- Kathleen McDowell, faculty at Univ. of Illinois
- Anna Chovanec, graduate of SU 2015
- Madison Sullivan, graduate of UIUC, 2015
- Sarah Crissinger, graduate of UIUC, 2015
- Sveta Stoytcheva, graduate of UIUC, 2015
Chovanec - Filling in the Spaces (FiTS)
- Treats the MSLIS experience as a human library.
- Focuses on student needs and gaps in the curriculum
- Began in 2010 by Chris Turner, who was then a student. Could the students be resources for each other?
- Leveraging the knowledge and expertise of our student community
- New librarian based model focused around membership. Students as members of the academic community.
- On-site events that are streamed and archived.
- How we do FiTS?
- Run by the LIS Student Assembly
- FiTS coordinator
- Tools - Google Drive, Adobe Connect
- Needs?
- Support from the school
- Connections between students
- Technology
- Administrative - workflow and policies
- Valuing student input
- Day of FiTS - first attempt to scale FiTS
- Partnerships
- Incentive
- Assessment
- Future of FiTS
- Can it be scaled even further?
- GA-ship
- Alumni outreach
- Issues of ownership and privacy
- What we have learned
- Classmates to colleagues
- Online student participation
- Value of informality
- Value of continuity - in partnership with the school
Sullivan - GSLIS Speaks
- Gather opinions, etc., from students about the program
- There is information on this in the blog Hack Library School
- The survey had 69 respondents
- Information was anonymized before being presented to faculty
- How did students rank the program? 3.8/5
- Asked for information on improvements that students wanted.
- Asked some opinion questions. Some questions could be answered in long form.
- Also had a student led town hall. This was a safe space for discussing opinions openly. Both on campus and online. Collaborative note taking.
- Students want to provide more input to faculty and faculty committees.
- Some conversations are privileged. GSLIS Speaks tried to pull the curtain back on the conversations.
- Students fear retribution from open conversations.
- Presented comments at two different faculty meetings.
- Would like to see the survey done on a regular basis.
- Clear that students want to be involved in the decision making process. Involving them needs to be in time and genuine.
Sarah Crissinger and Sveta Stoytcheva - 2015 Symposium on LIS Education
- Http://lisedsymposium.wordpress.com
- Held two days on site and virtually
- Both unconference and accepted presentations
- Had keynotes including people from Hack Library School
- Conference registration was free
- Has a code of conduct
- Work to meet any accommodations needed
- Unconference themes were developed from an upfront survey. Info is on the web site.
- Logistics - ask for help, not for permission.
- Used existing infrastructure.
- There was a lot of uncompensated time put into the event
- How can something like this be available to more students?
- Results and outcomes:
- No easy solutions, but many conversations
- On-going peer network
- Informs our professional practice
- Non-students were welcome but were asked to listen and not talk
- What's next?
- Would like to see this happen again and at more schools
- Would like to have a national LIS student conference, perhaps as part of another conference. Would need to be affordable for students.
- Would like to see more LIS conferences made affordable for students.
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