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Syllabus

Content
This course examines the concept and practice of collaboration between library media specialists and their teaching colleagues to improve student learning.

Goal
The overall goal is to develop knowledge and skills that allow the library media specialist and classroom teacher to create a learning environment where students are able to fully utilize the print and non-print resources to conduct productive research activities.

There are six modules to be completed during this course; each module is designed with required readings and individual and team activities. Activities will require your participation in online class discussions with the instructor and peers and sharing your reactions to readings, online resources, literature review, field research, reflecting on what you learn when viewing best practice case studies and interactive role playing activities. Other activities will involve using online tools to create an assortment of learning guides. Activities will include options for all grade levels from elementary through high school.

Participants will complete a needs assessment, develop a research guide and pathfinder for a collaborative project, and develop an assessment (rubric) for a research project appropriate to the developmental level of the students. Ongoing participation in discussions is a class requirement.

Participant Outcomes

Modules

1 - Introduction to School and Library Collaboration
Literature review and examination of research studies about building partnerships for learning with teaching colleagues

2 - Creating a Collegial Environment
Strategies for influencing administrators and creating an environment of collegiality in your school and a review of levels of collaboration and best practices in school library-media centers

3 - Best Practices for Teaching Research Skills
Techniques and strategies to teach information literacy and study skills for classroom research activities including teaching students how to locate, access and evaluate Web-based databases and information resources, note taking, citations and building bibliographies, ethics and fair use

4 - Creating Pathfinders to Guide Student Research
Emerging technologies to support literature circles and student research projects including searching, selecting and organizing pathfinders and other strategies for classroom research such as RSS feeds, Google docs, Animoto, Voicethread, iGoogle, Zoho Polls, Moodle

5 - Assessment Tools for Evaluating Students
Designing assessment tools for collaborative research projects in the classroom

6 - Creation of a Research Guide for School Use
Final collaboration project and reflective journal

Each module is structured around an Introduction, Readings, Activities, an Activity Checklist, and Discussion Board Participation. You will work individually and as a member of collaborative teams to share and define your key learning insights.

While online education is highly flexible and designed to meet your schedule, you will need to set and meet deadlines as part of your weekly assignment due dates and collaborative work. Your instructor has developed a week-by-week calendar of learning activity and project due dates. Additionally, your peers will depend on you for timely feedback as you interact via discussion boards and work together on small group tasks.

Participation
Participants will:

  • Virtually exchange communication with other participants in online class discussion;
  • Review and discuss online background readings;
  • Search for additional information in online resources;
  • Complete course activities including those that involve setting goals or developing materials that will help you plan for program and professional growth.

You will be able to customize activities to your specific personal and media center program growth needs.

Collaboration
During each activity, you are expected to share your thoughts, ideas, and questions with other class participants and your instructor.

Participants may share drafts of works-in-progress for peer feedback and discuss ideas and suggestions before submitting the final copy of each project.

Feel free to use this world time tool when you are communicating with participants who live in different time zones. WORLDTIME

Discussion Board
Many of the course instructional concepts are developed through discussion using our online discussion board. You are expected to check the discussion regularly (at least three times a week) to check for new postings and to react to other participants' discussion postings throughout the week. The criteria is to interact three different times during the week, reading and posting during each of those visits to the discussion board.

The discussion board's most vital use is to exchange ideas with other participants; these may include reactions to readings, discussing the topic/issue of the week, sharing information and resources with classmates, asking a question, or responding to a problem posted by peers or your instructor.

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Activities
Activities will vary with each module. Generally activities will involve:
  • Participating in a discussion
  • Reading online articles and sharing what you learned
  • Completing an activity individually and/or with class peers
  • Writing in your Learning Journal
  • Sharing a personal reflection with your instructor

Evaluation
Class Discussion
Evaluation of your participation will be based on the amount of your class discussion, evidence of thoughtful discussion, questions you ask, completion of activities/projects, and reflective journal.

Evaluation of your discussion participation is cumulative and subjective based on notes that the facilitator records each week.

Exemplary indicates you participated above the minimum level in both quantity and clarity of communication in your discussion postings.

Proficient indicates you met the minimum requirement.

Below average indicates you consistently contributed below the minimum number of postings or contributions were merely perfunctory ("I agree with so and so; thank you for sharing that information.") or unclear.

Discussion Board Participation Guidelines and Evaluation

Your grade for discussion board participation will be based on both frequency and quality of your contributions during our discussions. Posting should demonstrate critical thinking, rather than simply social presence on the discussion board.

Quality participation is considered as thoughtful and concise contribution that demonstrates critical thinking and moves the discussion forward as related to the course material.

