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Enhancing teaching and learning in the 21st-century academic library : successful innovations that make a difference / Edited by Bradford Lee Eden.

Contributor(s): Eden, Bradford Lee [editor.].
Series: Creating the 21st-century academic library ; 2.Lanham, Maryland, USA : Rowman & Littlefield, ©2015Description: xi, 214 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.Content type: text. ISBN: 9781442247031 (cloth : alk. paper); 9781442247055 (pbk. : alk. paper).Subject(s): Academic libraries -- Effect of technological innovations on | Academic libraries -- Information technology | Academic librarians -- Effect of technological innovations on | Education, Higher -- Effect of technological innovations on | Educational innovationsDDC classification: 027.7/En39 Other classification: COED
Contents:
Open access for student success / Teri Oaks Gallaway and James B. Hobbs -- The library-bookstore revisited / James Lund -- Librarians and MOOCs / Loren Turner and Jennifer Wondracek -- Trends in medical library instruction and training : a survey study / Antonio DeRosa and Marisol Hernandez -- Using digital badges to enhance research instruction in academic libraries / Susan David deMaine, Catherine A. Lemmer, Benjamin J. Keele, and Hannah Alcasid -- The librarian and the media producer : creating an audio-archive based on a unique collection / Helen Fallon and Anne O'Brien -- York College Library's school media specialist : a new library model for easing the transition from high school to college / Christina Miller and John Drobnicki -- Unleashing the power of the iPad / Michelle Currier and Mike Magilligan -- Training library staff with badges and gamification / Cyndi Harbeson and Scott Rice -- Gamification and librarianship: a new DART-Europe ready to roll / Diana Parlic, Adam Sofronijevic, and Mladen Cudanov -- Creating connective library spaces: a librarian-student collaboration model / Alexander Watkins and Rebecca Kuglitsch -- Merging Web 2.0 and social media into information literacy instruction / Rachel Wexelbaum and Plamen Miltenoff -- Library instruction in the age of constructivism : engaging students with active learning technologies / Anthony Holderied and Michael C. Alewine.
Summary: Libraries of all types have undergone significant developments in the last few decades. The rate of change in the academic library, a presence for decades, has been increasing this century. It is no exaggeration to claim that it is undergoing a top-to-bottom redefinition. The second volume of the series, Enhancing Teaching and Learning in the 21st-century Academic Library: Successful Innovations That Make a Difference, explores the initiatives in student learning and training that are underway in our academic libraries. The 13 chapters range from librarians redesigning the space in the library to assume control of the campus bookstore to implementing a MOOC, where the problems of providing material to potentially thousands of students taking an online course must somehow overcome copyright restrictions. One chapter describes how the iPad has become the chosen delivery mechanism for a rich array of resources that finally begin to reflect the educational potential of the digital world. Another chapter shows how a collaboration creates an audio archive to enrich the experiences of patrons and raise the visibility of the special collections unit on campus. Gamification plays a role in two chapters and active learning is featured in another that employs the technologies of interactive whiteboards, clickers, and wireless slates. These approaches, employing new technologies and terminology, signal that we have begun a new era in the definition and design of the academic library. We can't expect the redefined academic library to assume its final shape any time soon, if ever, but the transformation is well underway.
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General Reference Section
COED 027.7/En39 (Browse shelf) Available 84045

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Open access for student success / Teri Oaks Gallaway and James B. Hobbs -- The library-bookstore revisited / James Lund -- Librarians and MOOCs / Loren Turner and Jennifer Wondracek -- Trends in medical library instruction and training : a survey study / Antonio DeRosa and Marisol Hernandez -- Using digital badges to enhance research instruction in academic libraries / Susan David deMaine, Catherine A. Lemmer, Benjamin J. Keele, and Hannah Alcasid -- The librarian and the media producer : creating an audio-archive based on a unique collection / Helen Fallon and Anne O'Brien -- York College Library's school media specialist : a new library model for easing the transition from high school to college / Christina Miller and John Drobnicki -- Unleashing the power of the iPad / Michelle Currier and Mike Magilligan -- Training library staff with badges and gamification / Cyndi Harbeson and Scott Rice -- Gamification and librarianship: a new DART-Europe ready to roll / Diana Parlic, Adam Sofronijevic, and Mladen Cudanov -- Creating connective library spaces: a librarian-student collaboration model / Alexander Watkins and Rebecca Kuglitsch -- Merging Web 2.0 and social media into information literacy instruction / Rachel Wexelbaum and Plamen Miltenoff -- Library instruction in the age of constructivism : engaging students with active learning technologies / Anthony Holderied and Michael C. Alewine.

Libraries of all types have undergone significant developments in the last few decades. The rate of change in the academic library, a presence for decades, has been increasing this century. It is no exaggeration to claim that it is undergoing a top-to-bottom redefinition. The second volume of the series, Enhancing Teaching and Learning in the 21st-century Academic Library: Successful Innovations That Make a Difference, explores the initiatives in student learning and training that are underway in our academic libraries. The 13 chapters range from librarians redesigning the space in the library to assume control of the campus bookstore to implementing a MOOC, where the problems of providing material to potentially thousands of students taking an online course must somehow overcome copyright restrictions. One chapter describes how the iPad has become the chosen delivery mechanism for a rich array of resources that finally begin to reflect the educational potential of the digital world. Another chapter shows how a collaboration creates an audio archive to enrich the experiences of patrons and raise the visibility of the special collections unit on campus. Gamification plays a role in two chapters and active learning is featured in another that employs the technologies of interactive whiteboards, clickers, and wireless slates. These approaches, employing new technologies and terminology, signal that we have begun a new era in the definition and design of the academic library. We can't expect the redefined academic library to assume its final shape any time soon, if ever, but the transformation is well underway.

Text in English.

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