Kacy Lundstrom's research while affiliated with Utah State University and other places

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Publications (13)


Library Teaching Anxiety: Understanding and Supporting a Persistent Issue in Librarianship
  • Article

January 2021

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11 Reads

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9 Citations

College & Research Libraries

Kacy Lundstrom

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Britt Fagerheim

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Stephen Van Geem
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Faculty Teaching and Librarian-Facilitated Assignment Design

January 2019

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16 Reads

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22 Citations

portal Libraries and the Academy

This qualitative study explores the impact of a workshop on collaborative research assignment design that brought together an interdisciplinary group of faculty in a librarianfacilitated community of practice. Faculty participants attended the workshop, revised and implemented their assignments, and completed a follow-up interview. Themes that emerged reflected shifts in faculty teaching practices, including increased scaffolding, clarity, modeling, student collaboration, and opportunities for authentic learning. Gaining insight into how faculty approach the work of teaching directly impacts library instruction and how librarians can contribute to communities of practice among teachers in the academy.


Reading the Past to Inform the Future: 25 Years of The Reading Teacher

November 2017

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27 Reads

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5 Citations

The Reading Teacher

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[...]

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Kacy Lundstrom

This analysis examines articles from the past 25 years of The Reading Teacher to better understand the journal's content and trends influencing literacy instruction. A research team coded and analyzed the frequency of topics and grade levels targeted, then compared results with those of a similar analysis published in 1992. The Web of Science provided current information about trends in authorship and the popularity of highly cited and frequently accessed articles. This report shares various metrics, insights, and interpretations that help profile the impact of The Reading Teacher and make predictions about the future of reading instruction.


Extending Our Reach: Automatic Integration of Course and Subject Guides

April 2017

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12 Reads

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9 Citations

Reference & User Services Quarterly

Librarians at the Utah State University (USU) Merrill-Cazier Library started working with LibGuides in 2007, and USU subject librarians quickly adopted the system. USU is a land-grant institution with a main campus of 14,000 students and several smaller regional campuses and centers throughout the state, many of which rely heavily on online resources. After seven years of working with LibGuides, a product of Springshare, approximately seven hundred research guides had been published. The guides varied in purpose and design, and we did not have a consistent or clear view of how students found or used them. We also did not have a template or a structured design, beyond some general best practices. Over time, we started to consider questions around the visibility of LibGuides, more effective ways to integrate LibGuides into courses, and possibilities of using emerging technologies to reach students where they study and conduct research. While the library had already begun manually integrating guides into Canvas, USU’s learning management system (LMS), as a way to extend our online presence, we sought a more automated integration with course and subject guides.



Communal and student-centered: Teaching information creation as a process with mobile technologies

February 2017

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19 Reads

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9 Citations

Reference Services Review

Purpose This paper aims to investigate how teaching information creation as a process in a decentralized library classroom impacts student learning and engagement. Design/methodology/approach By using mobile technologies (iPads) and a targeted lesson design, the authors explored how these devices can be incorporated into threshold pedagogy. The study took place in a second-year composition course and was taught by librarians during a class session. Findings The findings supported by pre- and post-test scores, textual analysis and observations show that iPads did add to the engagement and learning of some students. The discussion includes student responses to the iPads, the decentralized roles of the librarian and instructor, the use of social media as an engagement tool and possible adaptations to the lesson. Originality/value This paper provides practical ideas for using iPads in higher education to engage students, particularly in targeting learning outcomes that emphasize on the changing nature and impact of the information creation process.


Making Strategic Decisions: Conducting and Using Research on the Impact of Sequenced Library Instruction

March 2016

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10 Reads

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3 Citations

College & Research Libraries

This study explores the relationship between course grades and sequenced library instruction interventions throughout psychology students' curriculum. Researchers conducted this study to inform decisions about sustaining and improving program integrations for first- and second-year composition courses and to improve discipline-level integrations. Researchers began with transcript analysis but soon incorporated student surveys and a faculty focus group to supplement the data and influence future directions. Findings confirmed that students benefit from meaningful collaborations with the library at strategic, sequenced points in their curriculum, including at the discipline level. This research also provided concrete information that brought about change at the classroom and programmatic level.


