interactive il teaching strategies day one

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Interactive Information Literacy Teaching Strategies

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Page 1: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Interactive Information Literacy Teaching Strategies

Page 2: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Resource List

• All print and electronic resources referenced in this class are listed here:

• http://www.delicious.com/eduserv/10_Strategies • http://delicious.com/eduserv/information_literacy

Page 3: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

What Do You Call…

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…This?

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I call it a Coke…but--

• Coke• Pop• Soda• Cola• Tonic • Drink

•Soft drink•Can•Soda pop•Carbonated Beverage• ?

Page 6: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Strategy:Using Language/Figures of Speech

• Great for teaching larger, abstract concepts used in a variety of research contexts

• Uses terminology students connect with

• Creates a conversation, active involvement

• Creates meaning in a fun way • Synonyms, metaphor, simile, analogy

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English Class

• Metaphor--a figure of speech concisely comparing two things, saying that one is the other

• Analogy--a cognitive process of transferring information from a particular subject (the analogue or source) to another particular subject (the target), and a linguistic expression corresponding to such a process.

• Simile--A figure of speech comparing two unlike things, often introduced with the word "like" or "as"

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• Synonyms--“Coke can”– Controlled vocabulary or search term

selection• “pay-per-view” metaphor

– Quality of programming compared to quality of information

– Information as a commodity

• “Garbage can as database” for an identity thief

• Facebook/database

Examples

Page 9: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Common Sources--Metaphors and Analogies

• Sports• Shopping• Food• Cars• Pets

•Technology•Weather•Family•Politics • ?

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Fishing for Analogies and Metaphors

• Students are the fish, how do you catch them? (know your students)

• What kind of “hook” are you going to use? (concept(s) you are teaching)

• Put a few lines in the water (brainstorm with colleagues)

• Watch for good fishing spots (look for examples in real life)

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Your Turn!

• Let’s take 5 minutes to discuss how you might use language creatively in your class!

• Share an example with the group!

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Strategy: Using Humorous Examples or

Images

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Make an Impression…

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Strategy: (Humorous) Comparisons

• Web page evaluation• Articles • Scholarly vs. popular

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Site Comparison:The Onion

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vs. CNN

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Article Comparison

• Exploding Head Syndrome

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Weekly World News

• From the Weekly World News, May 24, 1994:• MOSCOW --• Doctors are blaming a rare electrical imbalance in

the brain for the bizarre death of a chess player whose head literally exploded in the middle of a championship game!No one else was hurt in the fatal explosion but four players and three officials at the Moscow Candidate Masters' Chess Championship were sprayed with blood and brain matter when…

– Notable: – Pretty much the entire run of the WWN is available Via Google Magazines

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WWN, Cont’d.

• ..Nikolai Titov's head suddenly blew apart. Experts say he suffered from a condition called Hyper-Cerebral Electrosis or HCE.

• "He was deep in concentration with his eyes focused on the board," says Titov's opponent, Vladimir Dobrynin. "All of a sudden his hands flew to his temples and he screamed in pain. Everyone looked up from their games, startled by the noise. Then, as if someone had put a bomb in his cranium, his head popped like a firecracker.”

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Headache: The Journal of Head and Face Pain*

• Evans, R., & Pearce, J. (2001, June). Exploding Head Syndrome. Headache: The Journal of Head & Face Pain, 41(6), 602-603. Retrieved December 2, 2007, from Academic Search Complete database.

• *Ouch.

Page 21: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One
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Comparisons: Classroom Potential

• Give students one source and see what else they can find--is it real?

• Validate (or invalidate) by searching a variety of sources

• Direct comparisons--Search for bias, parody, consistency of facts across resources

• Bias--Fox vs. CNN; different disciplines? Journalism vs. scholarship/Medicine vs. Psychology

• Is there a corporate entity behind scholarly work? Example--positive article about Atkins Diet in scholarly journal, but sponsored by Atkins Corp.

Page 23: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Strategy: Goin’ Mobile

• So, they are going to have their phones anyway

• They are going to play with them

• How can we embrace this, and even help them to learn with it?

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Mobile Polling Tools

• PollEverywhere• www.polleverywhere.com

• Free for up to 30 users• Easy to create• Replaces expensive “clicker” idea• Can respond using site, twitter, or

mobile

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Mobile Comparisons

• Students insisting on using / not putting away their mobile?

• Have them test things out• Try this search, go to this site, etc.

• Have them share the differences (create peer interaction)

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Useful Print Resources

• CQ Researcher • Subject encyclopedias (Encyclopedia

of Psychology, Religion, Philosophy) • Periodicals

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Solving the periodical puzzle:

Scholarly vs. Popular• Scholarly vs. Popular • Give them criteria have them review

in teams• Evaluate and share, offer feedback• Tricks! Publications like Science,

Nature, New Yorker or Discover can prove challenging to evaluate

• Print vs. online full text

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Strategy: Boolehuh?

