The Librarian's Guide to Teaching

Amanda Piekart

This podcast is hosted by two instruction librarians that are interested in sharing their experiences teaching information literacy, discussing current trends, and having meaningful conversations about librarianship.

  1. 07/07/2021

    Assessment Round Up

    In this episode, Amanda and Jessica do a roundup of unique, versatile and effective assessments that we’ve recently read about that can be applied in the information literacy classroom. Resources referenced in this episode: Episode 2: Assessment - Are we asking the right questions? Episode 7 - Critical Digital Pedagogy Episode 25 - Formative Assessment with Mary-Michelle Moore Melissa Wong & Laura Saunders, “Instruction in Libraries and Information Centers” (2021) SILC Ed Tech Showcase: Google Forms by Danielle Apfelbaum (SUNY Farmingdale) (08/13/2020) Making Customizable Interactive Tutorials with Google Forms by Meredith Farkas by Meredith Farkas (11/5/2020) WHITEBOARD (But Make It Virtual) Using Google Jamboard to Promote Interactivity by Carrie Baldwin-SoRelle, DOLS Virtual Poster Session 2021 “Your Research Plan” by Giselle Burns, Kian Ravaei, Xinyi(Alex) Yan Contributors: Janet Goins, Kelly Kistner, Chris Lopez, Tama Hasson, Renee Romero, Doug Worsham Attributions: CIMER (Center for the Improvement of Mentored Experiences in Research), UCLA Undergraduate Research Center - Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, UCLA Undergraduate Research Center - Sciences, ACRL Framework for Information Literacy Sandbox Critical Library Pedagogy Handbook, Volume Two: Lesson Plans by Nicole Pagowsky and Kelly McElroy Algorithms Lesson Plans Collaborative Document ACRL 2021 Conference: Publicly Available Presentation Links This episode's theme music: Srivastav, A. (2013). Merry Go Round [Audio file]. Retrieved from https://soundcloud.com/909-music/arnav-srivastav-merry-go Here's where you can find us: Podcast: @Librarian_Guide Jessica: @LibraryGeek611 Amanda: @HistoryBuff820 Email: InfoLitTeachingPodcast@gmail.com Be sure to rate and subscribe wherever you listen to the podcast!

    30min
  2. 26/05/2021

    Journalism Instruction

    Show Notes: In this episode, Amanda and Jessica talk to librarians April Hines, Katherine Boss and Megan Heuer about their version of the ACRL Framework focused towards the journalism discipline that’s based on research with practicing journalists and students. Resources referenced in this episode: “Reporting in the “Post-Truth” Era: Uncovering The Research Behaviors of Journalism Students, Practitioners, and Faculty” by Katherine E. Boss, Kristina M. De Voe, Stacy R. Gilbert, Carolina Hernandez, Megan Heuer, April Hines, Jeffrey A. Knapp, Rayla E. Tokarz, Chimene E. Tucker and Kristina E. Williams IFLA Fake News & Its Impact on Society, Lecture 3: Research & AI Learning Methods (Guest presentation on their paper starts at 31 minute mark) Framework for Information Literacy in Journalism for Higher Education A new way of looking at trust in media: Do Americans share journalism’s core values? - American Press Institute The Next Big Idea Podcast: Episode: HUMOR: How to Turn Levity Into Your Secret Weapon "Hitting the service ceiling: the prohibitive cost of professional development in academic librarianship (and why we aren’t presenting at ACRL 2021)" This episode's theme music: Srivastav, A. (2013). Merry Go Round [Audio file]. Retrieved from https://soundcloud.com/909-music/arnav-srivastav-merry-go Here's where you can find us: Podcast: @Librarian_Guide Jessica: @LibraryGeek611 Amanda: @HistoryBuff820 Email: InfoLitTeachingPodcast@gmail.com Be sure to rate and subscribe wherever you listen to the podcast!

    44min

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Sobre

This podcast is hosted by two instruction librarians that are interested in sharing their experiences teaching information literacy, discussing current trends, and having meaningful conversations about librarianship.