CO, IL
Watkins, Alexander,
and Rebecca Kuglitsch. “Creating connective Library Spaces: A librarian- student
collaboration model.” In Enhancing Teaching and Learning in the 21st Century Academic Library: Successful Innovations That Make a Difference, edited by
Bradford Eden, 157-169. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2015.
Summary:
The new academic
library is a dynamic space where users and unique resources come together to
produce new ideas. Libraries have struggled to be relevant spaces that attract
students yet are more than simple study halls. The library as a connective
space is one solution. This idea is not just about providing study space or
collections space or even their juxtaposition, but about coming up with
innovative ways to harness their proximity. The library wanted to develop
spaces that foster both intentional and informal learning and are grounded in
strong disciplinary identities for the sciences and the arts. At the University
of Colorado Boulder they used service learning in a student collaboration model
to generate novel approaches to library spaces. Two parallel areas of the
library, the Science Commons and the Arts Commons, were reinvented to showcase
the digital and analog library resources that inform their respective subjects.
In this project, the library particularly hoped to harness the synergy between
science, technology, engineering, mathematics (STEM), and art and design
(which, when combined with STEM is known as STEAM) to develop spaces that
promote an atmosphere of creativity. The Science Commons highlights the digital
collections and the research and innovation they support; while the Arts
Commons exposes the aesthetics of the library's print collection and the
artwork it inspires. Both rely on student involvement and a commitment to the
new library as a connective space that by connecting users to the library’s
resources will facilitate informal learning activities: discovery, exploration,
and self-directed research.
Evaluation:
This is a great article and it reminded me of the Virtual Learning Commons and the Virtual Library.
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