators, which encourages educators to take a critiquing approach, rather than accepting that education has become a "product". The current crisis (with educators suddenly forced to go online) can be seen a an opportunity to reflect as well as to act. We can question things we have taken for granted (e.g. travelling to work) and look at education through lenses such as sustainability and inclusivity.
Thomas talked about the current requirement for "social distancing" which means physical social distancing. Those in tertiary education could be said to already practice social distancing, in being removed from civic engagement: when they are engaged, there is often a focus on economic benefits. He also mentioned a recent call for papers on virtual worlds and impact which had disappointingly few proposals to do with civic impact. Thomas referred to the discussion around MOOCs, which had initially been talked up as a way of reaching less advantaged people, but the statistics showed MOOCs were used extensively by those with existing qualifications etc. The way in which computers have been used in classrooms has also been critiqued, as have generalisations about "digital natives" who, in fact, vary in their economic and social ability to participate in the digital.
He quoted Jody Greene as saying " Teaching center staff who have been shouting into the wind about the benefits of learning communities can’t help but smile as the entire collegiate instructional workforce scrambles to find the nearest Hangout or Zoom teaching happy hour.”
Now that a lot of resistence to online working has, in the current crisis, been swept away, it is important to look at the implications for pedagogy, and develop pedagogy critically. He referred to Higgins et al.s' (2012) metanalayis which reveals what is familiar to me from other systematic or insightful research i.e. that the "success" of online teaching and learning is not a matter of receipes but depends on the nature of teachers, learners, context and pedagogy.
Thomas referenced Giroux in warning against having online learning appropriated by a neoliberalist agenda. He felt that there were signs of hope e.g. suggesting that ranking universities in terms of how they meet the UN's Sustainable Development Goals. Thomas challenged delegates to reflect on virtual worlds education in relation to civic engagement and sustainable development. He further posed teh questions "Given the recent embrace of ‘online learning’, how will (VW) education change as a result? Will it revert to what it was before? (students and teachers may perceive the recent online turn as a failure). Or will it be changed by the experience?" His talked was followed by a lively discussion in text chat and voice.
Linda Wylie, with her talk Virtual conferences and social responsibility, was addressing the issue of face to face conferences and social responsibility, and in particular talked about the Virtual International Day of the Midwife, a virtual conference she is involved with.
She started by talking about the various studies that have revealed the carbon footprint of universities in terms of international travel. Wylie felt that, yes, this was socially irresponsible and inequitable. She, like the previous speaker, identified that the current situation may be changing people's minds about virtaul working and conferencing. However there may be "professional fear" of virtual working that persists despite this, including in her own area, the health sector.
Wylie mentioned lack of social interaction and networking being seen as barriers to virtual interaction, but she pointed out that this interaction does not always happen at face to face conferences either. There was agreement from those in the audience that virtual conferences can also provide opportunities to get to know people (particularly in 3D worlds where you can express your personality via your avatar). Wylie emphasised that virtual conferences can reduce the carbon footprint, although f2f conferences themselves could be made more sustainable (e.g. more regional conferences, streaming in remote presenters, thinking about the sustainability of refreshments, accompanying virtual communities, having less swag - though the library world isn't exactly heavy on swag, I think the healthcare one may still be).
Wylie then went on to talk about the Virtual International Day of the Midwife online conference. The event is a 24 hour event (on 5 May 2020), so it is celebrated worldwide, with a simple approach so that it is accessible to those with low tech. It includes a student stream. They use BigBlueButton as a platform and support novice online presenters - Wylie stressed how this can still be scarey for people who aren't used to it.
The link to her talk is here https://youtu.be/sg2mNRSpsIA
New articles: Students friending lecturers; Gender equality; SEO and news media
Available in both Spanish and English, the open access journal Comunicar has published its latest issue, vol 63, no 2, 2020. It includes:
Ser o no ser amigos de los profesores en redes sociales: Las perspectivas de los estudiantes universitarios/ To-friend or not-to-friend with teachers on SNSs: University students' perspectives by Zeynep Turan, Erzurum (Turkey), Levent Durdu, Kocaeli (Turkey) & Yuksel Goktas, Erzurum (Turkey). https://doi.org/10.3916/C63-2020-08 "The most prominent finding is that the students were mostly opposed to their teachers’ sharing their political and religious views; however, they were in favour of teachers sharing information about their personal life. Despite some students displaying some hesitation, especially concerning the level of respect between them, the majority of students had a positive outlook towards teacher-student friendships. The students indicated that being friends on SNSs would increase their motivation towards the course."