Teaching and Learning Information Synthesis: An Intervention and Rubric Based Assessment

June 2015

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175 Reads

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11 Citations

Communications in Information Literacy

Full text: http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/22380 The purpose of this research was to determine how information synthesis skills can be taught effectively, and to discover how the level of synthesis in student writing can be effectively measured. The intervention was an information synthesis lesson that broke down the synthesis process into sequenced tasks. Researchers created a rubric which they used to assess a student’s level of information synthesis demonstrated in their final research essays. A form of counting analysis was also created to see if other methods could help in measuring synthesis. Full text: http://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/22380Findings from the rubric analysis revealed that students appear to benefit from the synthesis lesson. The level of synthesis, however, remains low overall. In addition, the study also showed that the different measures of synthesis established were able to identify different levels of information integration. Discovering effective ways to measure and teach synthesis continues to be essential in helping students become information literate.


An Information Literacy Snapshot: Authentic Assessment across the Curriculum

February 2015

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74 Reads

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30 Citations

College & Research Libraries

This paper outlines the process and results of an authentic assessment of student work using a revised version of the AAC&U's Information Literacy VALUE rubric. This rigorous assessment, which included the scoring of nearly 900 student papers from four different stages across the undergraduate curriculum, revealed much about the process of authentic assessment of student learning, the struggles and competencies of our students, and a clear path forward for improving practice. It also gave us a broad view of student learning, allowing us to immerse ourselves in student work and providing a stronger narrative to share with stakeholders. © 2015 Wendy Holliday, Betty Dance, Erin Davis, Brit Fagerheim, Anne Hedrich, Kacy Lundstrom, and Pamela Martin, Atribution-NonCommercial.


Teaching and Learning Information Synthesis: An Intervention and Rubric Based Assessment
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2015

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1,773 Reads

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43 Citations

Communications in Information Literacy

The purpose of this research was to determine how information synthesis skills can be taught effectively, and to discover how the level of synthesis in student writing can be effectively measured. The intervention was an information synthesis lesson that broke down the synthesis process into sequenced tasks. Researchers created a rubric which they used to assess a student's level of information synthesis demonstrated in their final research essays. A form of counting analysis was also created to see if other methods could help in measuring synthesis. Findings from the rubric analysis revealed that students appear to benefit from the synthesis lesson. The level of synthesis, however, remains low overall. In addition, the study also showed that the different measures of synthesis established were able to identify different levels of information integration. Discovering effective ways to measure and teach synthesis continues to be essential in helping students become information literate.

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Citations (12)


... At the same time, librarians continue to face challenges in their role as teachers. New librarians may find their education has left them unprepared for the classroom (Bryan 2016;Lundstrom, Fagerheim and Van Geem 2021). Expanding roles and responsibilities have left instruction librarians feeling overworked and pressed for time (Nicholson 2019). ...

Reference:

Editorial: The Place of Teaching in Librarians' Work
Library Teaching Anxiety: Understanding and Supporting a Persistent Issue in Librarianship
  • Citing Article
  • January 2021

College & Research Libraries

... Findings regarding the efficacy of teacher/professor and librarian collaboration are consistent across K-12 (Copeland & Jacobs, 2017;Haycock, 2007;Lance et al., 2010;Maharaj, 2016) and higher education settings (Lindstrom & Shonrock, 2006;Lowe et al., 2020;Wishkoski et al., 2019). Faculty members in teacher education programs also support the concept of collaboration between teachers and librarians as beneficial for preservice teachers (Latham et al., 2013;Moreillon, 2008). ...

Faculty Teaching and Librarian-Facilitated Assignment Design
  • Citing Article
  • January 2019

portal Libraries and the Academy

... The ability to synthesize information or data from multiple disparate sources is a complex vital skill (Johnson, 2009), and integrating evidence is essential to generating actionable knowledge from vast collections of data (Larsen & Wactlar, 2003). However, despite its importance, many people struggle to do this effectively (Lundstrom et al., 2015), particularly when the information is not directly comparable or comes from multiple sources (Mateos & Solé, 2009). Real-world data are often complicated, and it is necessary to filter out noise to reveal the underlying signal or true relationships (Severini, 2020;Silver, 2012). ...

