320 likes | 518 Views
Preparing 21st Century Teens for Lifelong Learning: A Collaborative, Interactive, Web-Based Tutorial Project. Bridget Kowalczyk, San José State University Pamela Jackson, San Diego State University June 10, 2006 LOEX-of-the-West Kohala (Kona) Coast of Hawaii's Big Island.
E N D
Preparing 21st Century Teens for Lifelong Learning: A Collaborative, Interactive, Web-Based Tutorial Project Bridget Kowalczyk, San José State University Pamela Jackson, San Diego State University June 10, 2006 LOEX-of-the-West Kohala (Kona) Coast of Hawaii's Big Island
Public & Academic Library Collaboration: Playing on Strengths • Public Library strengths: • Established relationships with High School Teachers and School Library Media Specialists • Teens Reach Group • Knowledge of California Dept. of Education Content Standards and Curriculum Frameworks • Academic Library strengths: • Experience infusing information literacy into the curriculum • Experience creating learning objectives and outcomes • Experience with creating content and quizzes for online tutorials • Technical support for the creation and maintenance of online tutorials • Continuing education opportunities in assessment, instructional design,… • Budget to support the Information Literacy Program • Established relationships with departments on campus
Web-Based Tutorials:Changing the Way We Teach Information Literacy
Why Make Web-based Education a Priority for InfoLit Instruction? • Students’ educational expectations • Convenience of virtual space • Reaching the masses
Enhancing Information Literacy Instruction with Tutorials • Allows for progressive reinforcement of information literacy concepts • In-person instruction with students can be more advanced and student-centered • Pre-college tutorials may help better prepare teens for college-level research
Concepts Taught via Teen Information Literacy Tutorial • Developing a Research Topic • Writing a Thesis Statement • Identifying Popular and Scholarly Literature • Understanding and Recognizing Primary Research • Researching Pro/Con issues • Listening and Note Taking • Plagiarism • And much more!
Student Learning Outcomes Popular vs. Scholarly Module Learning Objective(s): • Student learns to recognize the difference between popular and scholarly journals based on author, audience, language, appearance, references, and status (peer-reviewed or not). Assessment of Learning Outcome(s): • Step 1: Prequiz to determine student's understanding of the concepts to be taught. • Step 2: Tutorial Quiz results measure student's understanding of the concepts taught in the corresponding module. • Step 3: Student's ability to apply the concepts taught in successful completion of the corresponding high school assignment.
Measuring Student Learning • Quizzes at the end of each module test students’ knowledge upon completion. • Quiz data can be used to tailor content of both library and course instruction. • Library is able to provide teachers and librarians with data about their students’ knowledge.
Quizzes and Queries • Students register to take a tutorial. • Quiz scores are automatically emailed to the student upon completion. • Results are stored in a local database. • Queries allow us to see quiz scores by class, student, semester (includes class averages and scores by question).
Developing and Managing our Web-Based Teen Tutorial Project:Resources, Staffing, Budget
Development Team • Librarians and the Information Literacy Specialist responsible for creating the content and quizzes, and overseeing the overall direction of the tutorial • Two Programmers responsible for HTML, PHP, JavaScript, and back-end Oracle quiz databases and queries • Two Graphic Artists/Designers responsible for the artwork, Flash animations, and overall look of the tutorial • Sound engineer and/or digital media specialist to record voiceovers
Information Technology / Web Team Support • A web server dedicated to tutorial projects • Ability to support the exploration of a variety of technologies for instruction • Dedicated personnel
Budget • Ongoing, committed support for programming and graphic design • Funding, as needed, to keep up with the times and try new, interactive technologies to reach 21st century learners
Software and Technology Expertise • HTML • PHP • CSS (cascading style sheets) • JavaScript • Relational Database (e.g., MySQL or Oracle) • Macromedia Flash • Adobe Photoshop CS • Adobe Illustrator • Streaming Video and VoIP • Browser Compatibility
Accessibility • ADA Requirements • ADA issues with Flash Animations • Voice Over • Alt Tags for Images
Timeline to Complete a Tutorial • Tutorials are ongoing projects—they take significant time and nurturing • Average time to build a short, solid tutorial from start to finish can be a little as 3-6 months, but typically takes longer • Initial tutorials are usually launched and “tinkered” with every few months
TRAMS Tutorial • A series of interactive, web-based instructional modules for high school students • Modules based on the AASL Information Literacy Standards and actual student assignments
TRAMS Collaboration: How many minds does it take to create a teen tutorial? • Bridget Kowalczyk, SJSU’s Information Literacy Specialist • Pamela Jackson, SDSU’s Information Literacy Librarian, formerly a librarian at SJSU • Andrea Schacter, SJPL Youth Services Librarian • Dawn Imada, SJPL Youth Services Librarian • Hilary Langhorst, SJPL Web Team Programmer • Jie (Jessie) Cai, Chirag Bhalgami, Veer Vivek Kaushik, Programmers • Wan Si Wan, Eric Szeto, and Nobuko Kimura, SJSU students in Graphic Design and Animation/Illustration. • Mike Adams, TRFT Chair & Ramon Navarro Johnson, KSJS disc jockey: character voiceovers and technical support/use of the KSJS recording studio to capture voiceovers. • Chuck Manthe, Theater instructor and Lincoln High School and none high school theater students providing character voiceovers. • Two local high school teens, consulting the team on ways to present interesting content to their peers. • Focus groups with teensReach, a youth council for the San José Public Library.
The Result http://tutorials.sjlibrary.org/trams/
ThanksQuestions/Comments Presentation and handouts can be found online at:http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~pjackson/#Presentations
Other Tutorials Available at SJSU • Library Essentials • Library Basics • InfoPower • 5 Ways • Plagiarism: The Crime of Intellectual Kidnapping • Subject-Specific • Company Information Tutorial • Computer Science 100w • Health Professions 100w (down for revision) • LOTSS (for library school students) • Prospective Students • Stairway to Success • TRAMS (coming soon to a computer near you)