SEO y cibermedios: De la empresa a las aulas/ SEO and the digital news media: From the workplace to the classroom by Carlos Lopezosa, Barcelona (Spain), Lluís Codina, Barcelona (España), Javier Díaz-Noci, Barcelona (Spain) & José-Antonio Ontalba, Valencia (Spain). https://doi.org/10.3916/C63-2020-06 "this study explores perceptions and applications of search engine optimization (SEO) in the online news media and identifies the future training needs of journalists in this sector."
Igualdad de género y TIC en contextos educativos formales: Una revisión sistemática/ Gender equality and ICT in the context of formal education: A systematic review by María-Paz Prendes-Espinosa, Murcia (Spain), Pedro-Antonio García-Tudela, Murcia (Spain) & Isabel-María Solano-Fernández, Murcia (Spain). https://doi.org/10.3916/C63-2020-01 "Among the main results, we highlight that most of the good practices in the different educational levels are related to the use of web 2.0. and STEM competences. Finally, we recommend the design of proposals that work on gender through ICTs, with the “smart classroom" as an interesting suggestion that is part of the emerging pedagogies."
Photo by Sheila Webber: a shy violet in the curb, March 2020
Ser o no ser amigos de los profesores en redes sociales: Las perspectivas de los estudiantes universitarios/ To-friend or not-to-friend with teachers on SNSs: University students' perspectives by Zeynep Turan, Erzurum (Turkey), Levent Durdu, Kocaeli (Turkey) & Yuksel Goktas, Erzurum (Turkey). https://doi.org/10.3916/C63-2020-08 "The most prominent finding is that the students were mostly opposed to their teachers’ sharing their political and religious views; however, they were in favour of teachers sharing information about their personal life. Despite some students displaying some hesitation, especially concerning the level of respect between them, the majority of students had a positive outlook towards teacher-student friendships. The students indicated that being friends on SNSs would increase their motivation towards the course."
SEO y cibermedios: De la empresa a las aulas/ SEO and the digital news media: From the workplace to the classroom by Carlos Lopezosa, Barcelona (Spain), Lluís Codina, Barcelona (España), Javier Díaz-Noci, Barcelona (Spain) & José-Antonio Ontalba, Valencia (Spain). https://doi.org/10.3916/C63-2020-06 "this study explores perceptions and applications of search engine optimization (SEO) in the online news media and identifies the future training needs of journalists in this sector."
Igualdad de género y TIC en contextos educativos formales: Una revisión sistemática/ Gender equality and ICT in the context of formal education: A systematic review by María-Paz Prendes-Espinosa, Murcia (Spain), Pedro-Antonio García-Tudela, Murcia (Spain) & Isabel-María Solano-Fernández, Murcia (Spain). https://doi.org/10.3916/C63-2020-01 "Among the main results, we highlight that most of the good practices in the different educational levels are related to the use of web 2.0. and STEM competences. Finally, we recommend the design of proposals that work on gender through ICTs, with the “smart classroom" as an interesting suggestion that is part of the emerging pedagogies."
Photo by Sheila Webber: a shy violet in the curb, March 2020
Thursday, March 26, 2020
Call for proposals: Wikipedia and Academic Libraries: A Global Project
There's a call for Proposals for an open access book project Wikipedia and Academic Libraries: A Global Project. The editors are Laurie M. Bridges, Raymond Pun and Roberto A. Arteaga, and the publisher will be Maize Books, an imprint of Michigan Publishing. Proposals are due by June 1 2020.
"This open access edited volume will be a collection of approximately 20 chapters authored by academic library workers and faculty, Library and Information Science (LIS) faculty, and disciplinary faculty from around the globe that highlights engagement with Wikimedia-related projects and activities. This volume will be divided into two sections, and possibly a third: The first section will include real-world examples of activities and approaches to working with Wikipedia. The second section will focus on the theories and underlying concepts required for the development of pedagogical approaches to teaching with and within Wikipedia. A third thematic section may be added, depending on the breadth and number of submissions, for example, a section related specifically to WikiData."
Suggested topics include: Case studies of Wikipedia in information literacy instruction; Student researchers in Wikipedia; The role of Wikimedians/Wikipedians in Residence;
Collaborating with university faculty in the classroom; Edit-a-thon pedagogy and practice; Critical Librarianship and Wikipedia; Wikipedia's fight against misinformation and "fake news"; Use of Wikibooks in classes; Wikidata visualizations for education; Addressing gaps in Wikipedia, such as gender, LGBTQ+, racial, linguistic, regional, etc.
The full call for proposals is here: https://sites.google.com/view/globalwikipedia/cfp
Photo by Sheila Webber: cherry blossom, March 2020
"This open access edited volume will be a collection of approximately 20 chapters authored by academic library workers and faculty, Library and Information Science (LIS) faculty, and disciplinary faculty from around the globe that highlights engagement with Wikimedia-related projects and activities. This volume will be divided into two sections, and possibly a third: The first section will include real-world examples of activities and approaches to working with Wikipedia. The second section will focus on the theories and underlying concepts required for the development of pedagogical approaches to teaching with and within Wikipedia. A third thematic section may be added, depending on the breadth and number of submissions, for example, a section related specifically to WikiData."
