1 / 15

Promoting Collaboration with Faculty

Promoting Collaboration with Faculty. LOEX May 11, 2002 Margaret Fain, Bob Stevens, Peggy Bates Coastal Carolina University. T R U S T. Create Conversations with Faculty. Meet faculty one-on-one. Present library services at department meetings. Offer workshops.

Download Presentation

Promoting Collaboration with Faculty

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Promoting Collaboration with Faculty LOEX May 11, 2002 Margaret Fain, Bob Stevens, Peggy Bates Coastal Carolina University

  2. T R U S T

  3. Create Conversations with Faculty • Meet faculty one-on-one. • Present library services at department meetings. • Offer workshops. • Participate in discussion groups, brown bag lunches. • Get involved in centers for teaching. • Create research components for workshops. • Write articles for journals outside our field. • Attend cultural, social, athletic events with faculty. • Offer an on-campus “information literacy summer institute”. Source: Young and Harmony (1999)

  4. Recognize 3 types of research assignments Match needs with service

  5. Reactive Assignments • Faculty developed. • No input from librarians. • No context for assignment. • Often no library instruction.

  6. CooperativeAssignments • Faculty developed. • Librarians have input. • Librarians make suggestions, help with revisions. • Awareness of goals of class/assignment. • Library instruction session usually occurs.

  7. CollaborativeAssignments • Faculty/Librarian work together. • Goals are complementary. • Assignment directly related to content and outcomes of class. • Library research integral part of class. • Communication high between faculty, students, and librarians.

  8. Tact Respect Understanding Support Tenacity

  9. TACT • Art of diplomacy. • Method of approach. • Turns “bad” assignments into education opportunities. • Betters relationships.

  10. RESPECT • Mutually affirming. • Collegial. • Reinforces “authority”. • Enables true listening to occur. • Three way: faculty, students, and librarians.

  11. UNDERSTANDING • Inform faculty of L.I. objectives. • Establish common ground with faculty. • Learn faculty expectations.

  12. SUPPORT • Needed on all levels. • Reach out to faculty. • Be prepared. • Present solutions. • Provide the big picture. • Continually educate.

  13. TENACITY • Persistence. • Take advantage of all opportunities. • Try every approach imaginable. • Follow-up. • Try, try, again and again, and again . . . .

  14. Collaboration starts small. Learn from failure and success. Success reinforces success. Don’t be afraid to experiment.

  15. TRUST COLLABORATION

More Related