Contributions of low quality or lengthy excerpts from course materials or other sources will not result in an exemplary discussion grade. Comments such as "I agree" or "Yes/No" or “Thanks for the feedback” will not count toward the frequency of your participation.

The courseware management system monitors the amount of time, quality, number and frequency of both read and written discussion responses on the discussion board, and the instructor will review this while analyzing class postings based on the class discussion rubric

Project Evaluation
Projects will be evaluated using standards listed on the module rubrics or checklists. Projects will be evaluated for clarity, thoroughness, practical application, and professionalism.

Final Grade
Your final grade will be based on level of completion of module activities and online discussion.

40% - Module Activities
20% - Final Project
20% - Online Discussion (postings and participation on discussion board)
20% - Self-reflection
A - Meets or exceeds the requirements
B - Completion of most requirements
I - Incomplete assignments or partial completion of requirements (Work must be resubmitted.)

Your instructor will provide 1:1 feedback to you throughout the course, however, any time you want to ask about your progress, send a message directly to your instructor.

Grading Scale
Grades will be based upon performance in online class discussion, module activities and the final project. 

A      94-100% of the total points

A-     93-91% of total points

B+   90-88% of total points

B      87-84% of the total points

B-     83-81% of total points

C+   80-78% of total points

C      77-74% of the total points

C-     73-71% of total points

D      70-61% of the total points

F      60% and below total points

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ADA Statement
In compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), students are encouraged to register with UW Stout Disability Services for assistance with instructional accommodations due to disabilities. The phone number of the Disability Services office is 715-232-2995 or contact the staff via email at this website: http://www.uwstout.edu/disability/contact.shtml

Online Attendance
In an online course, you are not required to attend at a particular location or time of day.

This course is designed as an interactive course in which you contribute and respond to the discussion postings of other students.  Plan to log in and participate in the course discussion at least 3 times each week. Your instructor has access to a login summary including the date of each entry you make to the discussion board or dropbox—this includes a response to an assignment, a posting on the threaded discussion, submission of an assignment, or participation in group work.

If your professional/personal obligations or illness require you to be absent for more than 3 days, please contact me and arrange how you will make up the work. 

Please do not "drop out" for a period of time and then expect to "drop back in" without losing points. This makes it difficult for your colleagues to complete their assignments if feedback is required.

Late Policy
As an online instructor, I prefer to be flexible with due dates. Since we haven't committed to a regular schedule of meeting in a specific place, you can "come to class" at your convenience.

But this presents a problem when class participants abandon the course calendar completely. Regular, timely feedback to classmates via the Discussion board makes this class vital, and prompt submission of assignments for assessment allows the instructor to give you the guidance you deserve to receive.

Due dates for each module are published on the course calendar at the start of the class. Work turned in within seven days after that due date will be considered on time and will receive full credit.

After seven days, work that has not been submitted will receive a zero until the work is handed in and evaluated.

Excused Makeup Work - If the late submission has been requested and approved in advance of the due date, there will be no deduction of points from the grade. An e-mail to the instructor requesting an extension of the due date is sufficient.

Unexcused Makeup Work - If you have not requested an extension prior to the assignment due date, the late assignment will be considered unexcused.

Academic Honesty & Misconduct
From the university policy: “Students are responsible for the honest completion and representation of their work, for the appropriate citation of sources, and for respect of others’ academic endeavors. Students who violate these standards must be confronted and must accept the consequences of their actions.

Definitions of academic dishonesty as provided by the National Association of Student Personnel Administrators include:

Cheating - The use or attempted use of unauthorized materials, information, or study aids in any academic exercise.

Plagiarism - The use of others’ ideas and words without a clear acknowledgement of the source.

Fabrication - The intentional and unauthorized falsification or invention of any information or citation in 1any academic exercise.

Assisting - The facilitation or assistance in academic dishonesty.


UW-Stout also considers academic dishonesty to include forgery of academic documents, or intentionally impeding or damaging the academic work of others.

Academic misconduct in the University of Wisconsin System is defined by UWS Chapter 14. “
Student Academic Misconduct / Disciplinary Procedures - UWS Ch. 14 http://www.uwstout.edu/stusrv/dean/facstaff/chp14.shtml

 

Resources
It is recommended that you are familiar with the concepts presented in Information Power. (American Association of School Librarians and Association for Educational Communications and Technology Information Power: Building Partnerships for Learning. AASL and AECT, 1998).

All other required readings will be available online.

 


On this page:

Content

Participation

Collaboration

Class Discussion

Activities

Evaluation

ADA Statement

Online Attendance

Late Policy

Academic Honesty & Misconduct



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Last Updated: April 15, 2008