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Teaching and Learning via the Network
The Electronic Researcher
Project Number 12 - 1994
Prue Mercer
City Library Services Manager
University of Technology, Sydney
PO Box 123
Broadway, NSW 2007
Australia
+61 (2) 330 3339
+61 (2) 330 3331
P.Mercer@uts.edu.au
Other Individuals And Organizations Associated With The Project
University of Technology, Sydney Library liaison staff (20)
University of Technology, Sydney Library systems staff (2)
University of Technology, Sydney Information Technology Division (5)
University of Technology, Sydney Instructional Technology Services (3)
University of Technology, Sydney Faculty technical staff (5)
Enid Roberts - external consultant
Abstract
Purpose
The Electronic Researcher is an information literacy program to train
library staff and users in electronic research, and to position the
library and its users for the impact of the greatly increasing use of
electronic material in information seeking, retrieval and delivery.
During 1992 and 1993 the main focus of the program training seminars has
been on using electronic networks, such as the Australian Academic and
Research Network (AARNet) and the Internet.
Methods
Network training sessions are designed to enable academic staff to become
independent network users and navigators. Training is based on the
subject approach to the use of networks, and the key strategy is to
customise courses for academic staff subject interests. As well we allow
for our audience being adult learners, with different levels of
expertise, working on different computer platforms. Library subject
specialists, liaison librarians, collaborate to produce core sets of
training modules. These modules cover e-mail, telnet, access such as
Gopher, WWW etc, file transfer and newsgoups. Each liaison librarian
then provides specific subject information to enhance the core to match
the target group, the hardware and software environment, and the level of
knowledge, such as new user or
experienced.
As the university is a multi-campus organisation located in several parts
of Sydney, we deliver the training in the participants' environment. The
format consists of demonstration then hands-on by the participants for
each of the modules taught. At least two liaison librarians lead the
session in a team approach. The length of a seminar can be adjusted for
the group, but usually lasts two hours. The training is backed up by
distributing copies of training material. Participants are made aware
that they can request more advanced or specialised seminars in future,
and that they can request one on one assistance from the liaison
librarian at any time.
Current Status
Currently the program, which started out as a special project, is
integrated into liaison librarian work as part of the information
literacy goal of the Library. From September 1992 (when it started)
until the end of 1993, the Library delivered 28 seminars to 320 members
of academic staff (there are about 800 full-time academic staff), and 9
seminars to 38 library staff. There has been very little publicity
required as the demand for training has come from the benefits being
spread by word of mouth. The Library is continuing to meet this demand
in 1994.
Project Criteria
- Use of technologies that interoperate with the National Science
Foundation Network (NSFNET), the global Internet and the emerging
National Research and Education Network (NREN).
The Electronic Researcher currently is focussed on training staff in
the use of electronic networks. Through the university's network we
connect to AARNet and the Internet to use networked information
resources available locally, nationally and internationally.
- Explore how library and other information resources and services can
be made available in the networked teaching and learning process.
The Electronic Researcher is linked to client needs. It recognises that
academics are expert in their subject areas, but not necessarily in
information technology or retrieval techniques. It addresses directly the
issue of extending the scholar's access to information in a friendly and
cost effective way. The emphasis on teaching academic staff to become
independent information navigators empowers them to expand their research
horizons, and bring the resources they use into their offices. Library
staff are available to provide specialist advice and support to
complement the academics' subject expertise.
- Collaboration involving different types of institutions, organizations
and agencies.
The Library collaborates extensively with other university divisions to
provide the Electronic Researcher. The university's computing division
(Information Technology Division), the classroom support division
(Instructional Technology Services), and the respective faculties' local
area network administrators are involved directly with the program in
terms of general network services and support for training sessions. The
program enhances their services by bringing them into direct contact with
their major client groups. At the beginning of the program, the library
engaged an external training consultant, Enid Roberts.
- "Doing more with less"
The library does not have its own training rooms, and in taking the
training sessions into the academic staff environment is able to
compensate effectively for this. Equipment for screen projection is
borrowed from classroom support services or the local network manager,
who also assists in technical support matters for the local environment.
The university is one of Australia's recently constituted universities.
While it is already one of the larger universities in Australia with
22,000 students, it does not have the depth of traditional library
resources. We expand these by providing academic staff with the
expertise to navigate networks successfully. This provides them with
additional resources to support their teaching and research, that they
would not have had otherwise.
- Replicability and long-term viability.
Due to the common core of the program, its operation is streamlined.
Each liaison librarian, when designing a seminar, builds on the work of
others. Handouts and other documentation are stored in electronic form,
so they can be easily adapted and updated. Library staff have been keen
to share the experience and approach of the Electronic Researcher with
other information professionals. The program, and individual seminars
within it, have been the subject of a number of published articles and
conference papers. A selection of the subject resources compiled are
available on the Australian network training information gopher.
Electronic information and network information resources are being used
primarily for communication, not as a computing technology. Networks are
being exploited by academic staff for copying and distributing knowledge
in a timely way. These characteristics are strongly linked to the
traditional library skills of knowing how to find distributed information
and knowledge. The library has now established a primary role for itself
in providing network training courses at the university.
Audio-visual requirements
Macintosh computer with selected client software applications
(Telnet, Eudora, Fetch etc) for Internet access,
video projector for live demonstration.
CNI
21 Dupont Circle Suite #800
Washington, DC 20036-1109
202.296.5098
<http://www.cni.org/>
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