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Tech Success: Library Orientation with QuizBean

April 10, 2018

It’s never too early to start thinking about fall semester! With fall comes new students, and with new students comes library orientation. For an easy, self-guided library orientation, Brandywine Vairo Library used iPad minis and the website QuizBean to highlight areas and services the library offers.

QuizBean is an easy to use web interface that allows users to create original quizzes. Instead of it being a static activity, we wanted students to move around the library space and explore the surroundings. To easily make this into an orientation, after the question is answered, we wrote a brief explanation of the service and directions on what area of the library to find next. This made the students seek an answer, then move to a new area of the library to answer the next question. They moved in a circuit, exploring the space with a team, or individually. 

For example, if the first question starts at the circulation desk, the question might be about something that happens at the circ desk. In this case, it’s a question about course reserves and their loan policy. Whether they get the answer right or wrong, a small explanation will pop up, explaining a two-hour lending policy, and then direct students to find the Media Commons, or the One Button Studio, or the Academic Centers – whichever is next on their path of discovery around Vairo Library. Each of these is a service highlighted in orientation, and also areas that students can easily find from signage around the library space. If they can’t find it, no problem, because they can ask a librarian! Besides learning about some of the services that the library offers, one objective of orientation is really to learn that there are people there who can help you. We experienced students who were afraid to get a wrong answer and would ask for help before they answered any question. No problem – they learned about the space and they learned that we’re there to help, the two main objectives of this orientation. 

One of the benefits of using this program on a small campus was the ability to interact with the majority of incoming freshmen. At Penn State Brandywine, freshman convocation events have been well attended. Attendees sign up for two of four information sessions. The library orientation is one of those available sessions, and as there is no seating capacity limit like there is with the other sessions held in classrooms, two-thirds of the incoming students end up at the library orientation. This is a great chance for them to explore the library, interact with their peers, and meet the library faculty and staff. They work in small groups to finish the ten question quiz, then as they hand their iPad mini back in, they were told to grab University Libraries highlighters, notepads, water bottles, and mini sharpies. Students left having learned at least a little about the library, and with a bag full of s.w.a.g. It was a good way to start the semester!

C&CS and PA Forward Present Money Smart Week

April 10, 2018
by

Connect & Communicate Series and PA Forward

Present

Money Smart Week and Financial Literacy Programming

with Emily Mross

Friday, April 27 2018 at 11am

Zoom Session (online)

Register here for login link: https://goo.gl/forms/UyFPyxIuMh9DJImr2

Let’s break the ice and talk about money. Financial literacy is essential to personal success, but how can academic libraries help their users develop financial literacy skills? Join the C&CS and PA Forward’s Financial Literacy Team, represented by Emily Mross, as we discuss Money Smart Week, ALA’s partnership with the Federal Reserve Bank to help provide financial literacy workshops and trainings. A variety of variety of these partnerships between libraries and banks have been created. Link to Money Smart Week– http://www.ala.org/aboutala/offices/money-smart-weekpiggybank

 

Emily has been working with personal banker Olivia Sullivan at FNB to create programs and workshops for her students on this topic. Olivia works with employers and organizations to provide financial literacy education that targets consumer’s key money questions and provides them with practical strategies for being smarter about money. Emily’s full bio can be found here from her previous presentation with us.

You will receive a link to the session approximately 48 hrs before the session is scheduled to start. Please contact Erin Burns at eburns@psu.edu with any questions.

Projects and Products and Artifacts, oh my!

April 9, 2018

What counts as a mode of scholarly discourse has changed and continues to change. Scholarship today is a plexus, and intellectual output takes on an ever-widening array of variegation. Yet the paradigm for evaluating academic contributions is still very hierarchical and somewhat arbitrary. To look at the sum of books, articles and papers produced at the end of an academic career is interesting, but not necessarily informative about the paths of inquiry and detours of significance along the journey, especially if they are highly collaborative. Also, past performance, as the old saw goes, certainly is not indicative of any future success. Why then do promotion and tenure in higher education still have the very conservative threshold of publish or perish? What does it even mean to publish anymore?

open research workflows

Image from presentation on research workflows
NPOS Workflow-perspective-Bosman-Kramer.pptx
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.5065534.v1

Librarians can be in the forefront in answering questions such as these, because we can see the reticulation more objectively. While we occasionally have a vested interest in promotion and tenure policies, our vantage-point helps us to see more impartially the burgeoning ways scholarly research is openly communicated. We have, slowly at times and sometimes out of necessity, adopted format agnosticism. We also need to be aware of better markers for evaluation than just counting. Librarians are not usually expert enough to evaluate the quality of scholarship in terms of what it contributes to a field of study, but we do have a unique view on how, when and where scholarship is publicly delivered, discovered and employed. It may very well be too controversial at many institutions to include the librarian’s perspective in evaluating a faculty member’s contributions to an academic discipline, but we should give our teaching and research partners cause to call upon us for insight and librarians need to be ready.

