Meeting the Challenge of Teaching Information Literacy

While the profession has generated many books on information literacy, none to date have validated exactly why it is so difficult to teach. In her new book, Reale posits that examining and reflecting on the reality of those factors is what will enable practitioners to meet the challenge of their important mandate. Using the same warm and conversational tone as in her previous works, she

  • uses personal anecdotes to lay out the key reasons that teaching information literacy is so challenging, from the limited amount of time given to instructors and lack of collaboration with faculty to one’s own anxieties about the work;
  • examines how these factors are related and where librarians fit in;
  • validates readers’ struggles and frustrations through an honest discussion of the emotional labor of librarianship, including “imposter syndrome,” stress, and burnout;
  • offers a variety of approaches, strategies, and topics of focus that will assist readers in their daily practice;
  • looks at how a vibrant community of practice can foster positive change both personally and institutionally; and
  • presents “Points to Ponder” at the end of each chapter that encourage readers to self-reflect and then transform personal insights into action.
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Meeting the Challenge of Teaching Information Literacy

While the profession has generated many books on information literacy, none to date have validated exactly why it is so difficult to teach. In her new book, Reale posits that examining and reflecting on the reality of those factors is what will enable practitioners to meet the challenge of their important mandate. Using the same warm and conversational tone as in her previous works, she

  • uses personal anecdotes to lay out the key reasons that teaching information literacy is so challenging, from the limited amount of time given to instructors and lack of collaboration with faculty to one’s own anxieties about the work;
  • examines how these factors are related and where librarians fit in;
  • validates readers’ struggles and frustrations through an honest discussion of the emotional labor of librarianship, including “imposter syndrome,” stress, and burnout;
  • offers a variety of approaches, strategies, and topics of focus that will assist readers in their daily practice;
  • looks at how a vibrant community of practice can foster positive change both personally and institutionally; and
  • presents “Points to Ponder” at the end of each chapter that encourage readers to self-reflect and then transform personal insights into action.
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Meeting the Challenge of Teaching Information Literacy

Meeting the Challenge of Teaching Information Literacy

by Michelle Reale
Meeting the Challenge of Teaching Information Literacy

Meeting the Challenge of Teaching Information Literacy

by Michelle Reale

eBook

$46.00 

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Overview

While the profession has generated many books on information literacy, none to date have validated exactly why it is so difficult to teach. In her new book, Reale posits that examining and reflecting on the reality of those factors is what will enable practitioners to meet the challenge of their important mandate. Using the same warm and conversational tone as in her previous works, she

  • uses personal anecdotes to lay out the key reasons that teaching information literacy is so challenging, from the limited amount of time given to instructors and lack of collaboration with faculty to one’s own anxieties about the work;
  • examines how these factors are related and where librarians fit in;
  • validates readers’ struggles and frustrations through an honest discussion of the emotional labor of librarianship, including “imposter syndrome,” stress, and burnout;
  • offers a variety of approaches, strategies, and topics of focus that will assist readers in their daily practice;
  • looks at how a vibrant community of practice can foster positive change both personally and institutionally; and
  • presents “Points to Ponder” at the end of each chapter that encourage readers to self-reflect and then transform personal insights into action.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780838947135
Publisher: American Library Association
Publication date: 07/23/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 112
File size: 385 KB

About the Author

Michelle Reale is a professor and access services and outreach librarian at Arcadia University. Her books include Inquiry and Research: A Relational Approach in the ClassroomThe Indispensable Academic Librarian: Teaching and Collaborating for ChangeMentoring and Managing Students in the Academic LibraryBecoming an Embedded Librarian, and Becoming a Reflective Librarian and Teacher: Strategies for Mindful Academic Practice. Her research interests are embedded librarianship, mentoring, narrative inquiry, poetic inquiry, and reflective practice.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter 1    It Don’t Come Easy
 

Chapter 2    The Idea of a Concept or the Concept of an Idea
Information Literacy
 

Chapter 3    Information Literacy
Still the “Hidden Concept”?
 

Chapter 4    You Just Don’t Get It
The Harm of Persistent Librarian Stereotypes
 

Chapter 5    Inching toward the Mirror
Self-Perception, Imposter Syndrome, and Anxiety
 

Chapter 6    More Than Just Transactional
Faculty, Librarians, Service, and Collaboration
 

Chapter 7    That Anxious Feeling
Library Anxiety as a Hindrance to Learning
 

Chapter 8    Exhausted
The Emotional Labor of Librarianship
 

Chapter 9    Can’t We All Just Get Along?
Faculty Relationships and Collaboration
 

Chapter 10    Let’s Give Them Something to Talk About
Communities of Practice in the Library

Conclusion
Index

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