Lesson Study in Libraries Shevon Desai Marija Freeland University of Michigan Eric Frierson University of Texas at Arlington.

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Transcript Lesson Study in Libraries Shevon Desai Marija Freeland University of Michigan Eric Frierson University of Texas at Arlington.

Lesson Study in Libraries
Shevon Desai
Marija Freeland
University of Michigan
Eric Frierson
University of Texas at Arlington
Lesson Plans
• How do you plan?
– No lesson plan document at all
– Bullet points highlighting main concepts
– Fully fleshed out, scripted lessons
• How do you execute lessons?
– No matter how prepped, I never look at it (or don’t have one)
– Use it only as a rough guide
– Read it as a script
Lesson Plans
• Why don’t we just
read from the lesson
plan?
– We’re flexible
– We know this by heart
• We’re experts.
Expertise
“Expertise in a particular domain does not
guarantee that one is good at helping
others learn it. In fact, expertise can
sometimes hurt teaching because many
experts forget what is easy and what is
difficult for students.”
- How People Learn : How Experts Differ from Novices
Expertise
• Our sheer genius
hinders us.
Topic Selection
& Group Formation
Lesson Study
Scope Issues &
Lesson Study Intro
Discuss the Topic
& Teaching Strategies
Final Lesson Plan
Meet Again
& Revise
Select a Teacher
Solicit Student
Feedback
Teach the Lesson
& Observation
Expertise
Implementation
How did we get started?
• Instructor College Involvement
• Choosing a topic
• What do we teach?
• Core group of volunteers
Implementation
Implementation
Core Group
• Librarians and library students
• Different levels of expertise
• From across the libraries
• Different perspectives on the material and our
patrons
Social
Sciences
Abstracts
Find E-Journals
Find Databases
Quick Search
CSA
Biological Sciences
Databases
Implementation
Doing it all over again
• Later implementations of Lesson Study
• RefWorks
• Critical evaluation of resources
• Some of core group remained involved
• Lesson Study method particularly useful as
subjects taught changed
Benefits
• Instructors at all levels of expertise can
participate
• Allows collaboration among a wide range of
instructors
• Helps instructors become comfortable with
being observed by their peers
• Students have an active role
• End up with a useful file of lesson plans
Challenges
• Instructors and students are busy people!
• Dissemination of lesson plans
• Evaluation
Try it out!
• Use Lesson Study to teach a lesson
– Undergraduate students
– Using FirstSearch’s WorldCat
– Under 20 minutes
Q1 & Q2
• What to teach…
– What is it?
FirstSearch?
– Catalog, not Index
– Title Searching /
Formats
– WHY? WHAT? HOW?
GETTING STUFF.
– What it DOES and
DOESN’T.
– Known item / keyword
• How to teach it…
– Making relevant –
SCENARIO (has it
happened to you)
– Overview – then
students find top 10
videos on Spec. Ed.
– STUDENT teachs how
they got to results
– Going into Local Cat.
Making comparison
Q3
• What did you learn?
– LOTS of different ways (depending on audience)
– THIS IS SMALL GROUP – modeling good
behaviour
– Great variants in opinions (esp. about HOW TO
TEACH) – different UNIVERSITIES, audiences,
urban/rural
YOU AS STUDENT
• WHAT IS IT?
• Visual aid would help
• LONG LIST, then pared it down to what was
important
• COMPARING to a KNOWN tool (iTunes – by
Artist, by Title, by Genre)
• Thinking about faculty reactions to
‘pedestrian’ examples
• Are teaching faculty involved? It’s a valuable
P.O.V.
Lesson Study at Your Library
• Get buy-in from
instructors
• Recruit volunteers
• Decide what will be
taught
• Get together, plan 1st
lesson plan, teach
• Talk about it, revise it
• Lather, rinse, repeat
Lesson Study in Libraries
• Even the best teachers need a fresh
perspective
• Newer teachers need guidance
• Robust Lesson Plans
– Even if they go out the window when we teach,
creating them helps us to prepare & think
• Everyone has something valuable to say
Lesson Study in Libraries
• Feel the Lesson
Study Love
– Felt like a team
accomplishment
• Questions?