Planning, preparing and assessing made easyThese essential resources provide a comprehensive yet flexible teaching framework that successfully develops reading, writing, speaking, listening and critical literacy skills of students. Providing teaching ideas for all the components in the Literacy Network Middle or Upper series, each book ensures you have a clear pathway on how to deliver a balanced literacy program.The ideas can be used flexibly or followed step-by-step. Either way they will
The Survey of Best Practices in Developing Online Information Literacy Tutorials is a benchmarking report for online tutorial development, presenting a wealth of information on the practices involved in and the cost of developing online information literacy tutorials. The 285-page report also looks at how tutorials are marketed and accessed, and at popular access points such as Facebook, the library website and others, as well as how tutorials are used in for-credit classes and more ad-hoc use. The study looks at how tutorial designers are trained, and at how they inter-relate to non-library departments and other departments of the library. The study also looks at the use of tutorials of other colleges and vendor-produced tutorials, and at efforts to evaluate how students use tutorials, and how colleges should make decisions on what kinds of tutorials to produce and how to best produce them. The questionnaire for the report was largely developed by librarians at the University of Arizona libraries.
The study is based on data from 50+ North American colleges with data broken out by size and type of college, level of tuition and public/private status. The report covers institutional requirements for departmental assessment plans, policies on both faculty and student assessment, standardized test administration, outreach to students for assessment purposes, graduation requirements, and the institutional politics around assessment issues. The report also gives key benchmarking data on the size and budget of the college assessment office, or other office that performs similar functions. The study helps college administrators to answer questions such as: what are colleges doing in student and faculty assessment? What resources are being spent? What have colleges found to be successful? How have their efforts changed in the past few years and how are they likely to change in the future? What kind of assessment technologies and strategies are they finding useful? How are they reacting to new pressures from the Federal and state governments to demonstrate effectiveness as educators?
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