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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ana Roeschley, Amy Lanier, Merrion Dale Frederick, Kaitlin Siebert, Lauren Dentler, Lauren Alberque, Parisa Nasiripour, Crystal Tharayil, Caroline Fralia
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2026
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1501906
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author Ana Roeschley
Amy Lanier
Merrion Dale Frederick
Kaitlin Siebert
Lauren Dentler
Lauren Alberque
Parisa Nasiripour
Crystal Tharayil
Caroline Fralia
author_facet Ana Roeschley
Amy Lanier
Merrion Dale Frederick
Kaitlin Siebert
Lauren Dentler
Lauren Alberque
Parisa Nasiripour
Crystal Tharayil
Caroline Fralia
Ana Roeschley
Amy Lanier
Merrion Dale Frederick
Kaitlin Siebert
Lauren Dentler
Lauren Alberque
Parisa Nasiripour
Crystal Tharayil
Caroline Fralia
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents "We Were Working alongside with, Rather than for, a Professor": An Autoethnographic Reflection on Fostering Community and Research Skills through Project-Based Learning in Online LIS Education Ana Roeschley Amy Lanier Merrion Dale Frederick Kaitlin Siebert Lauren Dentler Lauren Alberque Parisa Nasiripour Crystal Tharayil Caroline Fralia Library Education Active Learning Student Projects Research Skills Sense of Community Online Courses Graduate Students Student Experience The rise of online library and information science (LIS) education has made advancement in the field more accessible to individuals who cannot take on the burdens of in-person graduate-school coursework. However, the online classroom environment also comes with challenges regarding communication and community-building for instructors and students. Furthermore, the expectations placed on LIS students continue to grow, with original research, in particular, becoming an increasingly important skill for new graduates. To address these issues by fostering research success and a sense of community in a new five-week online LIS course, the course instructor and lead author of this reflective essay designed the course as a participatory research lab where the instructor fully participated in all course assignments and activities that students participated in. Over five course modules, students and instructor each chose a research topic and then created and shared four in-depth reflective discussion posts on their topics, which were then incorporated into final papers that were submitted on the last day of class. To encourage a research mindset, each participant wrote the paper with a peer-reviewed journal in mind--with the goal of creating at least an early draft of a paper that could eventually be submitted for journal publication. Though the course was offered online, the class utilized weekly Zoom meetings and asynchronous discussions to build a community of learners who encouraged each other in their learning and growth. This autoethnographic case study, authored jointly by students and instructor, is a reflection on both the factors that enabled success and how this participatory approach to instruction can be improved in the future. Our experiment in participatory online learning has broadened our understandings of what an online classroom looks like and how we can show up for each other, even when we are not interacting in person.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1501906
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2026
record_format eric
spellingShingle "We Were Working alongside with, Rather than for, a Professor": An Autoethnographic Reflection on Fostering Community and Research Skills through Project-Based Learning in Online LIS Education
Ana Roeschley
Amy Lanier
Merrion Dale Frederick
Kaitlin Siebert
Lauren Dentler
Lauren Alberque
Parisa Nasiripour
Crystal Tharayil
Caroline Fralia
Library Education
Active Learning
Student Projects
Research Skills
Sense of Community
Online Courses
Graduate Students
Student Experience
"We Were Working alongside with, Rather than for, a Professor": An Autoethnographic Reflection on Fostering Community and Research Skills through Project-Based Learning in Online LIS Education Ana Roeschley Amy Lanier Merrion Dale Frederick Kaitlin Siebert Lauren Dentler Lauren Alberque Parisa Nasiripour Crystal Tharayil Caroline Fralia Library Education Active Learning Student Projects Research Skills Sense of Community Online Courses Graduate Students Student Experience The rise of online library and information science (LIS) education has made advancement in the field more accessible to individuals who cannot take on the burdens of in-person graduate-school coursework. However, the online classroom environment also comes with challenges regarding communication and community-building for instructors and students. Furthermore, the expectations placed on LIS students continue to grow, with original research, in particular, becoming an increasingly important skill for new graduates. To address these issues by fostering research success and a sense of community in a new five-week online LIS course, the course instructor and lead author of this reflective essay designed the course as a participatory research lab where the instructor fully participated in all course assignments and activities that students participated in. Over five course modules, students and instructor each chose a research topic and then created and shared four in-depth reflective discussion posts on their topics, which were then incorporated into final papers that were submitted on the last day of class. To encourage a research mindset, each participant wrote the paper with a peer-reviewed journal in mind--with the goal of creating at least an early draft of a paper that could eventually be submitted for journal publication. Though the course was offered online, the class utilized weekly Zoom meetings and asynchronous discussions to build a community of learners who encouraged each other in their learning and growth. This autoethnographic case study, authored jointly by students and instructor, is a reflection on both the factors that enabled success and how this participatory approach to instruction can be improved in the future. Our experiment in participatory online learning has broadened our understandings of what an online classroom looks like and how we can show up for each other, even when we are not interacting in person.
title "We Were Working alongside with, Rather than for, a Professor": An Autoethnographic Reflection on Fostering Community and Research Skills through Project-Based Learning in Online LIS Education
topic Library Education
Active Learning
Student Projects
Research Skills
Sense of Community
Online Courses
Graduate Students
Student Experience
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1501906