One entree would be to continuously familiarize ourselves with how research workflows are currently being laid open. One rather ambitious social project that gives academic librarians a purview, which originated with librarians Bianca Kramer and Jeroen Bosman at Utrecht University: “400+ Tools and innovations in scholarly communication” (http://bit.ly/innoscholcomm-list). Another good first step would be to take part in shaping how we even describe what it is scholars produce. Beware, though, some faculty may still very well bristle when librarians say they provide research assistance for new forms of scholarly communication, such as digital projects, products and artifacts.

Honoring Outstanding Undergraduate Research

April 8, 2018

Under the leadership of Kelly Clever, Public Services Librarian at Seton Hill University, the Reeves Library Undergraduate Research Award was created in 2014 to recognize and encourage the development of information fluency in resource-based research.  This has been a wonderful way not only to honor students, but also to increase awareness of the library and its resources.

“Collection”-based research (i.e., field/laboratory research, original literary criticism, or creative works are judged based only on their literature review/discussion sections and not on the portions of the project consisting of original work). Research projects in either traditional (e.g., academic paper) or multimedia (e.g., podcast, website, video, etc.) formats may be submitted.

Research projects created during the previous academic year’s Spring semester or the entire current academic year can be considered. There is no length requirement for works submitted. One entry is accepted per student.   A faculty member must sponsor each submission by completing a recommendation form. The faculty sponsor may be the instructor who assigned the project, or the student’s advisor. The student must submit the project being entered, a completed application form, and a brief (250-500 word) introduction to the project and a discussion of the research process.

The student’s name is removed from the body of the project to facilitate blind review.  Using a rubric, a panel of faculty and librarians judges the research. To make things easier, information is uploaded to the Canvas online learning system, which allows speed grading.

Each award recipient is recognized at Honors Convocation and receives a monetary prize in the amount of $250. One award is given to a first-year or sophomore and a second to a junior or senior.

Oh, the Places You’ll Go: Liberal Arts, Career Changes, and Transferable Skills

April 8, 2018

Last semester, one of my undergraduate classical studies professors asked me to speak to his current class about how my education prepared me for professional work. (To summarize: I studied classical studies, English, and anthropology. I’ve worked as a tutor, proofreader and editor, program manager in a business school, and in libraries.) Being able to articulate the skills that have leveraged me throughout my career helped my professor’s current students understand the value of their education. On a larger scale, being able to connect soft skills to practical experiences will provide anyone a leg up when making a career change, getting a new job or promotion, or otherwise bringing their unique background to the table. Below are the five skills I identified that have served me well, especially as a librarian.

Creativity
Many of my undergraduate professors encouraged creativity for their assignments. Instead of writing a standard research paper, I once presented information on life in Ptolemaic Alexandria through a fictional monologue. For my capstone project I experimented with writing a play in the style of Euripides to explore Greek drama from a writer’s perspective. As a tutor I translated the chorus of a Metallica song into Ancient Greek as an exercise for a tutee who listened to that music genre. Being creative has been instrumental when working on a limited budget to provide services to business school and library stakeholders. Innovating and producing work “out of the box” as a student turned into something I value now as a library instructor. Presenting information literacy in creative ways makes learning fun, relevant, and most importantly, memorable.

Analysis and Healthy Skepticism
Close reading of both classics and English texts in nearly every class I took built my ability to read between the lines and not take information at face value. Lateral research regarding the travel supplies and space needed for modern armies reveals that Herodotus’ numbers for the Persian army were impossibly overinflated. One English class had us analyze texts through the lenses of different literary criticisms. Evaluating information in context of the bigger picture and from different interpretations, especially now in the era of fake news, are skills I emphasize in the classroom.

Organization and Pattern Recognition
An initiative’s origins, current implementation, and future potential are all vital components of identifying impact. I followed how the changes in parts of speech over the course of a Greek play align with the play’s actions and themes. I marked Jane Eyre’s growing sense of self-worth through her increasing use of active versus passive voice. Recognizing the importance of the big picture helps me as an instructor match my lesson goals to the Framework, student learning outcomes, and students’ academic careers as a whole.

Detail Oriented
On the other side of the big picture and equally important is the ability to see and identify fine moving parts. Much of my undergraduate work involved grammatical analysis of Ancient Greek and Latin texts at the line and word level. For an anthropology project my group spent hours counting felid tooth marks on the bones of their prey. This type of focused detail work makes it more difficult for vital items to fall through any cracks. It formed the necessary foundation to successfully plan, implement, and evaluate events, lessons, and everyday work tasks from web content maintenance to email communication.

Contextualization
Behind every course of action is always the question, “So what?” What is the value of what we do, and does it justify the time and energy spent doing it?

English texts can be interpreted from a feminist, or historical, or reader-centric lens; so what? Well, understanding that people can look at the same piece of information and come to different conclusions highlights the diversity and complexity of the world. In turn, this understanding improves communication and inclusion.

Well-planned events have good food and high attendance; so what? Well, these events improve networking, relationships, good will toward the organization, and stakeholder buy-in. All of these factors play into the organization’s overall health.

This article paints a small portrait of one person’s soft skills; so what? Well, take this opportunity to identify how your academic experiences have mapped to your professional ones so that you too can best articulate what you bring to the table.

My liberal arts background provided the foundation for my career success. I look forward to seeing where my professional skill building experiences take me next.

What steps along your path led you to where you are today?