1 / 31

Give Us Some Credit

Give Us Some Credit. A look at librarians teaching credit-bearing courses. Dr. Monty L. McAdoo Edinboro University of PA July 25, 2017. Today’s presentation. Part I: Introduction Part II: Development Part III: Reflection and Review. Part 1 Introduction. Background. EUP

ellard
Download Presentation

Give Us Some Credit

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Give Us Some Credit A look at librarians teaching credit-bearing courses Dr. Monty L. McAdoo Edinboro University of PA July 25, 2017

  2. Today’s presentation Part I: Introduction Part II: Development Part III: Reflection and Review

  3. Part 1Introduction

  4. Background EUP • 1 of 14 PASSHE institutions • 2016: 4,840 UG; 1,341 G • 341 faculty Library • 15-20 work-study, 12 staff, 7.5 librarians Me • Librarian since 1994, PASSHE 1996, EUP 1999 • Research and instruction • UWCC • COUN794

  5. How many students… • can articulate what a librarian does? • can tell the difference between a staff member and a librarian? • know two or more librariansby name? • never participate in traditional library user education? • do not value and/or benefit from traditional library user education?

  6. As a librarian, do you… • believe you have valuable knowledge or skills to share with students? • believe the library should be/is the academic hub of your institution? • believe you – individually or collectively – could contribute more? • want to find ways to add relevance to your department/library?

  7. As a profession, librarians… • Perceive our work as inherently valuable • Often lack a communicable context for the work that we do • Risk marginalization • Experience ongoing questions about “faculty status” and our 9-month contract

  8. The journey begins…

  9. Opportunities • Greater depth and exposure • Truly embedded • Showcase expertise • Revitalize self and department • Draw positive attention to department • Better understand faculty/student needs • Add weight to “faculty” status • Curricular needs

  10. Department MeetingFall, 2011 Stepping In • Slam dunk • Confident • Focused • Energized • Showcase our skills and insights • Positive step Stepping Out • Being slammed • Uncertain • Confused • Frustrated • “Librarians don’t teach!” • Watch your step

  11. Timeline • Fall, 2011 • 2/3/12 • 2/9/12 • 4/11/12 • 4/12/12 • 4/16/12 • Spring, 2014, Fall, 2014, Spring, 2017 • Initial idea proposed • Fac. mtg;  ballot 7-2 • Signed by Chair and AVPUL • UWCC approval • Signed by Provost • Signed by President • Taught three times

  12. Part I: Introduction Challenges

  13. Personal Challenges • Expertise • Motivation • Resources • Process • Coordination

  14. Workload Challenges • Who will teach? • How many sections how often? • Translating workload hours • Victim of our own success • Reassignment of responsibilities • Position realignment

  15. Colleague Challenges • Why do you want to teach? • Credits won’t go anywhere. • Will we be expected to teach as well? • What makes you qualified to teach? • Librarians don’t teach. • If you want to teach, why don’t you go to a different department?

  16. Departmental Challenges • Articulating process • Determining workload equivalency • New or existing contract? • Who pays? • Ambiguous administrative milieu

  17. Institutional Challenges • What is your product? • Perception of “remediation”

  18. Contractual Challenges • What does “faculty” mean? • Teaching vs. non-teaching vs. mixed status • Part-time/adjunct in another department

  19. Curricular Challenges • What is the process? • Where will credits go? • LIBR prefix vs. other department’s • Online or F2F?

  20. Part IIDEVELOPMENT

  21. LIBR106: Information Ethics

  22. Self-Assessment • Who? • What? • Where? • When? • Why? • How?

  23. Identify Your Curricular Niche • Avoid “dead credits” • Address curricular “bottleneck” • Identify curricular opportunities • Avoid “remediation”

  24. General Considerations • “Specialized” vs. “normal” course • Departmental assignation • Alignment with curriculum structure • Curricular approval process/timeframe • Online or face-to-face? • Developing awareness

  25. Teaching • Time, time, and more time • Generating course materials • Grading • Student follow-up • Participation • Revision

  26. Assessment • Content • Official • Self-developed • “Feel good” caveat

  27. Part IIIREFLECTIONS AND REVIEW

  28. Successes • Interaction with students is invigorating • Interaction with students is frustrating • Sense of accomplishment/pride • A right to be happy

  29. Challenges • Feeling compromised • Grading • Authorization • Non-Honors • Writing co-requisite

  30. Opportunities • Precedent set • Curricular viability • Publishing opportunity

  31. Thank you! Dr. Monty L. McAdoo Research and Instruction Librarian Baron-Forness Library Edinboro University of PA Edinboro, PA 16444 mmcadoo@edinboro.edu 814-732-1070

More Related