Tuesday, October 13, 2009

ACRL Instruction Section Innovation Award

Nominations for the ACRL Instruction Section award are due December 9th. If you know of a project that "demonstrate[s] recognized creativity, quality, and innovation within the context of national trends in information literacy instruction or programming," let ACRL know about it so it can get some national recognition!

Sunday, September 20, 2009

ALI Episode 6, September 2009: fall classes and interview with Kim Duckett

Play the episode (mp3, 1 hour 5 minutes)


Part I (00:45-34:00; approx. 34 minutes)

We talk a bit about classes each of us have taught or are preparing to teach. Anna's tackling a class for October, which is set up as a social networking Q&A session for parents and teens. Jason taught a class about games as a guest speaker in a for-credit library course. Rachel's deep in preparation for a class where students may or may not have topics, the professor requested specific tools to be demonstrated, and it's at 8:30 in the morning to boot! We discussed tactics she could use to keep the students engaged.

Links/Resources:
  • Serious Game explanation via Wikipedia
  • America's Army
  • Passage
  • ACRL Webcast: Podcasting October 1st at 2pm Eastern
  • Internet Librarian 2009: Jason will be conducting a 15-minute Cybertour re: Podcasting
  • Conger, J. (2001). Wake up that back row: interactive library instruction without hands-on student computers. In C. Hales Mabry (Ed.), Doing the work of reference: practical tips for excelling as a reference librarian (pp. 309-322). Binghamton, NY: Haworth.

Part II (34:00-1:04:00; approx. 30 minutes)


Interview with Kim Duckett, Principal Librarian for Digital Technologies & Learning from North Carolina State University, about her involvement with creating contextual e-learning resources

Links/Resources:
Note: Kim wishes to thank those who have been critical to the creation of these projects: Hyun-Duck Chung, Dre Orphanides, Josh Wilson, Eleanor Smith, Emily Mazure, Sarah Bankston, and Susan Baker.

Join us for future episodes! If you’re interested, please post a comment on the Adventures in Library Instruction blog or email us! We’ll do it as a Skype discussion or you can record a segment on your own.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

What do you want us to talk about?

We're crowdsourcing the topics for the September episode of ALI, which we're recording next week. What would you like to hear us talk about?

Leave a comment here, or email us at adlibinstruction@gmail.com.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Pronouncing "pecha kucha"

As a followup to episode 5's discussion:


Thursday, August 20, 2009

ALI Episode 5, August 2009: Flying Kangaroo Powerpoint with Maurice Coleman

Play the episode (mp3, 1 hour 10 minutes)

Jason, Rachel, and Anna are joined by the fabulous Maurice Coleman, author of the Chronicles of of the (almost) Bald Technology Trainer and the Technical Trainer at Harford County (MD) Public Library. We discuss effective PowerPoint techniques, PowerPoint best practices, and even some speaker training tips (e.g., pecha kucha, lightning talks, etc.).

Links to some of the things we mentioned during the show (as well as a little of what we forgot to mention):
Also: If you can, please contribute to the LSW's fundraising effort for the Louisville Free Public Library's flood recovery. If you can't donate financially, you can help by spreading the word.

Join us for future episodes! If you’re interested, please post a comment on the Adventures in Library Instruction blog or email us! We’ll do it as a Skype discussion or you can record a segment all on your own.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

ALI Episode 4, July 2009: Professional development without a budget

We talk about ALA, conferences, current teaching stuff, and professional development with little or no budget. Links to some of the things we mentioned:
Join us for future episodes! If you’re interested, please post a comment on the Adventures in Library Instruction blog or email us! We’ll do it as a Skype discussion or you can record a segment all on your own.

Friday, June 12, 2009

ALI Episode 3 June 2009: Dana Longley, copyright curriculum, Faculty Learning Communities

Play the episode (mp3, 1 hour 3 minutes)

In this episode we're joined by guest Dana Longley, distance librarian at Empire State College SUNY.

Links to some of the stuff we talked about:

Dana's online workshops and Slideshare space with presentations on their instruction programLinkEFF launches "Teaching Copyright" curriculum (press release)
The RIAA's "Campus Downloading" site
An article about the GSU copyright lawsuit

Interview with Caroline Barratt, UGA Reference/Instruction Librarian about her involvement with Faculty Learning Communities (46:05-1:02:25; approx. 16 minutes)

Links:
Note: Caroline wishes to thank her co-facilitator Nadine Cohen and her colleagues in their 2007-2008 FLC, as well as Deb Raftus for the excellent title. Thanks also to the Center for Teaching and Learning for their support of faculty learning communities at UGA.

And something we forgot to mention:
ALI Zotero group: If you're using Zotero 2.0, feel free to join the group. We'll share references to stuff we talk about on the show, and all members should feel free to share other interesting instruction-related articles.