Initiating Conversations About the End of Life: The Advanced Illness Decision Simulation Environment

Written by ATIS Apps on . Posted in

Healthcare decision-making about the end of life has evolved resulting from technological advances that both save and prolong life. Public and private discourse about the benefits and burdens of life-sustaining treatments have underscored the importance of identifying preferences, but there is a discrepancy between patients’ wishes and their actual experiences at the end of life. We will develop the Advanced Illness Decision Support Environment (AIDSE) and utilize simulation technology to create an environment to engage students in active, real-time learning about how to initiate and facilitate decision-making conversations with patients about their goals for care and desired outcomes.

Developing a SUNY-wide Transliteracy Learning Collaborative to Promote Information and Technology Collaboration

Written by ATIS Apps on . Posted in

Awarded Grant: $60,000 Principal Investigator: Trudi Jacobson, University at Albany The Metaliteracy Learning Collaborative will be developed as a SUNY-wide think tank and incubator for promoting metaliteracy as an overarching and unifying construct for related information literacies. The Collaborative will define a set of learning objectives that will transcend boundaries based upon the traditional definition of information literacy and the concept of librarians as the sole interested party. This grant will assist SUNY’s efforts to develop students as lifelong creators of information in all forms. It will address how to infuse metaliteracy throughout students’ academic careers, opening dialogues among different educational groups, and exploring issues such as the transition from high school to college, and a prototype badging system outlining the myriad aspects of metaliteracy. This badging system will be scalable for various settings and pedagogical goals, in an open source and customizable format that can be used SUNY-wide, and event ually nation-wide, or globally. Co-PI’s and Key Partners: Thomas Mackey, Dean, Center for Distance Learning, Empire State College Mark McBride, Coordinator of Library Instruction, Buffalo State Michael Daly, Public Services Librarian, Fulton Montgomery Community College Michele Forte, Assistant Professor, Community and Human Services, Center for Distance Learning, Empire State College Jenna Hecker, Instructional Developer, University at Albany Ellen Murphy, Director of Online Curriculum, Empire State College Reports and Resources: Press Report: New Metaliteracy MOOC Explores Information Literacy in the Social Media Age Metaliteracy Learning Objectives These learning objectives have been created with the goal of developing metaliterate learners. Comments and suggestions from a variety of librarians and faculty across the state were sought and incorporated into the final (but still evolving) document. Metaliteracy learning is divided into four domains: behavioral (skills, competencies), cognitive (comprehension, organization, application, evaluation), affective (changes in learners’ emotions or attitudes through engagement with learning activities), and metacognitive (what learners think about their own thinking—a reflective understanding of how and why they learn, what they do and do not know, and how to continue to learn). The objectives are conceived broadly, so as to remain scalable, reproducible, and accessible in a range of contexts. Instructors and learners can meet these objectives in a variety of ways, depending on the learning context, choosing from a menu of learning activities. These metaliteracy learning objectives are reflected in the new UAlbany Gen Ed Information Literacy/Information Management requirements (scroll down to information literacy). These Metaliteracy Learning Objectives are also informing the discussion as the ACRL updates its learning objectives. Metaliteracy Badging Program Given current trends in badging, both in education and as part of the corporate world, the grant team wanted to explore a metaliteracy badging program that would recognize information and technology competencies. We moved quickly beyond exploration into design and development. Currently, the badging program is being built with BadgeStack and, over the course of the coming year, will be piloted with 500 students across the SUNY system and at the high school level. Students will complete a series of information literacy-themed activities, tasks, and quests (as in a video game). The program will include multiple forms of assessment and levels of granularity. Once the program is completed, it can be moved to an open source platform, such as Metaliteracy.org. It will be open source and customizable, and linked to Open SUNY and OER Commons for others to use. This badging program has generated a great deal of excitement from SUNY campuses eager to participate in the pilot test to New York State Education Department’s interest in developing it further in the K-12 arena. The badging program may be used by some of the instructors teaching the new Writing and Critical Inquiry course at the University at Albany, which meets the general education information literacy competency requirement. The availability of this program may make a critical difference in the ability of librarians at this institution to meet important course goals. Metaliteracy, as developed and introduced by PI Trudi Jacobson and co-PI Tom Mackey in “Reframing Information Literacy as a Metaliteracy” (January 2011), is gaining increasing attention in academia world-wide. Grant