LIRT (Library Instruction Round Table)

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The mission of the Library Instruction Round Table (LIRT) is to provide a forum for discussion of activities, programs, and problems of instruction in the use of libraries; to contribute to the education and training of librarians for library instruction; to promote instruction in the use of libraries as an essential library service, and to serve as a channel of communication on library instruction between the ALA divisions, ALA and ACRL committees, state clearinghouses, Project LOEX, other organizations concerned with instruction in the use of libraries, and members of the Association.

Learn more about LIRT on the ALA website.

Reminder - free virtual workshop! Reconstructing the Academy: Transforming Our Teaching and Research Practices through Epistemic Justice

  • 1.  Reminder - free virtual workshop! Reconstructing the Academy: Transforming Our Teaching and Research Practices through Epistemic Justice

    Posted Nov 04, 2024 09:43 AM

    [apologies for cross-posting]

    The Meaningful Inquiry team at Ohio State is excited to share an upcoming virtual workshop. All are welcome and there is no cost to attend! Please feel free to share with instructors or instructional support colleagues at your institutions. Additional upcoming workshops can be found at this site

    Reconstructing the Academy: Transforming Our Teaching and Research Practices through Epistemic Justice

    November 7, 2024, 12:00-1:00 pm

    To register: https://go.osu.edu/miepistemicjustice

    As academics, we prioritize certain types of knowledge and ways of knowing, often without even realizing it. This workshop invites faculty and librarians to explore the concept of epistemic justice, a practice that demands equal respect for diverse knowledge systems, decentering Euro-westernized academic research. While many diversity and inclusion initiatives focus on representation, epistemic justice goes deeper, asking us to rethink who we consider knowledgeable and why. Together, we will explore pragmatic tools for embedding an epistemic justice lens into undergraduate and graduate curricula, and how we might redefine approaches to knowledge creation.

    Heather Campbell (she/her) is an uninvited white settler of Scottish and Irish descent who lives and works on Treaty 6 territory, traditional lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnapéewak nations. As Curriculum Librarian for Western University (Canada), she supports the university's strategic curricular initiatives as both a member of Western Libraries and the Centre for Teaching and Learning. Heather's scholarship looks at teacher identity, curriculum decolonization, and epistemic justice.

    Ashley McKeown (she/her) is an uninvited white settler of Irish descent, who lives, works, and plays on the ancestral lands of the Anishinaabek, Haudenosaunee, Lūnapéewak nations, the first and rightful inhabitants. As a Certified Canadian Nurse Educator and Teaching Fellow for the Faculty of Health Sciences, she leads the development of an epistemic justice-based curriculum. Her goal is to redefine perceptions of "best evidence" and research competencies for students in health professional programs. Ashley's scholarly focus explores how integrating epistemic justice into evidence-based practice can foster cultural humility among health professional students and facilitate the creation of culturally safe healthcare spaces.



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    Amanda Folk
    Head, Department of Teaching and Learning
    The Ohio State University
    She/Her/Hers
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