This book explores the multifaceted role cognitive load has on one's learning journey, while introducing actionable approaches and resources to help bolster success. Multiple deadlines, competing responsibilities, an endless barrage of information, and constant stress: these situations are becoming increasingly common and intense for 21st-century learners. Even well-established needs, like finding and accessing relevant, credible information, take up more cognitive energy in this ever-changing information landscape. As pressure and complexity converge, learners are more likely to experience…mehr
This book explores the multifaceted role cognitive load has on one's learning journey, while introducing actionable approaches and resources to help bolster success. Multiple deadlines, competing responsibilities, an endless barrage of information, and constant stress: these situations are becoming increasingly common and intense for 21st-century learners. Even well-established needs, like finding and accessing relevant, credible information, take up more cognitive energy in this ever-changing information landscape. As pressure and complexity converge, learners are more likely to experience cognitive overload. Cognitive load refers to the amount of information an individual is able to retain in their working memory at one time. When cognitive load is surpassed, it can be much more difficult to process, encode, and retain new information. The purpose of this book is to help professionals transform passive efforts to support learners into more purposeful actions that address cognitive overload in the context of research and information seeking. Library practitioners may take cognitive load into consideration when creating resources like LibGuides, designing instruction sessions, or planning programming. Yet cognitive load cannot be addressed through isolated efforts; it cuts across departmental boundaries and organizational silos. To reflect the cross-sectoral dynamic of cognitive load and its impact, this book is organized around three crucial areas of one's learning journey: Instruction, Systems, and Outreach. Each section hosts a diverse collection of instructional, system design, and outreach/programmatic ideas that are built upon Cognitive Load Theory, providing readers with actionable approaches and resources that can inform their own practices when meeting the needs of their patrons. Whether you are a seasoned professional, new to your role, or just keen to explore the intersectionality of cognitive load throughout the learning journey, From Chaos to Order is designed to bring together useful theories, practices, and provocations for future exploration.
Courtney McAllister (MA, MLIS) is a Senior Solution Architect at Atypon, where she leverages her library background and technology expertise to consult with publishers and map their needs to platform features. The emphasis on needs assessment, collaborative problem-solving, user experience optimization, and accessibility builds upon McAllister's earlier work as a Library Services Engineer (EBSCO) and Electronic Resources Librarian (Yale Law and The Citadel). McAllister's research interests focus on change management, human computer interaction, and usability. She authored Change Management for Library Technologists: A LITA Guide and serves as the Associate Editor for The Serials Librarian and Serials Review. Elliott C. Rose (MLIS) is a STEM Librarian at The Pennsylvania State University and provides research, instruction, and collection development support to the School of Earth and Mineral Sciences. They have an ongoing research interest in cognitive load, belonging in the library, instruction pedagogy, accessible resources, and open educational resources (OERs). They have previously served as a co-editor for the LITA Guide, Augmented and Virtual Reality in Libraries, and authored (and co-authored) various book chapters and articles on inclusive teaching, outreach, communication in the sciences, and interdisciplinary collaboration. Sara C. Kern (MA, MSLIS) is an Engineering Librarian at the Pennsylvania State University, where she provides outreach, instruction, and other research support to the College of Engineering. She has authored or co-authored several book chapters and articles, most focused on accessible outreach and instruction. Her research centers on undergraduate and graduate student engagement with the libraries, specifically how inclusive instruction practices and a variety of types of programming and outreach can impact student engagement and sense of belonging.