research has informed many other academic endeavors, including the development of a new Metaliteracy MOOC at SUNY Empire State College. The document is a compilation of the following links to metaliteracy-related resources. Additional Project Outcomes This document includes a variety of additional outcomes associated with the project, such as: March 2013 Google Hangout video wherein grant coPIs describe the vision the team has for the project; Keynote and conferences presentations that explain metaliteracy and provide examples of metaliteracy in practice: “Metaliteracy in Practice: Metaliteracy sounds great but how do I teach it?” Trudi Jacobson, Tom Mackey, and Greg Bobish at the 3Ts conference at Empire State College, Saratoga Springs, NY, March 2013. “What’s in a Name?: Information Literacy, Metaliteracy, or Transliteracy” Trudi Jacobson and Tom Mackey for the ACRL (Association of College and Research Libraries) Conference, April 2013. The presentation examines the metaliteracy framework developed by Mackey and Jacobson, and reports on the successful Innovative Instruction Technology Grant (IITG) at SUNY that led to new metaliteracy learning objectives. “Reinventing Information Literacy as a Metaliteracy for E-Learning”  Keynote presentation by Tom Mackey and Trudi Jacobson for SOCHE (Southwestern Ohio Conference for Higher Education) Library Conference, May 2013. “(IITG) Building the Transliteracy Learning Collaborative: Challenges and Promise.” Presentation by Trudi Jacobson, Michele Forte, and Emer O’Keeffe at CIT, Utica, NY, May 2013. “Developing a System-Wide Metaliteracy Collaborative Creating a Unified Vision of Metaliteracy Across the SUNY System.” Presentation by Christian Poehlmann at SUNYLA, Buffalo, NY, June 2013. “Reimagining Information Literacy as a Metaliteracy: Empowering Learners for Participation, Collaboration, and Reflection” Keynote presentation by Trudi Jacobson and Tom Mackey for the New England Library Instruction Group (NELIG) Annual Program at Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, June 2013. “What a Wonderful World: What Team-based Learning Brings to Metaliteracy Instruction.” Workshop facilitated by Trudi E. Jacobson, at NELIG, June 2013.  “Designing Learning Activities to Promote Metaliteracy” Workshop facilitated by Tom Mackey at NELIG, June 2013. UPCOMING: “Developing an Open Badge Framework for Metaliteracy.” Presentation by Jenna Hecker and Michele Forte, at SLOAN-C in Orlando, Florida, in November 2013. UPCOMING: “Developing Metaliterate Learners: Transforming Literacy across Disciplines.” A successful proposal by Michele Forte, Trudi Jacobson, and Emer O’Keeffe to organize a Conversations in the Disciplines Conference, to be held at Empire State College, Saratoga Springs, NY, December 2013. Metaliteracy Resources and Research This document contains items arising directly from, or informed by and incorporating metaliteracy grant research including: Metaliteracy MOOC, developed by Tom Mackey and Trudi Jacobson in partnership between SUNY Empire State College and the University Libraries at the University at Albany. Members of the Metaliteracy Learning Collaborative will launch the MOOC in the opening session and grant coPIs Jacobson, Mackey, and Jenna Hecker will be MOOC facilitators. This project provides international exposure for the concept of metaliteracy. Campus Initiatives: In May 2013, the University at Albany’s Undergraduate Academic Council approved General Education Information Literacy learning objectives, which were heavily influenced by the metaliteracy learning objectives. As of fall 2014, each department must attest that students in their major(s) have met these learning objectives. Metaliteracy in the Classroom: As part of the IITG project, graduate student Stephanie Dudek interviewed IL instruction librarian Gregory Bobish about his use of metaliteracy-related elements in the classroom. Since it was first published in 2011, Mackey and Jacobson’s Reframing Information Literacy as a Metaliteracy has been cited in over 26 different publications. We continue our coverage of metaliteracy in academic literature on Metaliteracy.org. New citations include: A UNESCO document entitled Media and Information Literacy for Knowledge Societies (2013) provides a brief definition of metaliteracy and makes it central to the conclusion. Betty Hurley-Dasgupta, Carol Yeager, and Catherine Bliss (SUNY Empire State College) refer to metaliteracy in their article cMOOC and Global Learning: An Authentic Alternative in The Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks (JALN). Bernard Pochet, Philippe Lepoivre, and Paul Thirion. “Littérature scientifique et formation à l’information, la situation des bioingénieurs à Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech (ULg) (synthèse bibliographique)” in Biotechnol. Agron. Soc. Environ. 2013 17(1), 118-130, which discusses the role of scientific literature in the teaching of bioengineering at Gembloux, and incorporates recent advances in Information Literacy, including metaliteracy. Conceptual Relationship of Information Literacy and Media Literacy in Knowledge Societies (UNESCO). Essays cite metaliteracy and promote the framework. Badges being designed for the badging program will be differentiated by color, wings (for high level), and graphic. Badges incorporate the colors of the metaliteracy logo on the grant website (this graphic has also been incorporated into the Metaliteracy MOOC described above). Metaliteracy Model, used in discussions of learning objectives on the wiki. Project Outcome Report Creative Commons License:     

