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 Definition | How we integrated IC in the curriculum| Title V Academic Senate developmental models 2001-2002 |

How we integrated IC into the curriculum

Cuyamaca College is using an integration model.  In 1997-1998, the College undertook rigorous general education reform.  After these two years, Cuyamaca College adopted a set of six required components to all General Education courses.  One of these components is Information Competency.  Effective 1999, all General Education courses must show evidence of all six components in order to meet certification standards by the Cuyamaca Curriculum Committee. View the Academic Senate Proposal.

The current challenges to libraries are attracting greater support, raising the value of information literacy, and blurring the edges of the faculty/librarian divide. The focus of the librarian-faculty dialogue should move from what the library owns to how the library can contribute to student learning. The General Education reform movement at Cuyamaca College opened the door for the integration of information competency across the curriculum.

For all new courses, department chairs are required to submit a course addition library form, which is approved by the librarian.  For all new courses to be certified as General Education, department chairs are required to complete the above-mentioned course addition form and the
"General Education Survival Kit"
. Read more on adding information competency to a new or existing course. Blurring the edges of the faculty/librarian divide continues to be a great success. Cuyamaca Library has added course-specific research guides.

HISTORY

In 2001, Cuyamaca's Information competency program is cited in Title V proposal by the State Academic Senate (2002)
Academic Senate attempted to add an information competency clause to Title V. Cuyamaca College was used as one of the three models to justify the Title V addition.  Unfortunately, attempts to pass it failed. In spite of this, several colleges has successfully added some kind of information competency to their college. 

Cuyamaca integration model

Cuyamaca College Library is one of the frontrunners at the Community College level.  Even though we have the  technology tools, our students do not have the basic skills or critical thinking skills to be successful in college.  New freshmen don’t know the difference between a journal and a magazine. New freshmen need us librarians to “personalize” the entire research process for them. 

Cuyamaca College selected to implement the integration model.  In 1997-1998, the College undertook rigorous “general education reform”.  After these two years, Cuyamaca College adopted a set of six required components to all General Education courses.  One of these components is Information Competency.  The other five components are Writing Across the Curriculum, Linkages, General Education Outcomes, Workplace Skills Outcomes and Diversity Outcomes.  Effective 1999, all General Education courses and new course additions to the General Education package must show evidence of all six components in order to meet certification standards by the Cuyamaca Curriculum Committee.

 The Information Competency component is simply stated:

 “Courses shall motivate students to develop information competency skills to improve the quality of education and everyday life though the selective use of information technology and information resources.  Students will be able to identify information resources, apply appropriate tools to acquire information, formulate a search strategy, evaluate acquired information, and recognize alternative information sources (note: these could be considered as the primary elements of information competency).  This can be achieved through various activities including but not limited to: using computers, periodical/journal research, internet research, Web home-page projects, and library research orientations.”

This integration model approach is based on the understanding that each discipline has its own conventions of language use and style and that these conventions, supplemented by information competency, must be taught to students so that they might successfully participate in academic discourse.

 The primary mission is to help faculty implement and shape a course that makes information competency an essential and integral component in the learning process.

Goals

Implementation

To increase faculty awareness of information competency

Cuyamaca Staff Development Program offers two hours staff development collaborative training with librarian.

 

To meet individual faculty needs to infuse information competency into their course,

Cuyamaca librarians develop course-specific research guides, made available online 24/7 .

To meet individual departments need for information competency

Cuyamaca librarians are developing research links for department homepages.

To create throughout the campus a collegial atmosphere for discussing issues related to information competency

Cuyamaca librarians are in regular contact with faculty

Advantages: 

  • Integration model approach is never prescriptive.  It is based on the understanding that each discipline has its own conventions of language use and style and that information competency can easily be adapted to these conventions.
  • Integration model allows students to develop information competency skills at their own pace as they work through each General Education course.
  • Integration model make students aware that information competency is a necessary and frequently used skill in all courses and in the workplace.
  • Integration model reaches a greater number of students compared to a traditional unit course of 30 students.
  • Integration model easily implemented into online courses and traditional courses.
  • Integration model is embraced by faculty who do not have the time to develop information competency modules.
  • Integration model requires minimum cost to implement.

Disadvantages:   Integration models using Web-based delivery systems need web-design and technical support. For the years of 1999- present, Cuyamaca Library has committed to integrating information competency via the Web. The advantage to publishing the integration model to the Web is that the use of the Web has dramatically increased access to information competency research for students and faculty. The disadvantage is that, unlike some pages on the college site, the library information competency integration model will always be undergoing structural change.

Integration models requires librarians to develop expertise in building the web content pages.  If an instructor decides to change his course content, the librarian has to update all information competency modules by continuing to add new points of access, reformatting web layout, and re-designing appropriate visuals. Many students are more computer savvy than most of the staff and faculty here at Cuyamaca.  These students will gravitate toward web pages that reflect state-of-the-art awareness.   If a college chooses to publish to the Web, an expert web-designer and librarian content-builder are both critical to the success of an integration model.

 

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