What stayed with me from the first lesson of our learning on theme 2,
was that being proactive could improve the success of the reference interview.
One of the important ways to be proactive is through collaboration in planning
and teaching of information literacy skills so that students can find maximum success.
Even though Riedling does not stress it, collaborating with classroom teachers
in the planning of research units and teaching research skills to students would
be helpful. Haycock (2007) concludes that “Collaboration is not easy. But
collaboration is the single professional behavior of teacher-librarians that
most affects student achievement” (32). Last week a class arrived in the
library to do “research” using the laptops and the internet. The teacher arrived
approximately 15 minutes after the students. They had all begun work on their
projects. As I circulated it became obvious that their teacher had made several
assumptions about their level of skill. The students really were unsure about reliable
websites and currency. I thought about the statement in our class notes, "Why
many teachers don't consider the key role of the teacher-librarian when the
assigning research/reference work to students is a question that has plagued us
for years” (Beaudry, 2019, class notes). Later on in the class it became
apparent that some of the students had no idea how to print. Had I been in the
class even to explain the process for printing, this alone could have
alleviated significant stress for the students and saved much time that would
have allowed me to engage with students in reference interviews. Some of the
students ended up feeling like they were unable to complete the task as
assigned. Twenty minutes of time before the students started their research would
have saved hours of individual explanations and would have resulted in greater
student success. You never want the students’ first experience in the learning
commons to be a frustrating one.
Leinonen,
S. (2017, December 3). 7 principles of teamwork for teacher
collaboration
(T.A.R.G.E.T.S.).
Beaudry, R.
(2019). LIBE 467: Lesson 5: The reference interview: Cooperative program
planning and teaching for personalized inquiry. Class notes. Retrieved from: https://canvas.ubc.ca/courses/41996/pages/lesson-5-the-reference-interview-cooperative-program- planning-and-teaching-for-personalized-inquiry?module_item_id=1308253
Haycock, K.
(2007). Collaboration: Critical success factors for student learning. School
Libraries Worldwide, 13(1),
25–35.
Leinonen,
S. (2017, December 3). 7 principles of teamwork for teacher collaboration (T.A.R.G.E.T.S.). Retrieved
October 11, 2019, from https://youtu.be/qx95qRuZA9Y.
Youngson,
N. (n.d.). Collaboration. Alpha Stock Images. Photograph.
Retrieved from http://www.picpedia.org/highway-signs/c/collaboration.htm