Megan Oakleaf’s research while affiliated with Syracuse University and other places

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Publications (9)


The Problems and Promise of Learning Analytics for Increasing and Demonstrating Library Value and Impact
  • Article

January 2018

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94 Reads

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16 Citations

Information and Learning Sciences

Megan Oakleaf

Purpose This paper describes the need for academic libraries to demonstrate and increase their impact of student learning and success. It highlights the data problems present in existing library value correlation research and suggests a pathway to surmounting existing data obstacles. The paper advocates the integration of libraries into institutional learning analytics systems to gain access to more granular student learning and success data. It also suggests using library-infused learning analytics data to discover and act upon new linkages that may reveal library value in an institutional context. Design/methodology/approach The paper describes a pattern pervasive in existing academic library value correlation research and identifies major data obstacles to future research in this vein. The paper advocates learning analytics as one route to access more usable and revealing data. It also acknowledging several challenges to the suggested approach. Findings This paper describes learning analytics as it may apply to and support correlation research on academic library value. While this paper advocates exploring the integration of library data and institutional data via learning analytics initiatives, it also describes four challenges to this approach including librarian concerns related to the use of individual level data, the tension between claims of correlation and causation in library value research, the need to develop interoperability standards for library data, and organizational readiness and learning analytics maturity issues. Originality/value This article outlines a path forward for academic library value research that may otherwise be stymied by existing data difficulties.







Notes from the Field: 10 Short Lessons on One-Shot Instruction
  • Article
  • Full-text available

December 2012

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83 Reads

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10 Citations

Communications in Information Literacy

Librarians teach. It might not be what they planned to do when they entered the profession, or it may have been a secret hope all along. Either way, librarians teach, and one teaching scenario remains quintessential: the one-shot library instruction session. In recognition of the centrality of the "one-shot," this article shares several authors' "notes from the field." The notes provide a range of strategies for developing pedagogically sound one-shot library instruction sessions, grouped loosely into three categories: planning, delivery, and integration. The authors offer these insights in their own words in hopes that other teaching librarians may benefit from their experiences.

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Notes from the Field: 10 Short Lessons on One-Shot Instruction

December 2012

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17 Reads

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6 Citations

Communications in Information Literacy

Megan Oakleaf

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Steven Hoover

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Beth Woodard

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[...]

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Patty Iannuzzi

Librarians teach. It might not be what they planned to do when they entered the profession, or it may have been a secret hope all along. Either way, librarians teach, and one teaching scenario remains quintessential: the one-shot library instruction session. In recognition of the centrality of the “one-shot,” this article shares several authors' “notes from the field." The notes provide a range of strategies for developing pedagogically sound one-shot library instruction sessions, grouped loosely into three categories: planning, delivery, and integration. The authors offer these insights in their own words in hopes that other teaching librarians may benefit from their experiences.


Writing Information Literacy Assessment Plans: A Guide to Best Practice

October 2010

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294 Reads

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43 Citations

Communications in Information Literacy

Academic librarians throughout higher education add value to the teaching and learning missions of their institutions though information literacy instruction. To demonstrate the full impact of librarians on students in higher education, librarians need comprehensive information literacy assessment plans, composed of instructional program-level and outcome-level components, that summarize the purpose of information literacy assessment, emphasize the theoretical basis of their assessment efforts, articulate specific information literacy goals and outcomes, describe the major assessment methods and tools used to capture evidence of student learning, report assessment results, and highlight improvements made as a consequence of learning assessment.

Citations (8)


... Previous studies, NSS and HEIs, identify three major resource categories to enhance students' academic practice: library resources, IT/digital resources, and course-specific resources [15,26,27]. Library resources are literature (hardcopy and digital) made available to support the curriculum [28,29]. These can include the material and access to material such as databases for journal articles, conference papers, and databases, statutory and professional publications, to name a few. ...

Reference:

A scientometric analysis of global scientific literature on learning resources in higher education
The Problems and Promise of Learning Analytics for Increasing and Demonstrating Library Value and Impact
  • Citing Article
  • January 2018

Information and Learning Sciences

... To collect data for systematic review, the PRISMA framework is empolyed 24 . Inclusion criteria were as follows: (a) inclusion of articles concerning the impact of financial development on the environment (b) inclusion of articles from subject areas: environment, economics, energy, social science, management and multidisciplinary Source: Author's compilation For this study, the Scopus database is used because it contains International Scientific Indexing (ISI) and Scopus-indexed articles 25 . Scopus database was searched using a combination of keywords ("Financial Development"; AND "environ*;" OR "natur*;" OR "climat*;" OR "sustain*;" OR "carbon*;" OR "Energy consumption;" OR "ecolog*"), in the title, keyword or abstract which returned 1529 articles. ...

