Description
Book SynopsisTopics and issues in library and information science education pedagogy are commonly discussed in panels, conferences, peer-reviewed articles, professional articles, and dedicated monographs. However, in this abundance of education-oriented discussions, there are several noticeable gaps and omissions. Not always do education-oriented publications involve theoretical grounding that could make them stronger in argumentation and more generalizable to other contexts.
Addressing these gaps, the book stands to strengthen the less covered areas of LIS pedagogical thought; it enriches a theoretical foundation of pedagogical discourse and broadens its scope. This volume brings together a collection of essays from library and information science (LIS) educators from around the world who delve into difficult, unpopular, and uncommonly discussed topics—the inglorious pedagogy, as we call it—based on their practice and scholarship.
Presenting perspectives from Australia, Canada, China, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States, each chapter is a case study, rooted not only in the author’s experience but also in a solid theoretical or analytical framework that helps the reader make sense of the situations, behaviors, impact, and human emotions involved in each. The collective thought woven in the book chapters leads the reader through the milestones of (in)glorious pedagogy to a better understanding of the potentially transformative nature and wasted opportunities of graduate LIS education and higher education in general.
Table of ContentsContents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The Glories and Inglories of Library and Information Science Pedagogy
Kim M. Thompson and Keren Dali
Chapter 1. Performing Librarianship: Practicing the Reference Interview and Building Community through Improvisation.
Sarah Beth Nelson and Emily Vardell
Chapter 2. Nice to Have, a Distraction from the Core Curriculum, or a Disruptive Element? A Teaching Journey through Three Common Perceptions of Social Justice in LIS Education
Briony Birdi
Chapter 3. We, Who Cannot Unlearn: (Un)Learning and Disabled Faculty in American (Post)Pandemic Academia
Keren Dali and Paul T. Jaeger
Chapter 4. “The Pandemic Has Forced Us All to Become Professionals Again”: Adjunct Faculty Advocacy at a Canadian ALA-Accredited iSchool
Max Dionisio
Chapter 5. Teaching for Intellectual Humility
Tim Gorichanaz
Chapter 6. The Difficulty of Training Students to Do Research in Tangles of Discourses: A Case of a Postgraduate Dissertation Project
Liangzhi Yu and Xiaofei Yan
Chapter 7. Overwhelmed or Overteaching? Humanism for Time Use and Pedagogy
Kim M. Thompson
Chapter 8. The Academia-Practice Gap: It Takes Two to Tango
Keren Dali
Chapter 9. “I Feel Like an ATM Machine”: Mentoring, LIS Research, and Academic Capitalism
Jenny Bossaller
Chapter 10. The Way of WalDorF: Fostering Creativity in LIS Programs
Keren Dali
Chapter 11. Tales from Three Countries and One Academia: Academic Faculty in the Time of the Pandemic
Keren Dali, Nadia Caidi, Kim M. Thompson, and Jane Garner
Chapter 12. Transitioning to Postgraduate Distance Learning: Student Experiences of Change and Success
Anne Goulding and Guanzheng Li
Epilogue: Concluding the (In)glorious Journey
Keren Dali and Kim M. Thompson
Index
About the Editors and Contributors