Skip to Main Content

PALNI Information Literacy: Instruction -- Program level

This guide contains mapped versions of all PALNI LibGuides focused on Information Literacy.

Collaborating through Program Level Instruction

Programmatic Resources
There is plenty of research to demonstrate students’ research skills increase when faculty collaborate with librarians to foster IL competencies (Junisbai, Lowe, & Tagge. 2016). Persistence, willingness to participate in university conversations, flexibility, and communication are key in developing an Information Literacy program that will be embraced by faculty and university alike.

Key Findings

  1. A successful collaboration with one faculty member will often grow a larger program.
  2. Faculty are interested in Information literacy; meet them in their discipline
  3. Find an advocate to work with
  4. Do your homework
    1. Have research to back up your proposals
    2. Learn about the faculty’s discipline

Literature Review

Belzowski, N., & Robison, M. (2019). Kill the One-Shot: Using a Collaborative Rubric to Liberate the Librarian–Instructor Partnership.
Journal of Library Administration, 59(3), 282–297. https://doi.org/10.1080/01930826.2019.1583018
Brooks, M. (2017). Teaching TEI to undergraduates: A case study in a digital humanities curriculum. College & Undergraduate Libraries,
Cowan, S., & Eva, N. (2016). Changing Our Aim: Infiltrating Faculty with Information Literacy. Communications in Information Literacy,

10(2). https://doi.org/10.15760/comminfolit.2016.10.2.31

Dawes, L. (2019). Through Faculty’s Eyes: Teaching Threshold Concepts and the Framework. Portal: Libraries & the Academy, 19(1),
Egan, S. E., Witt, A. N., & Chartier, S. M. (2017). Going Beyond the One-Shot: Spiraling Information Literacy Across Four Years. Internet
Reference Services Quarterly, 22(1), 25–41. https://doi.org/10.1080/10875301.2017.1290003

Gilman, N. V., Sagàs, J., Camper, M., & Norton, A. P. (2017). A Faculty-Librarian Collaboration Success Story: Implementing a Teach-the-
Teacher Library and Information Literacy Instruction Model in a First-Year Agricultural Science Course. Library Trends, 65(3), 339–358. https://doi.org/10.1353/lib.2017.0005
Johns, E. M., Price, C., & Ungaretti, A. S. (2019). Where in the World Is My Librarian? Creating Cross-Campus Collaborations to Seamlessly
Connect with Students When Librarians, Students, and Faculty Are in Different Locations. Journal of Library & Information Services in Distance Learning, 13(1/2), 21–39. https://doi.org/10.1080/1533290X.2018.1499234
Johnson-Grau, G., Archambault, S. G., Acosta, E. S., & McLean, L. (2016). Patience, Persistence, and Process: Embedding a Campus-wide
Information Literacy Program across the Curriculum. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 42(6), 750–756. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2016.10.013
Junisbai, B., Lowe, M. S., & Tagge, N. (2016). A Pragmatic and Flexible Approach to Information Literacy: Findings from a Three-Year Study
of Faculty-Librarian Collaboration. The Journal of Academic Librarianship, 42(5), 604–611. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2016.07.001

Kordas, M., & Thompson, T. (2018). Better Together: A Collaborative Model for Embedded Music Librarianship. Music Reference Services

Phillips, M., Van Epps, A., Johnson, N., & Zwicky, D. (2018). Effective Engineering Information Literacy Instruction: A Systematic Literature
Review. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 44(6), 705–711. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2018.10.006

Pickard, E. (2017). From Barrier to Bridge: Partnering with Teaching Faculty to Facilitate a Multi-term Information Literacy Research
Project. Collaborative Librarianship, 9(3), 175–182.

Wishkoski, R., Lundstrom, K., & Davis, E. (2018). Librarians in the Lead: A Case for Interdisciplinary Faculty Collaboration on Assignment
Design. Communications in Information Literacy, 12(2), 166–192. https://doi.org/10.15760/comminfolit.2018.12.2.7

Zanin-Yost, A. (2018). Academic collaborations: Linking the role of the liaison/embedded librarian to teaching and learning. College &
Undergraduate Libraries, 25(2), 150–163. https://doi.org/10.1080/10691316.2018.1455548

Suggested Actions

1.  Study the Student Learning Outcomes (SLO) for your college/university or academic program.  Identify where the ACRL Framework for IL naturally fit. 

2.  Use curriculum mapping to identify where instruction and the frames easily fit within a program. 

See Webinar, ACRL IS M&LC: Creating the big picture: Improving instruction programming through curriculum mapping

3.  Partner with classroom faculty with whom you already have a good relationship.  Ask questions.  What are the research / IL needs evident in their students?  What are some ways for a librarian to meet that need?  Listen for partnering opportunities that benefit the library, faculty member, program, and student learning.  Be willing to be flexible.

4.  Start small and allow successes to create growth.

Best Practices

1. Communicate.

2. Align the Information literacy program with learning outcomes for the College/University, School, or degree program.

3. Support your Information Literacy plan with data

4. Be open to using multiple methods: LibGuides, LMS Embedding, in-person/virtual consultations, synchronous sessions, online tutorials, in person instruction/workshops.

5. Include assessment from the beginning

6. Be vigilant – look for opportunities and flexible

7. Remember collaboration is a two-way street

8. Communicate