Suggested topics include: Case studies of Wikipedia in information literacy instruction; Student researchers in Wikipedia; The role of Wikimedians/Wikipedians in Residence;
Collaborating with university faculty in the classroom; Edit-a-thon pedagogy and practice; Critical Librarianship and Wikipedia; Wikipedia's fight against misinformation and "fake news"; Use of Wikibooks in classes; Wikidata visualizations for education; Addressing gaps in Wikipedia, such as gender, LGBTQ+, racial, linguistic, regional, etc.
The full call for proposals is here: https://sites.google.com/view/globalwikipedia/cfp
Photo by Sheila Webber: cherry blossom, March 2020
Wednesday, March 25, 2020
Virtual libraries, taking libraries online - tweet chat #uklibchat on April 6th
The next regular #uklibchat Twitter chat is on April 6th at 7pm UK time with the topic of Virtual libraries, taking libraries online. Just use the hashtag #uklibchat to chat.
Add your questions to the Virtual Libraries #uklibchat agenda at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lCl2PR81UiG3_T7VqnmsEXnNUVOTkcgy0QabYfywSTM/edit?usp=sharing
The starter post on the blog is here https://uklibchat.wordpress.com/2020/03/22/uklibchat-6th-april-virtual-libraries-taking-services-online/
Add your questions to the Virtual Libraries #uklibchat agenda at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lCl2PR81UiG3_T7VqnmsEXnNUVOTkcgy0QabYfywSTM/edit?usp=sharing
The starter post on the blog is here https://uklibchat.wordpress.com/2020/03/22/uklibchat-6th-april-virtual-libraries-taking-services-online/
Tuesday, March 24, 2020
Links for librarians working from home; Doing meetings online
The Australian library association, ALIA, has made the latest addition of its professional development newsletter, PD Postings free to everyone. It has links aimed at helping librarians work from home (links to resources, podcasts, advice, webinars etc.) https://mailchi.mp/98d1f017d5a1/pd-postings-special-2020#Working
One of the resources they highlight is the set of material from the UK's association, CILIP, on Doing webinars and online meetings https://www.cilip.org.uk/page/DoingWebinars
One of the resources they highlight is the set of material from the UK's association, CILIP, on Doing webinars and online meetings https://www.cilip.org.uk/page/DoingWebinars
Going beyond Google
Some people are posting material that would have been presented at conferences. Search expert Marydee Ojala was going to present at the Computers in Libraries conference is one of these. This is a short and informative article about search sources, mostly other than Google (e.g. the Chrome extension http://unpaywall.org/ for finding free versions of articles)
Ojala, M. (2020, March 17). Going beyond Google. Information Today. https://www.infotoday.eu/Articles/Editorial/Featured-Articles/Going-beyond-Google-139783.aspx
Photo by Sheila Webber: Charlton Park, last week
Ojala, M. (2020, March 17). Going beyond Google. Information Today. https://www.infotoday.eu/Articles/Editorial/Featured-Articles/Going-beyond-Google-139783.aspx
Photo by Sheila Webber: Charlton Park, last week
Monday, March 23, 2020
Webinar: Flip the deficit script! How to build strengths-based information literacy instruction and programs
On March 26 2020 at 1.30 US Eastern time (which is 5.30pm UK time) there is a free webinar Flip the deficit script! How to build strengths-based information literacy instruction and programs. "We have an exciting group of scholar-librarians addressing this question: What if we made students' life-research experiences the focus of curriculum design for information literacy? Panelists: Liz Kocevar-Weidinger, Head of Research & Instruction Services at Virginia Military Institute. Mark Lenker, Teaching and Learning Librarian at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Tatiana Pashkova-Balkenhol, Undergraduate Research and Instruction Librarian at Millersville University, PA. Emily Cox, Collections and Research Librarian for Humanities, Social Sciences, and Digital Media at NC State University. The panel will discuss strengths-based strategies they’ve developed and integrated into their learning environments. They’ll also present their findings about teaching research skills to students and the connections between students’ real world information-seeking experiences and academic research. " Register at https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/2198937898691860748?source=ACRL-cjcls
It is organised by Ithaka "a not-for-profit organization helping the academic community use digital technologies to preserve the scholarly record and to advance research and teaching in sustainable ways."
Photo by Sheila Webber: tulips, today
It is organised by Ithaka "a not-for-profit organization helping the academic community use digital technologies to preserve the scholarly record and to advance research and teaching in sustainable ways."