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Acknowledgements Introduction First Spoke: Cognitive Overload and Library Instruction Elliott C. Rose Chapter 1: Reducing Cognitive Load Through Embedded Librarianship Arantes M. Armendariz and sam hidde tripp Chapter 2: Mind the Gap: Integrating Information Literacy Instruction Without Overloading Students Caitlin Miller and Jennifer Batson Chapter 3: Consistent Messages, Varied Channels: Using Universal Design for Learning to Reduce Cognitive Overload James Henry Smith Chapter 4: From Cognitive Overload to Practical Engagement in First-Year Seminar Information Literacy Sessions Sarah K. Myers, Beth M. Transue, & Elizabeth Y. Kielley Chapter 5: Conquering Cognitive Overload with Instruction Librarians, Information Literacy, and Scaffolding Michelle Shea Chapter 6: Unloading the Brain for Student Success: Navigating Cognitive Load in a First-Year Information Literacy Course Alicia G. Vaandering and Amanda Crego-Emley Chapter 7: Surfing the Digital Deluge: Mastering Cognitive Overload Through Critical Ignoring Karen Burton Chapter 8: Creating an Interactive Tutorial to Teach Synthesis Strategies Mary Snyder Broussard Chapter 9: Charting a Research Road Map for Adult Online Students in a Liberal Arts Core Class Kelly A. Clever Chapter 10: Choose Your Own Adventure! Designing and Teaching Archival Research with Community Document Sets Jacob Gordon Second Spoke: Cognitive Overload, Systems, and Research Tools Courtney McAllister Chapter 11: Redesigning Library Websites for Cognitive Ease Alyssa Panetta Chapter 12: Low-key Google: Exploring Cognitive Overload During Discovery Layer Usability Testing Natalie LoRusso Chapter 13: Guiding students through the research process: A redesign of subject guides to support student learning Gretchen Scronce Chapter 14: Standardizing Course LibGuides to Lighten Student Cognitive Load Sarah Grace Glover Chapter 15: Woah... What Great Information! How do I Use It?: Reducing Cognitive Overload for Non-traditional Education Graduate Students Amy Dye-Reeves Chapter 16: Beyond Boolean: Practical Strategies to Reduce Job Seekers' Cognitive Overload Eriberto Ramirez Chapter 17: Active Learning Principles within Online Library Instruction as a Way to Mitigate Cognitive Overload in First-Year Undergraduate Students Caitlin Anne Smits Chapter 18: Analyzing First-Year Library Instruction Modules Using Cognitive Load Theory: A Retrospective Maria A. Barca Chapter 19: Cognitive Load and Instructional Videos for Advanced Database Search Techniques: A Mixed Method Study Hanwen Dong Chapter 20: The TikTok Effect: Utilizing Short Form Video to Overcome Cognitive Overload in Librarian Led Legal Research Education B. Austin Waters Third Spoke: Filling in the Gaps with Informal Learning, Outreach, and Partnerships Sara C. Kern Chapter 21: Effective Outreach to Science and Engineering Students through a Cognitive Load Lens Denise A. Wetzel Chapter 22: Turbulent Flows: Surviving Cognitive Overload in Information Literacy for Engineering Design Kate Mercer, Kari D. Weaver, and Jennifer Howcroft Chapter 23: Drawing Them In: Using an LGBTQIA+ Zine-Making Workshop to Address Cognitive Load Elizabeth Meinke, Halle Novotney, Emily Rich, and Erin Sweeney Smith Chapter 24: Engaging the Senses and Promoting Wellness: Empathic and Inclusive Library Connections to Alleviate Cognitive Load Sabine Jean Dantus, Gricel Dominguez, and April Lafferty Chapter 25: Schema Acquisition during a Law Library Tour using Scaffolding, Chunking, and Choice Tracey McCormick Chapter 26: Peer Tutoring in Student Research: Best Practices for Reducing Cognitive Load Monica Gingerich Chapter 27: A New Approach: Redesigning Outreach to Lessen Cognitive Load for Students and Colleagues Sheli Pratt-McHugh Chapter 28: Librarian as Event Planner: Cognitive Overload in Outreach Librarians Laurie Borchard Recommended Readings About the Editors About the Authors
