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Providing Information Literacy Instruction to Graduate Students. Hannah Gascho Rempel Graduate Student Services Coordinator, Oregon State University OLA/WLA Conference April 18, 2008. Where We’re Headed Today. Who are our graduate students anyway?
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Providing Information Literacy Instruction to Graduate Students Hannah Gascho Rempel Graduate Student Services Coordinator, Oregon State University OLA/WLA Conference April 18, 2008
Where We’re Headed Today • Who are our graduate students anyway? • What are their information literacy needs? • Some ideas for providing instructional services (Example – OSU Libraries)
Why Focus on Graduate Students? • Traditionally underserved • Future faculty • Part of our strategic direction • Personal interest
Grad Student Facts & Figures • 13.9% of all students enrolled nationally(2001 – U.S. Dept. of Ed., Pontius & Harper, 2006) OUS 2006 Factbook
Grad Student Facts & Figures • 28% are members of minority groups (U.S. citizens) – (In Oregon 10.6%) • 13% - African-Americans • 8% - Hispanic • 6% - Asian/Pacific Islander • 1% Native American • 16% are international students Council of Graduate Schools, 2007
Grad Student Facts & Figures • 59% are female (65% at master’s-only institutions) – Oregon 58% F, 42% M Council of Graduate Schools, 2007; OUS 2006 Factbook
Grad Student Facts & Figures • Oregon 58% F, 42% M OUS 2006 Factbook
Grad Student Facts & FiguresAreas of Study • Education (74% female) and business (55% male) were the most popular disciplines • Health sciences is the fastest growing field • 53% of international students studied either engineering or sciences; only 16% of U.S. students did Council of Graduate Schools, 2007
Grad Student Facts & Figures • Grad students are adults OUS 2006 Factbook
Grad Student Facts & Figures • 33 – average age at dissertation completion (Brus, 2006) • 25% - have at least one minor dependent (U. of Iowa study, Brus, 2006) • Only at the largest doctoral universities did a majority (67%) attend full-time (CGS, 2007) leahleaf
Grad Student Facts & FiguresDepressing Facts • 49% of humanities students finish their dissertation in 10 years (as opposed to 63.8% of life science and 64.4% of engineering students) • 38% of humanities students finish at least $35K in debt vs. 12% of engineering and 18% of life science students Council of Graduate Schools, 2007
Ph.D. Completion Factors • 80% - financial support • 63% - mentoring/advising • 60% - family support • 39% - social environment & peer support • 39% - program quality • 30% - professional and career guidance Council of Graduate Schools, 2007
Working with Adult Learners • Adult learners bring their own learning preferences and needs • Expect to be accountable for more self-directed learning • Prefer learning through hands-on experience • Enjoy learning that addresses a specific problem • Typically have many more demands on their time, when compared with traditional-age students, due to family and work responsibilities. • (Dewald 1999; Ross-Gordon 2003)
Graduate Student Info Seeking Behaviors • Learn from their peers (Brown 2005; Kuruppu and Gruber 2006) • Lack of time impacts willingness to try new library tools and techniques (Parrish 1989; Sadler and Given 2007) • Primarily use journal articles rather than books (Chrzastowski and Joseph 2006) • Prefer electronic access (Chrzastowski and Joseph 2006) • Desire cross-database searching (Maughan 1999) OSU Libraries
Graduate Student Needs • Increase information literacy skills • Space to study/research/ write/collaborate • Community to interact with (“Community of Scholars”) cayce.vanhorn – Auburn University Libraries ARL/CNI Fall Forum 2007 Report
Why Grad Students Are Often Underserved • The undergraduate population is so much bigger • Undergraduate student development arguably requires more attention and resources • The perception that academic programs and departments already meet the needs of grad students • Grad students are experienced students – know how to navigate the higher ed system Pontius & Harper, 2006
Traditional Barriers • Assumptions about level of familiarity and knowledge • By librarians • By faculty • By students themselves • Lack of a traditional access point
Traditional Service Points • Orientations • Tool-specific classes • Research consultations • Reference Desk spencerselvidge
Creating a Graduate Student Services Program Departmental Shifts Surveyed Student Needs Appointed a Coordinator Looked for the point of greatest impact Chose an instructional style Evaluated Workshop Promoted Workshop Expanded Options
Why the Literature Review? • Survey results • Our own experiences as grad students (and librarians) • Common across departments • Specific, required information need • Great lead in for many IL competencies • Determining info needed, accessing, evaluating, incorporating, using effectively
Why a Workshop? • Separate from a specific course • Broad reach • Interactive environment • Realistic post-school setting • Elements we included • Pre-registration, confirmation reminders, personalized packets, name tags, food and drink, seating, conversational tone, group work
Workshop Promotion • Find the most effective means for your setting • Try multiple avenues • Posters, handouts, emails from subject librarians, emails from grad advisors • Evaluate what actually worked
Definition and purpose of the literature review Communicating with your advisor Comprehensiveness Strategies for conducting a literature review Learning how to read and recognize patterns in the literature Effective database searching Useful library services (e.g. interlibrary loan) Organizing searches and results (e.g., saving searches, bibliographic management software) Keeping up with the literature (RSS feeds, Table of Contents alerts, social bookmarking, search alerts) Contacts for further help and participant evaluation of workshop What We Cover
Evaluation • Pre-Assessment • Length of time at OSU? • Masters or Ph.D. student? • ILL use? • Summit use? • What article databases have you used? • What do you want to learn?
Evaluation – Post Workshop • Self-assessment of learning • Review of how we did • What they would like to learn in the future
Future areas to explore • Target specific audiences • international students, older than average students, or distance learners • Offer classes for a range of skill levels • Involve faculty • Increase thesis writing support for graduate students (based on requests on student evals) • Partner with writing center, academic departments to explore options • Make other library workshop offerings available to graduate students • Provide resources for grad students in their role as teachers and researchers (not just students)
Summary • Consider your audience • Create programs that meet a need