Photo by Sheila Webber: tulips, today
Saturday, March 21, 2020
Recordings of ACRL webcasts about moving information literacy education online #teachonline
There are free recordings of the webinars that ACRL (Association of College and Research Libraries) streamed last week. They are:
- Information Literacy Instruction at a (Social) Distance: Strategies for Moving Online (webcast on March 17) https://youtu.be/T9yRr4bl1OY
- Pandemic Pedagogy: Resources for Library Instruction at a Distance (webcast on March 18) https://youtu.be/gu8kyE2Q_Qc
- Copyright for Campus Closures: Exploring the Copyright Issues around Moving Instruction and Reference Online (webcast on March 20) https://youtu.be/zGPSbPHN824
Photo by Sheila Webber - Cherry blossom in Second Life, March 2020
- Information Literacy Instruction at a (Social) Distance: Strategies for Moving Online (webcast on March 17) https://youtu.be/T9yRr4bl1OY
- Pandemic Pedagogy: Resources for Library Instruction at a Distance (webcast on March 18) https://youtu.be/gu8kyE2Q_Qc
- Copyright for Campus Closures: Exploring the Copyright Issues around Moving Instruction and Reference Online (webcast on March 20) https://youtu.be/zGPSbPHN824
Photo by Sheila Webber - Cherry blossom in Second Life, March 2020
Friday, March 20, 2020
Tools, Strategies, and Pedagogy for Distance Learning - Tweetchat #teachonline
There is a special edition #DLFteach Twitter chat on Tools, Strategies, and Pedagogy for Distance Learning on March 25, at 2 p.m. USA Eastern time (which is e.g. 6pm UK time). DLF is the Digital Library Federation. "This #DLFteach Twitter chat is in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. In light of the global challenges that higher educational and cultural institutions are facing, we would like to have a conversation about best practices, methods, and opportunities to support our users and learners with using digital library technology and resources in distance learning. The aim is to support each other in brainstorming and sharing strategies & tools. Co-hosts are Sarah Moazeni (@sarahmoazeni) and Daria Hafner (@dhhafner). To join this conversation, follow and participate on Twitter using the #DLFteach hashtag. Chat questions will be tweeted from the @CLIRDLF handle.
Discussion questions are:
Q1: What opportunities or advantages has teaching online afforded you, your faculty, and your students?
Q2: What role do you think digital library technologies can and should play in a distance learning situation?
Q3: What digital library tools, resources, or platforms are you using to engage in distance learning? How are you using them?
Q4: How are you changing your support methods and channels for faculty and students using digital library tools in light of social distancing?
Q5: How might your learning outcomes change when teaching students about digital library collections and technologies when learning occurs online, or asynchronously?"
Archives of their tweet chats are available afterwards on their wiki: https://wiki.diglib.org/Pedagogy:Outreach:Twitter
Thanks to Esther Grassian for the alert
Photo by Sheila Webber: memories of the strike, view from the cafe I used to go to after being on the picket line (in the days before social distancing).
Discussion questions are:
Q1: What opportunities or advantages has teaching online afforded you, your faculty, and your students?
Q2: What role do you think digital library technologies can and should play in a distance learning situation?
Q3: What digital library tools, resources, or platforms are you using to engage in distance learning? How are you using them?
Q4: How are you changing your support methods and channels for faculty and students using digital library tools in light of social distancing?
Q5: How might your learning outcomes change when teaching students about digital library collections and technologies when learning occurs online, or asynchronously?"
Archives of their tweet chats are available afterwards on their wiki: https://wiki.diglib.org/Pedagogy:Outreach:Twitter
Thanks to Esther Grassian for the alert
Photo by Sheila Webber: memories of the strike, view from the cafe I used to go to after being on the picket line (in the days before social distancing).
Thursday, March 19, 2020
Information Literacy education at a distance & Covid-19 resources
This post highlights a resource-sharing initiative and a blog about resources. As you may gather, I'm focusing on making posts related to the issues around the current crisis. I have been physically relocating myself, but when I am sorted out I intend to do some blogs with perspectives of my own.
