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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Walsh, Tiffany R.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2011
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ917525
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Inhaltsangabe:
  • Evolution of an Information Competency Requirement for Undergraduates Walsh, Tiffany R. Feedback (Response) Undergraduate Students Research Needs Higher Education Integrated Learning Systems Case Studies Outcomes of Education Engineering Engineering Education Cooperation Library Instruction Tutoring Tutorial Programs Information Literacy Pretests Posttests University at Buffalo undergraduate students are required to complete a non-credit-bearing information competency assessment prior to graduation, preferably within their first year of study. Called the "Library Skills Workbook," this assessment has evolved from a short, print-based quiz into a sophisticated, multi-module tutorial and assessment on the Blackboard courseware platform (http://www.blackboard.com). The author presents a case study describing the usefulness of a large-scale, online information competency requirement to meet the developing research needs of undergraduate students. The case presented includes specifics of measured information proficiencies, the benefits and challenges of using Blackboard courseware, student learning outcomes, user and faculty feedback, and the introduction of a new, alternate version of the "Workbook" that is targeted to engineering students. Practical issues regarding the administration, maintenance, and marketing of the requirement are addressed as well. The author details her efforts and those of university administrators to enforce "Workbook" completion in students' initial year of study, as well as ongoing plans to rename the "Workbook" to better demonstrate the currency and relevance of its measured competencies. Future projects are also discussed, including the author's collaboration with her colleagues to create additional discipline-specific "Workbook" versions and, where possible, to integrate those directly into undergraduate coursework and curricula. (Contains 9 figures.)