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Interactive Team Teaching of Government Documents Data Sources: A Case Study

Betty J. Tims (Documents librarian at Auburn University at Montgomery.)

Reference Services Review

ISSN: 0090-7324

Article publication date: 1 March 1988

53

Abstract

Over the years much has been written about integrated library instruction and its importance as a viable, effective method of bibliographic instruction. Indeed, a study by Judith Pask showed that eighty‐eight percent of the academic libraries surveyed were using integrated library instruction. There is, however, a form of integrated library instruction, team teaching, about which little has been written. For purposes of this paper, team teaching is defined as a team composed of a professional librarian and an academic faculty member teaching the same course. A review of the literature over the past two decades showed only one reference to team teaching. Porter, Lanning, and Warner discussed a team teaching experience in which a chemistry professor and librarian alternately lectured in a one‐hour credit course with one instructor present at a time in the classroom. However, there is a type of team teaching, which this author has designated as interactive team teaching, to which no references in the literature were found. Interactive team teaching is defined as two instructors from different disciplines in the classroom at the same time. A case study of interactive team teaching follows.

Citation

Tims, B.J. (1988), "Interactive Team Teaching of Government Documents Data Sources: A Case Study", Reference Services Review, Vol. 16 No. 3, pp. 69-72. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb049028

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1988, MCB UP Limited

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