Firstly, the Californian association for information literacy, LILi, has set up a page for sharing resources about teaching IL online. "Inspired by CCC COVID-19 Website Google Doc, Lifelong Information Literacy (LILi) created this blog post to collect online instruction information from all libraries in California. Please share in the form or comment below for discussions. The LILi Web Committee will summarize important information and resources in this blog as the situation evolves." This is at https://lili.libguides.com/lion/COVID-19
Secondly, on the Information Literacy Group's website there's a blog post COVID-19: seeking reliable information in difficult times by David Bedford, Academic Support Librarian at the Hall Library, Universities at Medway, highlighting "key sources of reliable information" https://infolit.org.uk/covid-19-seeking-reliable-information-in-difficult-times/
Photo by Sheila Webber: forsythia, March 2020
Firstly, the Californian association for information literacy, LILi, has set up a page for sharing resources about teaching IL online. "Inspired by CCC COVID-19 Website Google Doc, Lifelong Information Literacy (LILi) created this blog post to collect online instruction information from all libraries in California. Please share in the form or comment below for discussions. The LILi Web Committee will summarize important information and resources in this blog as the situation evolves." This is at https://lili.libguides.com/lion/COVID-19
Secondly, on the Information Literacy Group's website there's a blog post COVID-19: seeking reliable information in difficult times by David Bedford, Academic Support Librarian at the Hall Library, Universities at Medway, highlighting "key sources of reliable information" https://infolit.org.uk/covid-19-seeking-reliable-information-in-difficult-times/
Photo by Sheila Webber: forsythia, March 2020
Webinar today 19 March: Yes, You Can! Tips for Moving Online at Short Notice
This webinar organised by ALISE (US library educators association) is today (March 19) at 2pm US Eastern time (which is, e.g., 6pm UK time - time differences from the US are 1 hour different from usual at the moment in many countries). Yes, You Can! Tips for Moving Online at Short Notice is presented by Laura Saunders, Associate Professor at Simmons University SLIS and Melissa A. Wong, Instructor in the School of Information Sciences at the University at Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. "Even for veteran online teachers, moving a face-to-face course to an online format with only a week or two notice is daunting, but it can be done. In this workshop, seasoned online instructors will share ideas for getting your course up and running quickly, including: • Taking stock, re-purposing existing materials, and deciding on formats (synchronous vs asynchronous); • Keeping students engaged; • Reviewing best practices for both synchronous and asynchronous sessions; • Planning for flexibility for you and your students" Go to https://www.alise.org/index.php?option=com_jevents&task=icalrepeat.detail&evid=40&Itemid=201&year=2020&month=03&day=19&title=alise-webinar--yes-you-can-tips-for-moving-online-at-short-notice&uid=8430276c39447e8d76f3f340116af2d8
Wednesday, March 18, 2020
Webinar - Relay Online Live Training Session - 18th March
Another webinar - not specifically about IL teaching, but teaching online generally. The Relay Online Live Training Session is on 18th March at 12:00 PM – 1:30 PM US Eastern time (so would start e.g. at 4pm in the UK). "If you have never taught an online class, you may feel a little anxious or uneasy about how to get started. The Relay GSE Online Instruction Team has created a live training designed to provide you with the tools and resources you need to teach an effective and engaging online class. In this session you will learn how to: Translate your best classroom practices to the online environment; Build community in online classes; Deliver online instruction for active learning and student engagement" Facilitators: Alice Waldron , Relay Online Dean and Ava Fenelus, Relay Online Assistant Dean. Go to https://www.eventbrite.com/e/relay-online-live-training-session-tickets-99705882980 to register
Photo by Sheila Webber: Cherry blossom, March 2020
Photo by Sheila Webber: Cherry blossom, March 2020
Tuesday, March 17, 2020
Webinar TODAY - Moving Library Instruction Online
ACRL is presenting a webinar on Moving Library Instruction Online, at 3pm USA Central time today (17th March). I think it is free and open. The time difference USA/rest of the world is a bit different at the moment, since the US has gone to summertime and many countries haven't yet, so 3pm Central is, for example 8pm in the UK. Check the time where you are, here https://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/fixedtime.html?iso=20200317T15&p1=64 .
Description: "Is your campus closing due to COVID-19? Join Melissa Wong for a crash course in moving your library instruction online. Melissa will address options for both synchronous and asynchronous instruction, discuss how to engage students in active learning while online, and provide a short list of best practices."
To register go to https://ala-events.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_3N3bEvzfSzChUMePBkq5Eg
Photo by Sheila Webber: spring springs regardless, Sheffield, March 2020.
Description: "Is your campus closing due to COVID-19? Join Melissa Wong for a crash course in moving your library instruction online. Melissa will address options for both synchronous and asynchronous instruction, discuss how to engage students in active learning while online, and provide a short list of best practices."
To register go to https://ala-events.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_3N3bEvzfSzChUMePBkq5Eg
Photo by Sheila Webber: spring springs regardless, Sheffield, March 2020.
