1 / 16

Chemical Info Literacy Tools: a work in progress

Chemical Info Literacy Tools: a work in progress. Debbie Chaves, Wilfred Laurier U, dchaves@wlu.ca Patricia Meindl, U of Toronto, pmeindl@chem.utoronto.ca. Subject Guides – What do we want?. Hope that subject guides provide students with a starting point for research

creola
Télécharger la présentation

Chemical Info Literacy Tools: a work in progress

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. Chemical Info Literacy Tools:a work in progress Debbie Chaves, Wilfred Laurier U, dchaves@wlu.ca Patricia Meindl, U of Toronto, pmeindl@chem.utoronto.ca

  2. Subject Guides – What do we want? • Hope that subject guides provide students with a starting point for research • Point of need – point of access – easy to find • Must not be static easily changed • Include library content: catalogues, databases, e-references… • Include course content: direct links to the classroom assignment • Include 2-way communication: chat boxes, Skype… • Include writing content: citation, writing centre…. • Include RSS feeds, del.icio.us cloud tags, book covers from librarything.com, videos….

  3. How do we create the paragon of Subject Guides? • Drupal: http://drupal.org - open source content management platform • Moodle: http://moodle.citylit.ac.uk/moodle/mod/resrouce/view.php?id=123 – open source content management system • MyLibrary: http://mylibrary.library.nd.edu/ - open source subject guide application • SubjectPlus: http://www.ithacalibrary.com/subplus - database-driven subject guide • LibData: http://libdata.sourceforge.net – open source authoring environment • ResearchGuide: http://researchguide.sourceforge.net – open source environment for subject guide creation • LibGuides: http://www.springshare.com/libguides - $ to create and host platform

  4. What to include? • What type of information should be included within a subject guide? • When is it too much information? • How broad should the information be?

  5. References • EBSCOhost: Internet Subject Guides in Academic Libraries. (n.d.). . Retrieved June 4, 2009, from http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdf?vid=3&hid=9&sid=a7472a9b-d689-43f5-a122-96aa9ce27550%40sessionmgr7. • Edward M. Corrado and Kathryn A. Frederick. (2008, April 10). Free and Open Source Options for Creating Database-Driven Subject Guides. The Code4Lib Journal. Retrieved June 4, 2009, from http://journal.code4lib.org/articles/47. • iLibrarian » A Librarian’s Guide to Creating 2.0 Subject Guides. (n.d.). . Retrieved June 4, 2009, from http://oedb.org/blogs/ilibrarian/2007/a-librarians-guide-to-creating-20-subject-guides/. • Project MUSE - portal: Libraries and the Academy - Students, Librarians, and Subject Guides: Improving a Poor Rate of Return. (n.d.). . Retrieved June 4, 2009, from http://muse.jhu.edu/login?uri=/journals/portal_libraries_and_the_academy/v004/4.1reeb.html.

  6. Online tutorials • Demonstrate the search process • Added value info • On-demand access • Interactivity available in some software • Can be assignment-focused • New simple software • Commercial: Captivate, Camtasia • Free: Wink, Camstudio

  7. Chemistry - a special case? • Unique needs of chemistry • Properties • Spectra • Chemical structures • Reactions • Not just topic-based searching

  8. Examples • Scifinder web • More specific tutorials • In a Maths for Chemists course (p.37) • FIS 2132 examples • Unfortunately most examples seem to be on Blackboard type portals and not freely visible

  9. Problem 1 • An organic chemistry professor is going to give his students an assignment on Named Reactions • they have to identify the origins of a specific named reaction and then find examples of the reaction in the current literature • The professor could give you 20 minutes in class to tell the students where to look • But is there a better way to get the info to students?

  10. Problem 2 • A analytical lab course is going to examine many chemical properties during the term • The instructor has asked the librarian to show the students where to get the literature data – he can fit you in during the first lab class • Is there a better way?

  11. Problem 3 • A large first year class needs to learn how to use the handbooks and MDS sheets • Each lab group is doing the experiments in a different order (due to access to facilities) • These are also new students and could use a general library orientation as well • How to deal with this?

  12. Problem 4 • Suggestions?

More Related