For immediate release | April 22, 2014
Putting the 'pop' in information literacy
91´«Ã½
CHICAGO — 91´«Ã½ Editions announces a new facilitated eCourse . Dawn Stahura and Erin Milanese will serve as instructors for a five-week facilitated eCourse starting on Monday, July 7, 2014.
In this course, Dawn Stahura and Erin Milanese will offer you two tools that can make it easy to liven up your instructional sessions—popular culture and assessment. Learn how to incorporate pop culture into your instruction—through your weekly assignments, you’ll build a fully defined, one-shot instructional session using a popular-culture theme. Along the way, you’ll learn about how you can effectively assess your instruction by engaging with students to discover your strengths and weaknesses.
eCourse outline
Week 1: Introductions, Assumptions We are Making and the Problem We are Facing
Objectives:
- To define information literacy instruction and active learning
- To identify typical problems in library instruction
Week 2: Solutions! Bringing Pop Culture Themes into Information Literacy
Objectives:
- To introduce various pop culture themes and how they can be used in library instruction
- To assess a past session and identify how it could be improved
Week 3: Scenario 1—Database Instruction
Objectives:
- To describe typical problems in database instruction and pop culture solutions
- To create ways to present database instruction
Week 4: Scenario 2—Evaluation and Citing Sources
Objectives:
- To introduce various methods of evaluation instruction
- To create your own evaluation lesson based on a pop-culture theme
Week 5: Assessing Your Sessions and Course Conclusion
Objectives:
- To describe how pop-culture themes can carry into session assessment
- To construct an assessment tool for use in a future class
About the Instructors
Dawn Stahura is a research services librarian at Simmons College, specializing in Africana Studies, Sociology, Education, Psychology, and Women and Gender Studies. She has taught information literacy courses using the premise of a zombie apocalypse to engage students in the material. She currently teaches one-shot instructional sessions. Stahura recently co-authored the article “Teaching with Zombies: Bringing Information Literacy Back from the Dead,” which appeared in the July issue of C&RL News.
Erin Milanese is the educational and emerging technologies librarian at Goshen College and works with students and faculty on incorporating technology, such as iPads and the Moodle LMS, into the college curriculum. She has taught information literacy courses in online, face-to-face, and blended formats, and co-authored the article “Teaching with Zombies: Bringing Information Literacy Back from the Dead.”
Registration for this 91´«Ã½ Editions facilitated eCourse, which begins on July 7, can be purchased at the . Participants in this course will need regular access to a computer with an internet connection for online message board participation, viewing online video, listening to streaming audio (MP3 files), and downloading and viewing PDF and PowerPoint files.
publishes resources used worldwide by tens of thousands of library and information professionals to improve programs, build on best practices, develop leadership, and for personal professional development. 91´«Ã½ authors and developers are leaders in their fields, and their content is published in a growing range of print and electronic formats. Contact 91´«Ã½ Editions at (800) 545-2433 ext. 5418 or editionscoursehelp@ala.org.
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Contact:
Dan Freeman
eLearning Manager
91´«Ã½ Publishing
91´«Ã½ Publishing
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