Monday, March 16, 2020
Recent articles: health information sharing and behaviour - students, older people, Zika virus
The latest issue of Information Research, vol 25 no 1, has been published. It celebrates 25 years of this open access scholarly publication - congratulations to its founder Professor Tom Wilson! Articles include:
- Research data sharing during the Zika virus public health emergency by Vanessa de Arruda Jorge and Sarita Albagli
- Sharing is caring: the everyday informal exchange of health information among adults aged fifty and over by Martijn Huisman, Daniël Biltereyst and Stijn Joye
- Personal health information management by college students: patterns of inaction by Sujin Kim, Donghee Sinn and Sue Yeon Syn
- How Middle Eastern students in the USA use their social networks for medication information: a mixed methods study by Esra S. Abdoh
- College students' sexual health information needs and source preferences in relation to worry about sexual health outcomes by Snježana Stanarević Katavić, Ivana Martinović and Sung Un Kim
- Co-experience on Twitter: a study of information technology professionals by Bazilah A. Talip and Bhuva Narayan
- Dynamic aspects of relevance: differences in users' relevance criteria between selecting and viewing videos during leisure searches by Sarah Albassam and Ian Ruthven
Go to http://informationr.net/ir/25-1/infres251.html
Photo by Sheila Webber: the wreath in the photo I used in January eventually dropped off the cherry tree to get neatly caught on this post. Also appropriate for the 25th (silver) anniversary of the journal
- Research data sharing during the Zika virus public health emergency by Vanessa de Arruda Jorge and Sarita Albagli
- Sharing is caring: the everyday informal exchange of health information among adults aged fifty and over by Martijn Huisman, Daniël Biltereyst and Stijn Joye
- Personal health information management by college students: patterns of inaction by Sujin Kim, Donghee Sinn and Sue Yeon Syn
- How Middle Eastern students in the USA use their social networks for medication information: a mixed methods study by Esra S. Abdoh
- College students' sexual health information needs and source preferences in relation to worry about sexual health outcomes by Snježana Stanarević Katavić, Ivana Martinović and Sung Un Kim
- Co-experience on Twitter: a study of information technology professionals by Bazilah A. Talip and Bhuva Narayan
- Dynamic aspects of relevance: differences in users' relevance criteria between selecting and viewing videos during leisure searches by Sarah Albassam and Ian Ruthven
Go to http://informationr.net/ir/25-1/infres251.html
Photo by Sheila Webber: the wreath in the photo I used in January eventually dropped off the cherry tree to get neatly caught on this post. Also appropriate for the 25th (silver) anniversary of the journal
Sunday, March 15, 2020
Postponement of the key information literacy conferences #LILAC20 and @WILUConference
Both the UK's LILAC 2020 conference (due to take place in April) and Canada's 2020 WILU conference (due to take place in May) have been postponed to 2021. Those already registered for LILAC can get refunds or be able to defer their bookings to 2021. WILU have announced that the 2021 conference will be located in the same venue as the planned 2020 one, i.e. Halifax, Canada.
Wednesday, March 11, 2020
Call for participants - Characteristics of Programs of Information Literacy that Illustrate Best Practices
The ACRL Instruction Section Information Literacy Best Practices Committee and the ACRL First Year Experience Discussion Group seek participants for a webinar on the Characteristics of Programs of Information Literacy that Illustrate Best Practices, due to take place on April 28 at 2pm US Eastern time, which is e.g. 7pm UK time. The deadline for proposals is March 16, 2020. Characteristics of Programs of Information Literacy that Illustrate Best Practices: A Guideline is at http://www.ala.org/acrl/standards/characteristics
"Does your information literacy program embody one (or more) of these seven characteristics in your first-year instruction? If so, we’d like to hear from you! Each panelist will have ten minutes to discuss their first-year information literacy program and how it aligns with the characteristics, including practical and concrete examples. Programs can include both credit-bearing courses and distributed (non-credit bearing) library instruction. Librarians from outside of the United States, community or junior colleges, or historically black colleges and universities are especially encouraged to participate" If you want to participate, email Hailley Fargo at hailley.fargo@gmail.com by March 16.
"Does your information literacy program embody one (or more) of these seven characteristics in your first-year instruction? If so, we’d like to hear from you! Each panelist will have ten minutes to discuss their first-year information literacy program and how it aligns with the characteristics, including practical and concrete examples. Programs can include both credit-bearing courses and distributed (non-credit bearing) library instruction. Librarians from outside of the United States, community or junior colleges, or historically black colleges and universities are especially encouraged to participate" If you want to participate, email Hailley Fargo at hailley.fargo@gmail.com by March 16.
Tuesday, March 10, 2020
Webinar: Personalised video instruction: A novel approach to online information literacy
There is a free one-hour webinar on 17 March 2020 at 4pm UK time (which is, e.g., 12 noon US Eastern time): Personalised video instruction: A novel approach to online information literacy. It is organised by Robert Gordon University's OneHE Mindsets. "Personalised video instruction is tailored to the individual student's information literacy need and has been successfully used by a liaison librarian in a university with a growing, global online learning population. Replacing traditional face-to-face, one-on-one bibliographic instruction reference appointments with personalized videos has been met favorably by the students and has been found by the liaison librarian to be less time-consuming than scheduling appointments. The background and methodological framework of the approach will be discussed as well as a step-by-step overview of the process. Preliminary data and analysis of video usage and engagement will be shared." The presenter is Emily Kean, Associate Librarian at the Donald C. Harrison Health Sciences Library at the University of Cincinnati (UC) in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.