Writing Information Literacy Assessment Plans: A Guide to Best Practice

Communications in Information Literacy

... The librarians in the interviews stated that they neither had the time nor the competence to help students develop their academic writing skills. Others (Loertscher & Woolls, 2012;Oakleaf, Hoover, Woodard, & Corbin, 2012) called for a role-expansion for librarians. "Librarians are uniquely positioned to play a special role" Oakleaf et al. (2012, p. 22) stated, and they continued: "Librarians participate (or should) in the development of the learning outcomes for the campus-especially those related to information literacy-and ensure that outcomes are embedded in the beginning, middle and end of the curriculum" (p. ...

Notes from the Field: 10 Short Lessons on One-Shot Instruction

Communications in Information Literacy

... Indeed, using AI and analytics in academic libraries poses moral and ethical dilemmas, particularly concerning user privacy and well-being (Jones and Salo, 2018;Jones et al., 2020). Prioritizing ethical considerations and embedding them in technological designs is crucial to obtaining positive impacts of AI and analytics in academic libraries investing in these technologies to achieve digital transformation and enhance library services (Doty, 2020;Komosany and Alnwaimi, 2021;Oakleaf et al., 2017). Meanwhile, other studies have focused on leveraging AI and analytics to personalize library services, underscoring the importance of understanding users' unique needs to enhance service quality (Khavidaki et al., 2023). ...

Academic libraries & institutional learning analytics: One path to integration
  • Citing Article
  • August 2017

The Journal of Academic Librarianship

... While research indicates that multiple information literacy sessions are more e®ective than a one-shot session (Gibbs et al., 2012;Oakleaf et al., 2012), information literacy education becomes far more e®ective, with better learning outcomes for students, when knowledge and practical skills are integrated into subject-speci¯c curricula or delivered through stand-alone information literacy credit-courses (Holderied, 2013;Lowry, 1990;O'Clair, 2013;Toth, 2005). Besides teaching information literacy knowledge and skills, a credit-course promotes problem-solving and thinking skills, as well as instilling con¯dence in students regarding their abilities. ...

Notes from the Field: 10 Short Lessons on One-Shot Instruction
  • Citing Article
  • December 2012

Communications in Information Literacy

... 38 No. IV December 2023 -----------COLLEGE LIBRARIES In addition to instructional technologies, organisations can and frequently do collect information about user interactions with virtual assistants, smart phones, tablets, wearable gear, computers, sensors, and ID card readers (Kyle et. al, 2020).As pointed out by Megan Oakleaf (2015), to assess and research the relationships between student library interactions and student learning and success measures, librarians may adopt such Library Analytics (LA) practices. Moreover, worms, viruses, plagiarism, flaming, hacking, and misinformation are the threats as a result of dysfunctional human behaviour as identified by Ikolo (2019). ...

The Library's Contribution to Student Learning: Inspirations and Aspirations
  • Citing Article
  • March 2015

College & Research Libraries

... Another study (Williamson, 2008) finds that the greatest barrier to change lies in transforming the knowledge and skills of library staff from the traditional service model to an engagement model that emanates from the organizational culture. Belanger and Oakleaf (2013) describe the use of Assessment Management Systems (AMS) as a catalyst to librarian engagement through assessment in their own line of work as well as through the broader life of campus by advising institutions on AMS exploration. ...

AMSs: Questions to Spark Librarian Engagement
  • Citing Article
  • July 2013

The Journal of Academic Librarianship

... The Community of Online Research Assignments (CORA) is another repository of learning objects for information literacy instruction. Regarding assessment, Oakleaf (2014) and Hosier (2017) posited early suggestions in creating Framework-based learning outcomes, which could be graded. Oakleaf suggested the structure, "The student will be able to + ACTIVE VERB" (p. ...

A Roadmap for Assessing Student Learning Using the New Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education
  • Citing Article
  • September 2014

The Journal of Academic Librarianship