Acknowledgements Introduction First Spoke: Cognitive Overload and Library Instruction Elliott C. Rose Chapter 1: Reducing Cognitive Load Through Embedded Librarianship Arantes M. Armendariz and sam hidde tripp Chapter 2: Mind the Gap: Integrating Information Literacy Instruction Without Overloading Students Caitlin Miller and Jennifer Batson Chapter 3: Consistent Messages, Varied Channels: Using Universal Design for Learning to Reduce Cognitive Overload James Henry Smith Chapter 4: From Cognitive Overload to Practical Engagement in First-Year Seminar Information Literacy Sessions Sarah K. Myers, Beth M. Transue, & Elizabeth Y. Kielley Chapter 5: Conquering Cognitive Overload with Instruction Librarians, Information Literacy, and Scaffolding Michelle Shea Chapter 6: Unloading the Brain for Student Success: Navigating Cognitive Load in a First-Year Information Literacy Course Alicia G. Vaandering and Amanda Crego-Emley Chapter 7: Surfing the Digital Deluge: Mastering Cognitive Overload Through Critical Ignoring Karen Burton Chapter 8: Creating an Interactive Tutorial to Teach Synthesis Strategies Mary Snyder Broussard Chapter 9: Charting a Research Road Map for Adult Online Students in a Liberal Arts Core Class Kelly A. Clever Chapter 10: Choose Your Own Adventure! Designing and Teaching Archival Research with Community Document Sets Jacob Gordon Second Spoke: Cognitive Overload, Systems, and Research Tools Courtney McAllister Chapter 11: Redesigning Library Websites for Cognitive Ease Alyssa Panetta Chapter 12: Low-key Google: Exploring Cognitive Overload During Discovery Layer Usability Testing Natalie LoRusso Chapter 13: Guiding students through the research process: A redesign of subject guides to support student learning Gretchen Scronce Chapter 14: Standardizing Course LibGuides to Lighten Student Cognitive Load Sarah Grace Glover Chapter 15: Woah... What Great Information! How do I Use It?: Reducing Cognitive Overload for Non-traditional Education Graduate Students Amy Dye-Reeves Chapter 16: Beyond Boolean: Practical Strategies to Reduce Job Seekers' Cognitive Overload Eriberto Ramirez Chapter 17: Active Learning Principles within Online Library Instruction as a Way to Mitigate Cognitive Overload in First-Year Undergraduate Students Caitlin Anne Smits Chapter 18: Analyzing First-Year Library Instruction Modules Using Cognitive Load Theory: A Retrospective Maria A. Barca Chapter 19: Cognitive Load and Instructional Videos for Advanced Database Search Techniques: A Mixed Method Study Hanwen Dong Chapter 20: The TikTok Effect: Utilizing Short Form Video to Overcome Cognitive Overload in Librarian Led Legal Research Education B. Austin Waters Third Spoke: Filling in the Gaps with Informal Learning, Outreach, and Partnerships Sara C. Kern Chapter 21: Effective Outreach to Science and Engineering Students through a Cognitive Load Lens Denise A. Wetzel Chapter 22: Turbulent Flows: Surviving Cognitive Overload in Information Literacy for Engineering Design Kate Mercer, Kari D. Weaver, and Jennifer Howcroft Chapter 23: Drawing Them In: Using an LGBTQIA+ Zine-Making Workshop to Address Cognitive Load Elizabeth Meinke, Halle Novotney, Emily Rich, and Erin Sweeney Smith Chapter 24: Engaging the Senses and Promoting Wellness: Empathic and Inclusive Library Connections to Alleviate Cognitive Load Sabine Jean Dantus, Gricel Dominguez, and April Lafferty Chapter 25: Schema Acquisition during a Law Library Tour using Scaffolding, Chunking, and Choice Tracey McCormick Chapter 26: Peer Tutoring in Student Research: Best Practices for Reducing Cognitive Load Monica Gingerich Chapter 27: A New Approach: Redesigning Outreach to Lessen Cognitive Load for Students and Colleagues Sheli Pratt-McHugh Chapter 28: Librarian as Event Planner: Cognitive Overload in Outreach Librarians Laurie Borchard Recommended Readings About the Editors About the Authors
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