• Boolean searching is an essential concept for effective database searching

• I learned it via Venn diagrams. Ugh. • What are some other, more effective

ways to teach students about this idea?

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Boolean Operators

AND -- NOT -- OR --NEAR

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cars AND trucks library OR libraries

dolphins NOT football

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Boolean Shoes

• Use the students, get them up and moving and illustrate boolean concepts based on the kinds of shoes they are wearing:

• Black AND brown shoes (NO Results!) • Flip flops OR sandals• Sneakers NOT Reebok

Page 32: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Strategy: Make it Memorable With Mnemonics

(and other memorable sayings)

• The Five W’s of Information Evaluation

• The ABC3 of web page evaluation• SQ3R-for critical thinking • CRAAP test • Others?

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Five W’s

• Who-authority• What-topic, consistency• Where-where did you find it? • When-when was it published? Last

updated? • Why-Bias- is it trying to influence or

inform? Persuade, sell, entertain?

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ABC3

• Authority• Bias• Content• Consistency• Currency

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Discussion: Do you ever?

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Helpful Resources

• Purdue University OWL• http://owl.english.purdue.edu/• OWL Materials-Writing a Research

Paper• http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/

resource/658/01/

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Helpful Method-SQ3R for Critical Thinking

• Survey• Question• Read• Recite• Review• WRITE!

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Strategy: Use a Game

• Information Literacy Game • Information Literacy Jeopardy • Word search• “Information Literacy Bingo”

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Information Literacy Game

• General concepts in board game format from UNC-Greensboro

• Multiple players• Fun, interactive--students can chose

an avatar/identity• UNC-G makes files available for other

libraries to share

Page 40: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Information Literacy Jeopardy

• Any popular game is adaptable • Really helps reinforcing concepts like

Plagiarism• Example of “answer” from Murphy

Library/UW LaCrosse Library Jeopardy: • To take or disguise ideas or words of

others as your own; to use another’s idea without crediting the source.

• Question: “What is plagiarism?”

http://www.uwlax.edu/murphy/nonweb/searchsoup/jeopardy/

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Discussion: Competition!

• Competition=engagement• How else might we engage students

in competitive endeavors in the classroom?

• Contests, Trivia, “Battles,” Teams

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Strategy: Use an Online Tutorial

• Yours, or, well, ‘borrow’ one!• There are lots of good ones out there• Great for exploring topics in a hands-

on process• Excellent for use with difficult or time

consuming topics like plagiarism

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Online Tutorial: Example

• Acadia University • “You Quote it, You Note it”• http://library.acadiau.ca/tutorials/

plagiarism/

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Strategy: Concept Mapping

• Frustration: You’ve spent time teaching boolean searching, search terms, etc.--then you move to hands on searching.

• Still, students type in their topic as a complete sentence!

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Topic

• The role of women in the Civil War• “Mindwalking through”

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Key Concepts

• Women Role Civil War

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Keywords

Women Role Civil War

•Gender•Wife

•Wives

•Home•Family•Nurse•Spy

•War btw. The States

•United States

•History•American Civil War,

1861-1865

Page 48: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Strategy: Mundane to scholarly

• Everyday information leads to scholarship• Instructor prompts discussion with students about

different information needs in a typical student’s life, different information sources they might use to fill that need, and why a source is useful.

• Example: Where do you look when you need info about--

• A movie you might like to see?• The weather for the upcoming weekend?• Information about a celebrity or political figure?

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Then…

Magazines/Newspapers

Books/Monographs

Scholarly Journals

•Most current info•Good for topics in the news

•Thorough treatment•Written by experts

•Present research•Review articles•Very specialized

Instructor explains that, similarly, there are different sources of academic information and each has its uses. List each source and its characteristics.

Page 50: Interactive IL Teaching Strategies Day One

Icebreakers or…This One Goes to 11!

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A Few Icebreakers to Get Your Class Going!

• Use candy as an incentive/prize for responses• Inform students that it's "o.k." to interrupt

librarians• Ask students about their previous

experience(s) in using the library, good/bad, successful/unsuccessful, etc.

• Begin with a library orientation video

– 3 Letter body parts!

• Discussion: How do you break the ice?– ACRL Brainstorm,

http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/acrl/about/sections/is/eventsconferences/brainstorming.cfm

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Video-Be careful!

• Queue it up carefully!• Make sure it works• Test ahead of time• Make sure it is still there

– http://www.watchcartoononline.com/the-simpsons-episode-206-dead-putting-society

– 12:31

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Icebreakers

• Use icebreakers to set the tone for your lecture

• If you get students attention from the beginning, it's easier to keep it

• Students stop listening after the first seven minutes of class, so keep icebreakers on hand even for use in the middle of a session

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Questions? Comments?• What strategies do you use?

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End of Day One!

Questions?Questions?Russell [email protected]