To register, go to https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/personalised-video-instruction-a-novel-approach-to-online-information-literacy-tickets-97437308613
Photo by Sheila Webber: Crocuses, Botanic Gardens, Sheffield, March 2020
To register, go to https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/personalised-video-instruction-a-novel-approach-to-online-information-literacy-tickets-97437308613
Photo by Sheila Webber: Crocuses, Botanic Gardens, Sheffield, March 2020
Monday, March 09, 2020
Recent articles: Undergraduates; Narrative inquiry; Ebooks
New articles from the March issue (vol 81 no 2) of open access College and Research Libraries include:
- Information Literacy’s Influence on Undergraduates’ Learning and Development: Results from a Large Multi-institutional Study by Kevin Fosnacht
- Tell Me Your Story: Narrative Inquiry in LIS Research by Emily Ford
- Undesirable Difficulties: Investigating Barriers to Students’ Learning with Ebooks in a Semester-length Course by Cindy Pierard, Vanessa Svihla, Susanne K. Clement, Bing-Shan Fazio
- Innovating Support for Research: The Coalescence of Scholarly Communication? by Heather Moulaison Sandy, A.J. Million, Cynthia Hudson-Vitale
Table of contents https://crl.acrl.org/index.php/crl/issue/view/1575/showToc
Photo by Sheila Webber: treat after picket duty, March 2020
- Information Literacy’s Influence on Undergraduates’ Learning and Development: Results from a Large Multi-institutional Study by Kevin Fosnacht
- Tell Me Your Story: Narrative Inquiry in LIS Research by Emily Ford
- Undesirable Difficulties: Investigating Barriers to Students’ Learning with Ebooks in a Semester-length Course by Cindy Pierard, Vanessa Svihla, Susanne K. Clement, Bing-Shan Fazio
- Innovating Support for Research: The Coalescence of Scholarly Communication? by Heather Moulaison Sandy, A.J. Million, Cynthia Hudson-Vitale
Table of contents https://crl.acrl.org/index.php/crl/issue/view/1575/showToc
Photo by Sheila Webber: treat after picket duty, March 2020
Sunday, March 08, 2020
Enhancing Teaching and Learning in Irish Academic Libraries: Stories of Professional Artistry
I missed a free online book that was published in March 2019: Enhancing Teaching and Learning in Irish Academic Libraries: Stories of Professional Artistry, available at http://l2l.ie/publications-2/
It was a key output from the Irish Library Staff Learning to Support Learners (L2L) project "a two year project being funded by the National Forum through its Teaching and Learning Enhancement Fund (https://www.teachingandlearning.ie/) looking at the Professional Development Framework for all Staff who Teach in Higher Education through the lens of Library staff to see if it meets our professional development needs."
Photo by Sheila Webber: daffodils, March 2020
It was a key output from the Irish Library Staff Learning to Support Learners (L2L) project "a two year project being funded by the National Forum through its Teaching and Learning Enhancement Fund (https://www.teachingandlearning.ie/) looking at the Professional Development Framework for all Staff who Teach in Higher Education through the lens of Library staff to see if it meets our professional development needs."
Photo by Sheila Webber: daffodils, March 2020
Friday, March 06, 2020
Call for proposals: International Visual Literacy Association conference @VisualLiteracyA
Proposal are invited for the 52nd Annual Conference of the International Visual Literacy Association (IVLA), which runs September 24 to 27, 2020, in Toledo, Ohio, USA. The conference theme is Seeing Across Disciplines: Visual Literacy and Education. "The conference will bring together different theoretical viewpoints and practices on visual literacy, joining scholars, students, and practitioners from all over the world in an interesting exchange of ideas. The conference is open to contributions on new theoretical insights, media, innovative practices, and methodologies on assessment and evaluation. .... Paper presentations (20 mins), round tables, panel sessions (40 mins), poster sessions and Pecha Kucha (7 minutes) are invited." The deadline is 1 April 2020.
"The IVLA will award several IVLA conference scholarships in 2020 to enable students who lack financial support to have an opportunity to attend the conference. The IVLA will select applicants who are enrolled at a college or university. Individual scholarships will include IVLA membership for two years. Please note that awarded amounts my vary significantly based upon the travel needs of applicants. One of the awards is reserved for a student from a traditionally under-represented group."
