Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 170
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-5381-0480-4 • Hardback • October 2018 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-1-5381-0481-1 • Paperback • October 2018 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
978-1-5381-0482-8 • eBook • October 2018 • $53.00 • (£41.00)
Jennifer S. Ferguson is the Team Lead, Arts and Humanities, at the Tisch Library of Tufts University, providing innovative and proactive library service in the areas of research, teaching, and learning to undergraduates, graduate students, and faculty. Jennifer has published on topics that include education for librarianship, discovery layer usability, and streaming video in academic libraries, and won the Association of College & Research Libraries-New England Chapter 2017 Best Paper Award. She has also been invited to speak at regional, national, and international conferences on a wide array of topics, including information literacy and authentic assessment. She has a BA from UCLA, an MA from Rutgers University, and an MSLIS from Simmons College and has worked in both special and academic libraries.
Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Tables
Preface
1. Authentic Assessment Defined
2. Authentic Assessment in Academic Libraries: Where Are We Now?
3. Authentic Assessment Instruments: Advantages and Challenges
4. Authentic Assessment in Action
5. Authentic Assessment in Context
6. Adapting Authentic Assessment to Common Instructional Settings
7. Future Directions in Authentic Assessment
8. Authentic Assessment, the ACRL Framework and Beyond
Index
About the Author
Ferguson (Tisch Library, Tufts Univ.) provides a detailed overview of authentic assessment methods in a variety of academic library instructional settings. She asserts in the preface that “… this book is intended to demystify authentic assessment by defining the terminology, describing how it is used in practice, and providing a practical roadmap for implementation”(p. xii) The book opens with a literature review of definitions of authentic assessment over the last 25 years and ends with Ferguson asserting it is essentially “… techniques that more authentically demonstrate (the libraries) impact on student learning.” The author goes on to explore the advantages and challenges of doing authentic assessment in common instructional settings including credit-bearing courses, one-shot sessions, embedded librarianship, and online instruction. She also details over a dozen methods of authentic assessment including minute papers, problem-based activities, reflections, portfolios, and annotated bibliographies. The sixth and final chapter contains eleven sample assignments, prompts, and worksheets that serve as models for implementation. Although many articles have been written about authentic assessment techniques and approaches in library instruction settings, Ferguson's book is unique in that it treats the topic comprehensively.Summing Up: Recommended. Professionals and practitioners.— Choice Reviews
Ferguson’s introduction to authentic assessment, examples of its use in academic departments since the 1980s and in academic libraries, as well as her discussion of advantages and challenges of the practice offer an informative introduction to those unfamiliar with its concepts. . . . This work is highly recommended for addition to all library collections. While it is valuable as a whole, reading and reflecting on the philosophy behind authentic assessment can help librarians, staff, and library administrators evolve their thinking, even if putting the framework into practice is untenable due to lack of time and lack of personnel.— Public Services Quarterly
Chapter 6, “Adapting Authentic Assessment to Common Instructional Session,” with its step-by-step instructions, sample worksheets, and accompanying narrative, might be the most popular chapter in the book. The templates that Ferguson provides her readers are the type of practical, quick-start help that any instructional librarian will value. . . . Most of the text, by design, focuses on the intersection of instructional settings and assessment methods, but the book is at its very best when pushing the reader to see instruction and assessment in a fundamentally revised way.— College & Research Libraries
This book combines clear and detailed explanations with practical advice that librarians can act on to start integrating assessment into their instruction right away.— Laura Saunders, associate professor, Simmons College
At long last, a book has come along for teaching librarians who want to learn the ropes of authentic assessment. Ferguson’s sharp sense of strategy and professional practice make this primer on the 'hows' and 'whys' of evaluating information literacy programs an essential reference to keep on the shelf.
— Alison J. Head, Director, Project Information Literacy