Open SUNY Textbooks Renewal

Written by ATIS Apps on . Posted in

The Open SUNY Textbook 2012 program, a very successful pilot, proved that SUNY Faculty and Libraries are interested in creating high-quality open textbooks. We received 38 proposals in a 2 week call for a writing deadline that was idealistic, libraries contributed funding and staffing to expand the program from the funded 5 open textbooks to 15. Those will be published during fall 2013. This demonstration of the Power of SUNY is key to reducing the cost of attending colleges and universities for students. It is vital to higher education leveraging the creative talents of their faculty, librarians, and staff, and provides the sustainability and scalability to Open SUNY. Using lessons learned from the pilot, we seek to expand learning resource production and participation to better meet some of the needs of SUNY faculty, our 440K current students, plus the anticipated 100K online SUNY students, and beyond.

Open SUNY Textbooks

Written by ATIS Apps on . Posted in

Principal Investigator: Cyril Oberlander, SUNY Geneseo This project funds an innovative and collaborative pilot to develop Open SUNY textbooks and develop the venture partnerships to sustain open textbook publishing among SUNY institutions. The grant provides incentive funding to invite faculty to create open textbooks during a pilot phase that builds a community of practice for creating cost-effective course readings, engages libraries in publishing service and infrastructure, promotes academic reusable content models, explores student roles in publishing, and utilizes a hybrid distribution model. Participating libraries are from SUNY Geneseo, SUNY Brockport, University of Buffalo, SUNY Upstate Medical, SUNY ESF, SUNY Fredonia, with support from SUNY Press. During fall 2013, the Open SUNY Textbook program will publish 15 free online textbooks, thanks to the support from a SUNY Innovative Instruction Technology Grant (IITG) and library funding, and the time and talent of librarians and consultation by SUNY Press. Co-PI’s and Key Partners: Charles Lyons, University at Buffalo Open SUNY Textbook participating Libraries or IT: The College of Brockport, SUNY ESF, SUNY Fredonia, SUNY Geneseo, SUNY Monroe Community College, SUNY Oswego, SUNY Upstate, and University of Buffalo. SUNY Press serves as a consultant to the project. Reports and Resources: Open SUNY Textbooks Journals and Press Articles: “Online textbooks open a new chapter in learning” Note: Open Textbooks are a key strategy that can make access to college more affordable, can expand opportunities for learning across the globe, and develop critical support to build academic friendly publishing models that are sustainable and produce high-quality open educational resources. Creative Commons License: