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Main Authors: Tancheva, Kornelia, Andrews, Camille, Steinhart, Gail
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ885143
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author Tancheva, Kornelia
Andrews, Camille
Steinhart, Gail
author_facet Tancheva, Kornelia
Andrews, Camille
Steinhart, Gail
Tancheva, Kornelia
Andrews, Camille
Steinhart, Gail
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Library Instruction Assessment in Academic Libraries Tancheva, Kornelia Andrews, Camille Steinhart, Gail Academic Libraries Library Instruction Teaching Methods Evaluation Methods Formative Evaluation Summative Evaluation Information Literacy Achievement Gains Pretests Posttests Focus Groups Surveys Program Evaluation Instructional Effectiveness Outcomes of Education Determining the best methods of assessment for a library instruction program in a large research university can be a challenging task. Albert R. Mann Library at Cornell University Library has pilot-tested three methods of formative and summative assessment for its library instruction program--attitudinal, outcomes-based, and gap-measure--and determined not only key areas of improvement for the program, but also the benefits and drawbacks of each method of assessment. Attitudinal assessment has guided program improvement in areas of marketing and user satisfaction but does not provide the measurement of learning that outcomes-based assessment covers. The latter can be difficult to achieve in single-session, short-term instruction, while gap-measure assessment can provide a more nuanced view of both patron and instructor attitudes toward learning outcomes, if not actual data on achievement of the objectives themselves. The authors have determined that a combination of these three different types of assessment can address the shortcomings of a single method alone and provide a better measure of the program as a whole. (Contains 10 figures.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ885143
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2007
record_format eric
spellingShingle Library Instruction Assessment in Academic Libraries
Tancheva, Kornelia
Andrews, Camille
Steinhart, Gail
Academic Libraries
Library Instruction
Teaching Methods
Evaluation Methods
Formative Evaluation
Summative Evaluation
Information Literacy
Achievement Gains
Pretests Posttests
Focus Groups
Surveys
Program Evaluation
Instructional Effectiveness
Outcomes of Education
Library Instruction Assessment in Academic Libraries Tancheva, Kornelia Andrews, Camille Steinhart, Gail Academic Libraries Library Instruction Teaching Methods Evaluation Methods Formative Evaluation Summative Evaluation Information Literacy Achievement Gains Pretests Posttests Focus Groups Surveys Program Evaluation Instructional Effectiveness Outcomes of Education Determining the best methods of assessment for a library instruction program in a large research university can be a challenging task. Albert R. Mann Library at Cornell University Library has pilot-tested three methods of formative and summative assessment for its library instruction program--attitudinal, outcomes-based, and gap-measure--and determined not only key areas of improvement for the program, but also the benefits and drawbacks of each method of assessment. Attitudinal assessment has guided program improvement in areas of marketing and user satisfaction but does not provide the measurement of learning that outcomes-based assessment covers. The latter can be difficult to achieve in single-session, short-term instruction, while gap-measure assessment can provide a more nuanced view of both patron and instructor attitudes toward learning outcomes, if not actual data on achievement of the objectives themselves. The authors have determined that a combination of these three different types of assessment can address the shortcomings of a single method alone and provide a better measure of the program as a whole. (Contains 10 figures.)
title Library Instruction Assessment in Academic Libraries
topic Academic Libraries
Library Instruction
Teaching Methods
Evaluation Methods
Formative Evaluation
Summative Evaluation
Information Literacy
Achievement Gains
Pretests Posttests
Focus Groups
Surveys
Program Evaluation
Instructional Effectiveness
Outcomes of Education
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ885143