The call for papers is at https://ivla.org/conference/call-for-proposals/
The application form for the scholarships is at https://ivla.org/conference/student-scholarship/
Photo taken by Sheila Webber in the 3D virtual world, Second Life, 2019
"The IVLA will award several IVLA conference scholarships in 2020 to enable students who lack financial support to have an opportunity to attend the conference. The IVLA will select applicants who are enrolled at a college or university. Individual scholarships will include IVLA membership for two years. Please note that awarded amounts my vary significantly based upon the travel needs of applicants. One of the awards is reserved for a student from a traditionally under-represented group."
The call for papers is at https://ivla.org/conference/call-for-proposals/
The application form for the scholarships is at https://ivla.org/conference/student-scholarship/
Photo taken by Sheila Webber in the 3D virtual world, Second Life, 2019
Thursday, March 05, 2020
#Worldbookday
Today (5th March) was "World" Book day in the UK and Ireland - the website with resources and ideas is at https://www.worldbookday.com/
World Book Day elsewhere in the world is on 23 April https://www.un.org/en/events/bookday/
World Book Day elsewhere in the world is on 23 April https://www.un.org/en/events/bookday/
Wednesday, March 04, 2020
Call for proposals: IFLA session: role of information literacy in fostering transition #wlic2020
There is a call from the IFLA Information Literacy Section and the School Libraries Section for the open session to be held during IFLA WLIC in Dublin, Ireland on 15-21 August, 2020, on the theme: Perspectives on the role of information literacy education in fostering a smooth transition throughout a learner’s formal education journey - from PK to 20 and beyond. Proposal abstracts must be submitted by 2 April 2020. "How are librarians building partnership within and beyond their home institutions to smooth a learner’s information literacy education journey from one place to another? At a macro level, information literacy education happens at all stages from PK to 20 and beyond. This panel will discuss how public, academic, and school libraries work together to empower learners on their information literacy skills through curriculum-based information literacy education. We are particularly interested in proposals that explore the following issues:"
- frameworks of concrete skills including inquiry process and IL skills enabling a smooth transition within and from formal education possible"
- collaborations between librarians (public, school, academic) and their institutions"
- collaborations between various libraries in teaching IL"
- transitions from primary to secondary school, ideally from the perspective of primary and secondary"
- transitions from secondary school out of formal education (i.e., transitions to life outside of school)"
- transition from secondary school to university"
- teaching of IL skills in the 'In-between' places such as workforce-to-college, college-to-workforce, grade-to-grade transition, and beyond"
More information at https://2020.ifla.org/cfp-calls/information-literacy-joint-with-school-libraries/
- frameworks of concrete skills including inquiry process and IL skills enabling a smooth transition within and from formal education possible"
- collaborations between librarians (public, school, academic) and their institutions"
- collaborations between various libraries in teaching IL"
- transitions from primary to secondary school, ideally from the perspective of primary and secondary"
- transitions from secondary school out of formal education (i.e., transitions to life outside of school)"
- transition from secondary school to university"
- teaching of IL skills in the 'In-between' places such as workforce-to-college, college-to-workforce, grade-to-grade transition, and beyond"
More information at https://2020.ifla.org/cfp-calls/information-literacy-joint-with-school-libraries/
Tuesday, March 03, 2020
Registration open for #WILU2020
WILU 2020 (the Canadian Information Literacy conference) will be hosted by Dalhousie University, Mount Saint Vincent University, and Saint Mary’s University in Halifax, Canada, on May 27 to 29, 2020. It has the theme Visions of the future. Registration is now open. Keynote speakers are Kim Brooks and Veronica Arellano Douglas. There are 3 preconference workshops on 27 May. More information at https://wilu-conference.github.io/
Monday, March 02, 2020
Critical Approaches to Libraries Conference #CALC2020
The programme is now available for the The Critical Approaches to Libraries Conference (CALC) taking place on May 13 2020 in Coventry, UK. You can find the programme at http://calc.coventry.domains/8-2/conference-program/
You can register at https://www.eventsforce.net/cu/frontend/reg/tSelectBookingMode.csp?pageID=1760501&eventID=6711&tempPersonID=1982468 - it costs £50
There are 5 bursary places (travel + conference fee) to CALC for library workers from marginalised and/or underrepresented groups. The form is here https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=mqsYS2U3vkqsfA4NOYr9T1-Xj0VHddpAksfnnSp5SoxUOUY2VEI2Q0JBQUY3RE9CSTVJSFEwNVNERS4u
You can register at https://www.eventsforce.net/cu/frontend/reg/tSelectBookingMode.csp?pageID=1760501&eventID=6711&tempPersonID=1982468 - it costs £50
There are 5 bursary places (travel + conference fee) to CALC for library workers from marginalised and/or underrepresented groups. The form is here https://forms.office.com/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=mqsYS2U3vkqsfA4NOYr9T1-Xj0VHddpAksfnnSp5SoxUOUY2VEI2Q0JBQUY3RE9CSTVJSFEwNVNERS4u