Tuesday, November 13, 2007

ACRL Standards for Proficiences of Instruction (for Librarians and Coordinators)

Last summer in Washington, D.C. at ALA, the ACRL Board has approved standards for proficiences of instruction.

For instruction librarians, these new standards are broken down into the following proficiencies:

  1. Administrative Skills
  2. Assessment and Evaluation Skills
  3. Communication Skills
  4. Curriculum Knowledge
  5. Information Literacy Integration Skills
  6. Instructional Design Skills
  7. Leadership Skills
  8. Planning Skills
  9. Presentation Skills
  10. Promotion Skills
  11. Subject Expertise
  12. and finally, yes, Teaching Skills.
Please take a look at the Standards at: http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards/profstandards.cfm
(It is also available in the October issue of College and Research Libraries News)

Have any thoughts or ideas on how we can utilize them to improve our instruction (or plan new programs or technologies)? Share your thoughts! Click on "Comments." We'd love to hear from you.

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Welcome to CCLI-North's New Blog!

*******Bumped up to greet our members as this is now officially live! ************

Welcome! Well for those who attended our event in 2007, on using Web 2.0 products for library instruction, it seemed fitting that CCLI-North (California Clearinghouse on Library Instruction of Northern California for those not in the know), should go Web 2.0 as well and have its own blog. So here it is. Stay tuned for getting links, tips, and discussions, and thoughts about approaches to library instruction in the 21st century.

But first things first. You should at least take a look at our fantastic website at http://ic.arc.losrios.edu/~ccli/index.htm Notice that as we are still a "Clearinghouse"
as we have a depository only now it is to web sites--to library subject guides, sites on information competency, and more!

So please bookmark us (on Delicious! of course), or subscribe to us hitting on the Posts (Atom) link listed on the bottom of the page-- and from time to time we may make you ponder about what we can do to improve our teaching and better reach our students and other users. And by all means, please feel free to hit the "Comments" link after a post to reply to us.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Web 2.0: Searching Innovations

Hi fellow library people,

I attended a great Infopeople (http://infopeople.org/) workshop on July 24, 2007 at San Jose State University. This workshop, part of a series on Web 2.0 topics, was free, but I would have paid money for it! For other workshops in this free series see: http://infopeople.org/training/web20/.

The workshop was taught by Joe Barker, a recently retired librarian from UC Berkeley, who now teaches workshops for Infopeople. We started off with a brief discussion of Web 2.0 and then moved quickly into a hands-on introduction to del.icio.us, the mobile, community-oriented, user-friendly bookmark/favorite organizer! It is mobile because it allows you to access your bookmarks from any location. It is community oriented
because you can make your favorites visible to others and tag them so that you and others can easily search them! It is user-friendly because… Well, try it out and see for yourself at http://del.icio.us/. Here’s a link to Joe Barker’s bookmarks: http://del.icio.us/joebarker.
He links to many good Web 2.0 sources. I was able to set up an account and add a number of bookmarks complete with tags during the workshop. To see my much more limited set go to: http://del.icio.us/sradcliff (I did all this during the workshop!).

We covered many other Web 2.0 topics, such as using various search engines and strategies to search for blogs, wikis, and multimedia material on the Web. Hint: for wikis use inurl:wiki. For blogs: try Technorati! We also looked at Flickr, the site for uploading, tagging, and sharing pictures. This source, I had already used extensively. You can tag and group pictures and create slideshows. For a non-library related example go to: http://www.flickr.com/photos/miknez (my pictures). Many libraries use Flickr to get photos of exhibits, library events, etc… on to their Home Pages. For an example see
http://library.coloradocollege.edu/news/. You can also search Flickr for pictures of exhibits and library signage to get ideas!

Something new I learned at the workshop was that Google now has a CSE product! A CSE is a custom search engine that you build yourself by limiting your search to a set group of websites. Or you can use someone else’s CSE that they have made public. The Google product is similar to Rollyo, which has been around for a while, but allows you to add more websites! For some examples, go to http://www.customsearchguide.com/.
For other links to CSE, go to the bookmarks on the Infopeople website for this class at
http://bookmarks.infopeople.org/. Look for web2_srchng_bk.html (another great resource for all things Web 2.0).

We also covered RSS (“Really Simple Syndication”) feeds which Joe Barker describes as “trapping what you need to stay on top of.” He recommends Bloglines as the best feed reader around. I also find it to be easy to set up and use. You can set up an account at:
http://www.bloglines.com/. You can easily subscribe to a few blogs and also set up an RSS feed for a customized Google search! Go to http://www.bloglines.com/ to register.

The workshop also covered Facebook, MySpace, and the new kid on the block: Ning.
I searched Ning and found a community of Business Librarians. Hmmm… Maybe I’ll join.

These were some of the highlights of the workshop for me though many other topics and sources were covered! I highly recommend this Web 2.0 series!
Sharon Radcliff, Business Librarian, Saint Mary’s College, Moraga, sradclif@stmarys-ca.edu

Thursday, July 19, 2007

CCLI 2007: Social Networking to Teach

Last May, CCLI-North held its workshop in Sacramento. The theme was on using the Web 2.0 tools and universe as a forum for library instruction. As you can see, it was well attended:

librarians at the CCLI Workshop of 2--7
We invited three excellent speakers to help us explore how we could tap into this interactive online universe of social networks and have our students use these tools to enhance and improve their research. For information about our three excellent speakers, please go to http://ic.arc.losrios.edu/%7Eccli/workshops.htm

Library Instruction 2.0: Empowering the Learner
2007 Spring Workshop
May 11, 2007
California State University, Sacramento

Presentations are now available as podcasts.

Sharon Radcliff
Podcast: Welcome from Chair

David Silver
Podcast: Learning 1.0 in a Web 2.0 World: Engaging Students, Classrooms, and Libraries
Access David's blog at http://silverinsf.blogspot.com

Anne-Marie Deitering
Podcast: Research Instruction in a Web 2.0 World
Presentation Notes & Links

Michele Mizejewski
Podcast: Instruction on Demand: Shifting Time and Space
Presentation Slides
Notes & Links