CCLI: California library instruction conference

CCLI 2019 – Reimagining Student Success: Approaches that Increase Participation, Representation, and Relevance

http://www.cclibinstruction.org/2019-conference/2019-conference-program/

Fabulous Keynote:
curiosity compassion communication 

Melanie Chu – Lake Tahoe CC  (HER SLIDES)

Critical information literacy and museum visitor studies = participatory learning in the library’s shared spaces. Using museum engagement techniques, librarians can better support the experience, engagement, and assessment of student learning in creative, effective, and nontraditional ways.

  • Context library  series – instructional art exhibit integrated into the  curriculum in the library lobby by local artist, low budget,  by librarian and student workers
  • Museum studies framework- personal, sociocultural, physical
  • Falk and Dierking’s  Contextual Model of learning
  • personal context – constructivist theory, individual role in their learning
    • EX: wounded Hearts exhibit, hearts students could add to the clothesline;
    • they digitized the exhibit heats and put in their IR!)
  • sociocultural context – role for social interactions and experiences in ones learning process;
  • social cognition
    • EX: patterned heritage exhibit – like a game board road map where students add to and create;
    • EX: invisible project photos of homelessness – with large post its on the wall where student can write answers to questions ending with a panal discussion about resources locally
  • physical context – role of library as as learning laboratory;
  • situated learning
    • EX:  enlisting a nation display about WW1 propaganda, students worked through the exhibit reacting and responding to it, creating their own new knowledge from that
  • Other exhibit examples with students:
    •  more than a fence (de) constructing mexico US borders. created by introduction to sculpture class. using a recycled piece of chain linked fence the interactive part was students could add messages, notes, memories on to the fence to create a personal context to them.
    • student created poster session exhibit:  Beyond the Stereotype, a social justice initiative to stop cultural appropriation (posters of students ripping up posters of these stereotypes; there was a call to pledge to civility and diversity on a butcher paper roll on the wall … this produced a lot of conversation on paper white students not understanding (wow); they used Conversations that Matter (Hashtag) virtually through the hashtag and then an in person conversation facilitated by a professor and then captured in storify. (THESE POSTERS ARE CC and FREELY AVAILABLE TO USE)
    •  The Uterus Flag Project
  • Tools that can be used to engage:

SESSION – replace scavenger hunts with Problem Based Learning (PBL)
bit.ly/pbl-lib-instruction

small group discussion on scavenger hunts – sometimes good for tours, or for INTO folks; what is the real need or  goal for scavenger hunts?

– want new students to feel welcome
– want them to know about our spaces and services

these are good things! but apply problem based learning and use in a one shot, orientation, first year writing class, etc  HOW — groups, directions, scenarios, tools, teach others.

PBL from 1970s (Barrow) – student centered, small groups, teaching guide, student demos

why PBL good?

  • self directed learning
    centered in student experiences
    build  problem solving skills in research and inquiry
    students are teachers
    focus on the students strengths!
    relevant – cultural competences
    what is the students goal for success – it may not be yours!
    always have them do a so what? question at the end

see CORA – community of online research assignments https://www.projectcora.org/ 

EX: 2 websites an NRA site give a gun take a gun but its a .org (share the safety.ogr)| greatness site that is for runners that quotes PubMed but has lots of ads and its a .com — showing its not as easy as .org vs .com

LIGHTNING ROUNDS

Data Literacy as a flipped on shot -(Mary-Michelle Moore, UCSB)
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1oWb6pGt8f7UPatMgzCOEVyzvso2sPzn0Xw-r1jNX-G8/edit#slide=id.g58fe40c26f_0_156

ZInes (paige Sundstrom/UCSB)  

  • “Wins Opportunities and Thoughts”
  • Zine in instruction class
  • 4 sources, any type; list of source reflection questions (why did you choose this/what did you learn – via text to images
  • reflection
  • do it again? a group zine

Students at the Center of the Studio: Peer learning, Collaborations, and Service Design
By Beth and Jane 🙂 
A PDF of our slide are here

 

 

Presenting at CCLI!

Presenting at CCLI!

Gleeson Library

Gleeson Library

University of San Francisco

University of San Francisco

** PHOTOS of the Gleeson Library and CSUMB are here!

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