Academic Angles

Screencasting: What Tool to Choose?

Oct 8th, 2010 | By

There are so many tools out there to help create screencasts, so which do you choose? Should you go free, or pay more for features? What features do each have, anyway? Don’t worry: help is out there. Take a look at this sites for more information: Five Minute Screencasts — The Super Tool for Science
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The Value of Academic Libraries

Sep 24th, 2010 | By

The ACRL has published a new report, Value of Academic Libraries: A Comprehensive Research Review and Report. The report “is focused on the articulation of library value to external audiences,” so it lacks emphasis on “internal library processes” (p.11). There are three sections to the report: a literature review, “suggestions for immediate ‘Next Steps’ in
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Instruction Collaboration: The Types

Sep 13th, 2010 | By

At the ACRL blog, Maura Smale wrote about the “Taxonomy of Collaboration.” She sees four types of collaborators: “Enthusiastic Partners” who fully engage with librarians, ”Quiet but Satisfied” who see the value but have a minimum of interaction with librarians, “Possibly Unconvinced” who attend the sessions but are busy with their own tasks (maybe satisfied or
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Canadian Council on Learning’s Taking Stock Report

Aug 27th, 2010 | By

The Canadian Council on Learning recently released the results of a five-year study on Canada’s education system, all the way from preschool to the post-secondary level, including adult learning and Aboriginal learning. Researchers concluded that Canada has a “Learning Paradox”: there are positive signs with a mainly highly educated population, but also “signs of systemic
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A+ = Engaging Teaching

Aug 27th, 2010 | By

Two U of Calgary researches, Sharon Friesen and Michele Jacobsen, found that computers alone don’t generate success in classes. The teachers need to be tech savvy themselves, and must use engaging instructional techniques in order for students to have success. As Jacobsen stated, “The purpose of the investigation was to understand how students’ learning in
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Google Waves Goodbye

Aug 7th, 2010 | By

Wednesday, Google announced that it was stopping development on Google Wave, the service that was supposed to change how people communicate. As the official Google blog stated, “We were equally jazzed about Google Wave internally, even though we weren’t quite sure how users would respond to this radically different kind of communication…But despite these wins,
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New Report: “A Slice of Research Life: Information Support for Research in the United States”

Aug 3rd, 2010 | By

Relationships between researchers and traditional library and university support for research have shifted radically; many of the services most valued by researchers are found not in the library but on the network.

The majority of researchers interviewed for this study use online tools – and commercial services – related to their discipline rather than tools provided by their university. This report summarizes interviews held with researchers, research assistants, graduate students, grant and other research administration specialists, and university administrators at four elite U.S. research universities. It complements a similar study undertaken in four English universities, to be published shortly.



Your Assignment: Not Very Clear

Jul 27th, 2010 | By

The latest research report from Project Information Literacy evaluates handouts for research assignments. Twenty-eight US colleges and universities are represented in the 191 voluntarily submitted handouts. Key findings are 83% of handouts required a standard research paper, over other formats. 85% required students to work individually. “Six in 10 handouts recommended students consult the library
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Dumping the Library Orientation

Jul 16th, 2010 | By

Inside Higher Ed has a great article on ditching the library orientation session and integrating library instruction into the curriculum, but from the instructor’s perspective. From the article: After years of frustration, last spring I gave up on the orientation. In my mind it created three types of the students: the half who tuned out,
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Universities and Libraries Move to the Mobile Web

Jul 11th, 2010 | By

The latest issue of Educause Quarterly has several interesting articles on cloud computing in higher ed, but also this article on libraries and the mobile web. Key points include: Web-enabled smartphones (and their applications) have converged with cloud computing to change the ways people interact with each other and their environments. The academic community has
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