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Autore principale: De Hart, Florence E.
Natura: Recurso educativo Open Access
Lingua:en
Pubblicazione: 1974
Soggetti:
Accesso online:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED098995
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author De Hart, Florence E.
author_facet De Hart, Florence E.
De Hart, Florence E.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Library-College Concept: For the Want of a Horse Shoe Nail. De Hart, Florence E. College Libraries Higher Education Independent Study Individual Instruction Learning Resources Centers Librarians Library Education Library Material Selection Library Role Library Services The library college concept is a teaching method which differs from traditional methods in that librarians and faculty work more closely together in carrying out course objectives and tend toward a convergence in role or a symbiotic relationship. In the spring of 1967 an upperclass course in library materials was taught using this method at a small university. The course plan included brief lectures, assignment of a research project, talks by library staff members, conferences with librarians, presentation of class reports, and open-book tests. Small difficulties and inconveniences, mostly arising from the lack of time and other resources, threatened the successful implementation of the library college concept, but the concept was found to be promising with respect to increasing student involvement and enthusiasm. It was concluded that librarians will begin to play their role in implementing the library college concept when they become aware of the efforts on the part of the faculty in this regard, and that implementation of the concept will reveal so much basic worth that its eventual theoretical development will pose no problem. (Author/PF)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED098995
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1974
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Library-College Concept: For the Want of a Horse Shoe Nail.
De Hart, Florence E.
College Libraries
Higher Education
Independent Study
Individual Instruction
Learning Resources Centers
Librarians
Library Education
Library Material Selection
Library Role
Library Services
The Library-College Concept: For the Want of a Horse Shoe Nail. De Hart, Florence E. College Libraries Higher Education Independent Study Individual Instruction Learning Resources Centers Librarians Library Education Library Material Selection Library Role Library Services The library college concept is a teaching method which differs from traditional methods in that librarians and faculty work more closely together in carrying out course objectives and tend toward a convergence in role or a symbiotic relationship. In the spring of 1967 an upperclass course in library materials was taught using this method at a small university. The course plan included brief lectures, assignment of a research project, talks by library staff members, conferences with librarians, presentation of class reports, and open-book tests. Small difficulties and inconveniences, mostly arising from the lack of time and other resources, threatened the successful implementation of the library college concept, but the concept was found to be promising with respect to increasing student involvement and enthusiasm. It was concluded that librarians will begin to play their role in implementing the library college concept when they become aware of the efforts on the part of the faculty in this regard, and that implementation of the concept will reveal so much basic worth that its eventual theoretical development will pose no problem. (Author/PF)
title The Library-College Concept: For the Want of a Horse Shoe Nail.
topic College Libraries
Higher Education
Independent Study
Individual Instruction
Learning Resources Centers
Librarians
Library Education
Library Material Selection
Library Role
Library Services
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED098995