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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joseph, Margaret A., Dabbs, Julia K.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1986
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED298964
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author Joseph, Margaret A.
Dabbs, Julia K.
author_facet Joseph, Margaret A.
Dabbs, Julia K.
Joseph, Margaret A.
Dabbs, Julia K.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Effective Library Assignments. Joseph, Margaret A. Dabbs, Julia K. Assignments College Faculty College Libraries College Students Course Integrated Library Instruction Higher Education Library Skills Research Papers (Students) Student Research Arguing that the primary means of integrating the library with classroom instruction is the library assignment or research paper, this paper takes a practical look at what constitutes an effective library assignment. It begins by debunking various misconceptions about the library and students' library skills which tend to undermine library assignments from the start. Some typical ineffective library assignments are then examined and improvements are suggested. These include deliberately giving students "impossible" assignments, referring an entire class to a single article without placing it on reserve, or assigning students trivial questions to answer as evidence of their library research. Finally, some ways of making library assignments an integral and stimulating part of students' undergraduate experience are suggested. Generally, it is suggested that effective library assignments are best developed using real problem-solving assignments rather than concocting artificial ones, and involving the librarian in the development--and possibly the presentation--of the assignment. (3 bibliographic notes/references) (EW)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED298964
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1986
record_format eric
spellingShingle Effective Library Assignments.
Joseph, Margaret A.
Dabbs, Julia K.
Assignments
College Faculty
College Libraries
College Students
Course Integrated Library Instruction
Higher Education
Library Skills
Research Papers (Students)
Student Research
Effective Library Assignments. Joseph, Margaret A. Dabbs, Julia K. Assignments College Faculty College Libraries College Students Course Integrated Library Instruction Higher Education Library Skills Research Papers (Students) Student Research Arguing that the primary means of integrating the library with classroom instruction is the library assignment or research paper, this paper takes a practical look at what constitutes an effective library assignment. It begins by debunking various misconceptions about the library and students' library skills which tend to undermine library assignments from the start. Some typical ineffective library assignments are then examined and improvements are suggested. These include deliberately giving students "impossible" assignments, referring an entire class to a single article without placing it on reserve, or assigning students trivial questions to answer as evidence of their library research. Finally, some ways of making library assignments an integral and stimulating part of students' undergraduate experience are suggested. Generally, it is suggested that effective library assignments are best developed using real problem-solving assignments rather than concocting artificial ones, and involving the librarian in the development--and possibly the presentation--of the assignment. (3 bibliographic notes/references) (EW)
title Effective Library Assignments.
topic Assignments
College Faculty
College Libraries
College Students
Course Integrated Library Instruction
Higher Education
Library Skills
Research Papers (Students)
Student Research
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED298964