Two-Shots Instead of One: Using the Flipped Classroom to Teach Information Literacy (Webinar)

Librarian Michelle Sánchez led webinar for the Lifelong Information Literacy Online Instruction Show & Tell Series titled "Two-Shots Instead of One: Using the Flipped Classroom to Teach Information Literacy," explaining the use of PlayPosit in a flipped classroom model to promote student engagement.

Webinar: Two-Shots Instead of One: Using the Flipped Classroom to Teach Information Literacy, Michelle Sánchez (she/her), Reference Librarian at Chaffey College, February 7, 2024 (presentation slides | recording)

Abstract

While college faculty reach out to their liaison librarians with requests to teach information literacy to their classes, librarians still face the challenge of presenting a large amount of content within a one-shot session of at most fifty minutes. As a result, students have difficulty absorbing the information and recalling what the librarian presented to them during the in-class session. Therefore, it is important that cognitive offload is done in order to help students retain the information being taught. Research on the flipped classroom model over the past five years has shown to be promising when it comes to engaging college students and getting them to remember such topics as developing search strategies, choosing appropriate databases, and how to find peer-reviewed articles. Having students watch a pre-made interactive tutorial that shows how to use specific research skills prepares them in advance for the hands-on practice that takes place during the librarian's scheduled in-person visit. In my proposed presentation, I will discuss my experience utilizing the flipped classroom model with a sociology research methods course. I will address the collaboration process with the requesting instructor, the creation of the interactive tutorial using PlayPosit, and student engagement with the tutorial and during the in-person follow-up class.