While mobile technologies are ubiquitous among students and increasingly used in many aspects of libraries, they have yet to gain traction in information literacy instruction. Librarians at Champlain College piloted mobile phone polling in a first-year classroom as a less expensive and more versatile alternative to clickers. By utilizing a technology that virtually all students have in their pockets librarians found that it increased engagement from previous iterations of the session. In addition, by asking poll questions about students\u27 experiences, librarians were able to facilitate in-depth inquiry into information literacy topics. Ultimately, from direct experience in over 30 different classes, we found that mobile phone polling is a...
Assuming that students no longer read printed handouts, many librarians have stopped producing print...
Purpose With mobile phones now becoming an almost ubiquitous technology the time seems ripe for l...
Presentation slides from a workshop at European Conference on Information Literacy, Istanbul, Turkey
While mobile technologies are ubiquitous among students and increasingly used in many aspects of lib...
While mobile technologies are ubiquitous among students and increasingly used in many aspects of lib...
Getting first year students to engage in the classroom can be a tremendous challenge. They have a lo...
Mobile devices have changed everyday life and they have had a great impact in higher education. This...
Learning essential information literacy skills through the use of mobile phones is an innovative m-l...
Practically all our students seem to have mobile phones, constantly switched on, continually on th...
(Forst paragraph) Our learners are as varied as the techniques we employ in information literacy cla...
In this paper we report on two surveys and offer an introductory plan that librarians may use to beg...
In his latest book, futurist Howard Rheingold defines the smartmob, a new paradigm in social compu...
Purpose This paper describes a case study illustrating the systematic approach librarians used to d...
While there have been a number of articles written about the need to provide mobile services for use...
In this paper we report on two surveys and offer an introductory plan that librarians may use to beg...
Assuming that students no longer read printed handouts, many librarians have stopped producing print...
Purpose With mobile phones now becoming an almost ubiquitous technology the time seems ripe for l...
Presentation slides from a workshop at European Conference on Information Literacy, Istanbul, Turkey
While mobile technologies are ubiquitous among students and increasingly used in many aspects of lib...
While mobile technologies are ubiquitous among students and increasingly used in many aspects of lib...
Getting first year students to engage in the classroom can be a tremendous challenge. They have a lo...
Mobile devices have changed everyday life and they have had a great impact in higher education. This...
Learning essential information literacy skills through the use of mobile phones is an innovative m-l...
Practically all our students seem to have mobile phones, constantly switched on, continually on th...
(Forst paragraph) Our learners are as varied as the techniques we employ in information literacy cla...
In this paper we report on two surveys and offer an introductory plan that librarians may use to beg...
In his latest book, futurist Howard Rheingold defines the smartmob, a new paradigm in social compu...
Purpose This paper describes a case study illustrating the systematic approach librarians used to d...
While there have been a number of articles written about the need to provide mobile services for use...
In this paper we report on two surveys and offer an introductory plan that librarians may use to beg...
Assuming that students no longer read printed handouts, many librarians have stopped producing print...
Purpose With mobile phones now becoming an almost ubiquitous technology the time seems ripe for l...
Presentation slides from a workshop at European Conference on Information Literacy, Istanbul, Turkey