skills@library at the university of leeds

23
Skills@Library at the University of Leeds Helen Howard [email protected] k

Upload: helen-howard

Post on 27-Nov-2014

682 views

Category:

Education


1 download

DESCRIPTION

Presentation for the academic skills support event at Leeds Metropolitan University June 2012, outlining why and how Skills@Library evolved and looking at the services we provide.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Skills@Library at the University of Leeds

Helen Howard

[email protected]

Page 2: Skills@library at the university of leeds

[email protected] IL and Academic Skills

Why?

What?

Who?How?

Next?

Page 3: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Why? - Blending Academic and Information Literacies

• Universities reacting to fees agenda, employer concerns, changing student attitudes:

–skills acquisition and employability taking a higher priority–definition of graduate attributes

Association of Graduate Recruiters 2010, p.5

“Employers need graduates who are equipped with a range of core work skills as well as academic ability…these competencies…make graduates employable”

Page 4: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Why? - Blending Academic and Information Literacies

• Universities reacting to fees agenda, employer concerns, changing student attitudes:

–curricula reviews to make them fit for purpose and unique:• innovative, global, broad

King’s-Warwick Project 2010, p.9

“the teaching and assessment of student literacies requires greater prioritisation within the curriculum”

Page 5: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Why? - Blending Academic and Information Literacies

• IL is not a discreet set of skills: transferability is vital• Skills development is continuous and ongoing• Close links and overlaps in content• Student-centred with focus on changing needs, esp. in digital

environment

Head and Eisenberg 2010, p.2

.

“the sheer act of just getting started on research assignments and defining a research inquiry was overwhelming for students”

Page 6: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Why? - Blending Academic and Information Literacies

• Embedding of both is critical (working with Faculties)• Division can be confusing to staff and students in practical terms

Peacock 2011, p.2

“This blended model allows intelligent connections across the planning, resourcing and implementation of student-facing support, and places the onus for service and support sensemaking on the institution rather than the student.”

Page 7: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Curriculum review at Leeds University

Core of all programmes:• Research-

based learning

Core threads in the curriculum:• Employabili

ty• Global &

cultural insight

• Ethics & responsibility

Providing wider opportunities within the curriculum:• 10

broadening strands

Bringing together Leeds experience, including extra-curricula:• 19 Leeds

for Life skills

Page 8: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Changes at Leeds University Library

Bring skills strategy and delivery together and address overlaps• S

trategy – Structure - Delivery

Page 9: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Strategy, Structure & Delivery

Strategy: for Academic Skills, to replace the IL Strategy

Structure: teams and roles

Delivery: changes needed to deliver the strategy

Page 10: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Academic Skills Strategy

Leeds University Library 2010 Academic Skills Strategy

http://library.leeds.ac.uk/library-academic-skills-strategy

“The aim is that by 2015 all Faculty Team Librarians will be able to deliver the full range of academic skills, with the exception of Maths support. The Skills@Library Team will provide strategic direction and a high level of support to both Faculty Team Librarians and academic staff for this, particularly in the area of learning technologies”

Page 11: Skills@library at the university of leeds

What? Academic Skills Strategy

• Central team leads AS activities• FTLs deliver AS in curriculum• Work with academic staff and provide support for them• IL is part of a broader set of academic skills:

“Academic skills are those generic and transferable skills which underpin the learning development of undergraduate and taught postgraduate students in higher education, enabling them to be confident, independent critical thinkers and reflective learners.”

Page 12: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Why this approach?

Integrated IL / AS supportStudent-centred service

Developmental, positive approachEmbedded, subject-specific

Collaborative: our teams with academic schoolsRetains a single point of contact for schools

Fits into University curriculum initiatives

Page 13: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Who? - StructureLearning & Research Support

Skills Team Faculty Team – Arts & Social Sciences

Faculty Team – Science & Engineering

Faculty Team - Health

Customer Services

Skills@Library

Leeds University Library Organisational Chart

Page 14: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Skills@Library

Skills Team : generic support

Workshops

Website & e-learning

1 to 1 support

Faculty Teams: subject supportIn-curriculum

teaching

Subject-specific e-learning

1 to 1 support

Who? - Structure

Page 15: Skills@library at the university of leeds

How? – Service delivery: initial steps

- Consultation re in-curriculum

teaching- Improved

support through Lecturer

webpages, ULTA & staff workshops

- Expand e-learning tutorials- Retain generic

workshop programme- Survey of

needs

Involving staff: Involving students:

Page 16: Skills@library at the university of leeds

How? – Service delivery case studies

1. Using or adapting generic online resources to support / replace face-to-face teaching

2. Working closely with academic staff to develop a package of support which they help deliver

3. Providing support for staff to deliver academic skills themselves

Page 17: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Using generic online resources

• Library Guide has replaced long face-to-face induction sessions: used nearly 3,000 times in 2 weeks

• Harvard tutorial used over 10,000 in 5 months!

Page 18: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Adapting generic online resources

Rethinking support for distance-learners and final year projects / dissertations

Page 19: Skills@library at the university of leeds

In-curriculum teaching

Face-to-face teaching & online support via VLE provided jointly.

AS Officer inputs initially then hands-over to FTL and academic staff.

Faculty Team

Librarian

Academic Staff in a School

Academic Skills

Officer

Page 20: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Support for academic staff

• Lecturer webpages: generic teaching materials (lesson plans, powerpoints, activities)

–Used by librarians and academics

• Workshops–ULTA (University Teaching Award)–Generic: open to any staff member

Page 21: Skills@library at the university of leeds

What next?Define clearly skills / competencies supported at different levels

Continue to identify gaps in our provision

Devise measures to monitor progress

Review subject librarian role

Page 22: Skills@library at the university of leeds

Questions / comments

Helen Howard

Skills@Library

University of Leeds

0113 3434983

[email protected]

http://library.leeds.ac.uk/skills

@helhoward

Page 23: Skills@library at the university of leeds

References

• Association of Graduate Recruiters. 2010. Talent, opportunity, prosperity. A manifesto for graduate recruitment : http://www.agr.org.uk/Content/AGR-A-manifesto-for-graduaterecruitment

• Head, A. J. and Eisenberg, M.B. 2010. Truth be told: how college students evaluate and use information in the digital age. Project information literacy progress report: http://projectinfolit.org/pdfs/PIL_Fall2010_Survey_FullReport1.pdf

• Howard, H. 2012. Looking to the future: Developing an academic skills strategy to ensure information literacy thrives in a changing higher education world. Journal of information literacy, 6(1), pp. 72-81. http://ojs.lboro.ac.uk/ojs/index.php/JIL/article/view/LLC-V6-I1-2012-2

• King’s-Warwick Project. 2010. Creating a 21st century curriculum: http://kingslearning.info/kwp/attachments/134_KWP%20-%20Creating%20a%2021st%20Century%20Curriculum%20-%20summary%20report.pdf

• Peacock, Judith A. (2011) Integrated literacies : every online player wins a prize. In Proceedings of 15th Australian Library and Information Association (ALIA) Information Online Conference, ALIA, Sydney Convention and Exhibition Centre, Sydney, NSW. http://eprints.qut.edu.au/41370/

• Thornes, S. L. 2012. Creating an online tutorial to support information literacy and academic skills development. Journal of information literacy, 6(1), pp. 82-95. http://ojs.lboro.ac.uk/ojs/index.php/JIL/article/view/LLC-V6-I1-2012-3