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  • WILU 2010: Lighting Strikes, Birds of a Feather and more (Day Two)

    Posted on May 13th, 2010 Bruce 3 comments

    WILU 2010 Conference Artwork

    Conferences are interesting events where the learning, socializing and networking combine to produce a more productive and inspired Bruce. The traditional “sage on the stage” giving a presentation is still a very popular model and one that succeeds in many cases. That said, I like when conferences experiment with different models and that’s what I received today. The day began with “lighting strikes” sessions where presenters have to convey a concept or practice in seven minutes. Michelle Baratta and Sarah Forbes  from the University of Toronto presented on their efforts to use games, both video and real life, to engage students and build engagement.The creativity and energy of these presenters (and others I haven’t mentioned) was a great way to start the second day of the conference.

    The “birds of a feather” session (see the official WILU notes on the session) was a free form ‘unconference’ style session. Participants looked at a list of tables dedicated to different topics, sat down and started talking. My table explored the challenge of student motivation. To my delight, another librarian raised Dan Pink’s work on motivation who has argued that the drive for mastery, autonomy and purpose. Others discussed exercises they have devised for students that challenges them to think critically about what they read. I was intrigued by the idea of setting high expectations – university is a demanding intellectual environment – and community. By interacting with their sources deeply, students can join the community of scholars. Intrinsic motivation is the best kind and librarians ought to seek out ways to engage it but there was a consensus that some students appear to be motivated solely by carrots and sticks. I’m not sure that a love of learning can be instilled in every case but it is well worth trying.

    In the afternoon, I attended two sessions that sought to explore and understand students more deeply. From Utah State University, Wendy Holliday presented on, “From Active Learning to Activity: Getting Beyond Busy Work and into Deep Learning.” This ethnographic research followed a first year composition class, observing how students and instructors interacted. Reading actual transcripts of instructor-student interaction was enlightening on several levels as it revealed how both parties think about assignments and learning. Many students appear to desire (or indeed, operate from) a check list approach for research that short circuits learning and research. As Holliday argues, “information literacy is a reading problem,” – without deep and sustained reading, students will rarely progress beyond busy work.

    The day’s presentations culminated with a deeply challenging but vital issue facing academic librarians; how can we support at risk students? Presented by Janet Goosney from Memorial University, I learned how librarians worked with struggling students, writing centre staff and instructors to support students. One of the reasons given for the success of the program was the history of close collaboration between Memorial’s librarians and writing centre staff – that strikes me as a natural partnership once I think about it but it isn’t an idea I had encountered before. The kind of support provided in thte at risk student program (if failing students take it and pass, they can stay on, otherwise they have to leave the university for a time) is a model of academic collaboration. Some of the methods – such as self-reflective student journalling on education – strike me as an effective approach to stimulate student interest. Arguably, many students would benefit from doing that and it is unfortuante that this practice is not more wide spread.

    Related posts:

    1. WILU 2010: Design, Play & Learn! (Day 1)
    2. OLA 2010 Conference: Day One
    3. OLA 2010 Conference: Day Two
    4. 10 Reasons To Attend the OLA 2010 Conference
     

    3 responses to “WILU 2010: Lighting Strikes, Birds of a Feather and more (Day Two)”

    1. [...] Bruce Harpham has some more notes from the discussion here: http://bruceharpham.ca/2010/05/wilu-2010-day-two/. [...]

    2. Hey Bruce,

      The conference sounds really interesting.

      I’m curious to learn more about “Deep Learning”.

      Also, did anyone discuss how to approach learning in a professional (non-academic institution) context?

    3. Hi Adam,

      Thanks for commenting. The deep learning concept is still something that I’m learning more about. To my mind, it strikes me as the educational application of flow as proposed by psychologist Mihály Csíkszentmihályi.

      Regarding learning in the workplace, I attended one session on that might be of interest. A librarian from Grant MacEwan University (Edmonton, AB) presented on an internal training program they introduced where staff observe each other and make a conscious effort to learn from different approaches. More specifically, this involved librarians observing how their co-workers taught information literacy sessions and skills to students.

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