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College Readiness Dialogue Wiki
Page history
last edited
by Laurie Hathman 11 years, 1 month ago
College Readiness Dialogue Wiki has been replaced with a LibGuide.
This wiki is no longer updated as of March 2013.
The objective of the College Readiness Dialogue is to provide an open, relaxed, and informal dialogue between high school and academic librarians on students' college readiness (information skills). How prepared are our high school seniors for college research? What strengths do they take with them during this transition? And, in what areas do they need support? What can we do to help them achieve success?
On October 15, 2010 over 90 librarians from high schools and academic libraries from the greater Kansas City area met at Blue Valley High School in Stillwell, Kansas, to share ideas about preparing high school students for the experience of doing college-level research in academic libraries.
This wiki was created to encourage continuing dialog and collaboration between high school and academic librarians in the greater Kansas City metropolitan area. But we welcome any interested high school or academic librarians to join in the discussion.
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College Readiness Dialogue Wiki
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Comments (1)
Carol Ann K. Winkler said
at 2:24 pm on Oct 19, 2010
Two years ago I held a similar event for my faculty at our college prep high school. I have read the notes of two of your attendees and see that the college librarians on the west side of the state outlined the same issues. Since that presentation I have been careful to insert a description of primary sources and of scholarly resources into the talk I get to give to all students in the Writing class. The trouble is that the talk is Sophomore year and I get 30 minutes to present about resources. That's it. Increasingly it becomes apparent that Sophomores have had little (or no) experience of conducting research in databases, books, and magazines....so it seems silly to talk about scholarly publishing when all they know is Google. But I do it any way...... When I get a chance to talk to them as upperclassmen, I reiterate. But those opportunities are scattered.
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