Teaching and Learning Information Synthesis: An Intervention and Rubric Based Assessment

Communications in Information Literacy

... In the other five studies, researchers (Jerrolds, 1992;Stahl & Fisher, 1992;Pearson, 1992;Dillon, et al., 1992 andMohr, et al., 2017) analysed the articles in RT which were the milestones for trend topics and the journal through content analysis. For instance, Jerrolds (1992) determined the topics as milestones in teaching reading from 1947 to 1991. ...

Reading the Past to Inform the Future: 25 Years of The Reading Teacher
  • Citing Article
  • November 2017

The Reading Teacher

... 2, p. 210). There have been few studies to determine the efficacy of the Automagic Tool specifically, but the desire for an automated process is evident; Duke University libraries and Utah State University libraries both built in-house LTI tools of their own to integrate library resources prior to Springshare's LTI Automagic Tool debut (Daly, 2010;Fagerheim et. al., 2017), and the Penn State University library was an early adopter of Springshare's LTI Automagic Tool (Clossen, 2018). Limitations of automatic integration mainly focused on course structures at a university rather than on the Automagic Tool itself (Fagerheim et. al., 2017;Clossen, 2018). Thus, with the increase in online degree programs, and ...

Extending Our Reach: Automatic Integration of Course and Subject Guides
  • Citing Article
  • April 2017

Reference & User Services Quarterly

... Collaborative learning was positively influenced by mobile technology for engineering students and theatre art students [27] [32]. Researchers have proposed various models to integrate different online pedagogy for effective online classrooms [28] [33]. Though e-learning has witnessed a considerable leap during and post-pandemic, quality has been an area of concern. ...

Communal and student-centered: Teaching information creation as a process with mobile technologies
  • Citing Article
  • February 2017

Reference Services Review

... Librarians and faculty need to ensure that IL concepts are properly scaffolded or sequenced through the curriculum, which has been shown to increase students' IL proficiencies. 58 Progress for both curriculum mapping and scaffolding will be assessed in upcoming annual reviews. Librarians have also instituted changes to their teaching and learning objectives. ...

Making Strategic Decisions: Conducting and Using Research on the Impact of Sequenced Library Instruction
  • Citing Article
  • March 2016

College & Research Libraries

... This is because new knowledge from those large amounts of data cannot be derived without the appropriate skills or techniques. Information synthesis can be defined as the process of evaluating, analyzing and connecting information that is found from various sources and combining them with prior knowledge in order to develop something new [15]. Meanwhile, the synthesizing mind differentiates on the importance of the information and sorts them out in ways they are beneficial to the synthesizer and optimally, to the targeted audiences [16]. ...

Teaching and Learning Information Synthesis: An Intervention and Rubric Based Assessment
  • Citing Article
  • June 2015

Communications in Information Literacy

... Guidelines have been published to guide rubric-based assessment of IL skills that include strategies such as building collaborative relationships between faculty and librarians, choosing an assignment in which students must demonstrate the skills being assessed, and customizing a rubric, such as the VALUE rubric for Information Literacy, specifically to the chosen assignment [12]. The VALUE rubric for Information Literacy is designed to assess students' IL skills regardless of discipline [2], and several such studies from beyond engineering were useful in informing this project [13]- [15]. ...

An Information Literacy Snapshot: Authentic Assessment across the Curriculum
  • Citing Article
  • February 2015

College & Research Libraries

... For example, in a search using the search terms "information literacy" and "college students" for peerreviewed research articles, published between the years of 2011 and 2021, and listed in the Education Research Complete database, a total of 1,655 articles was retrieved. Studies have focused on a variety of topics related to information literacy such as how students find and use information (e.g., Baer et al., 2006;Head, 2013;Head & Eisenberg, 2012); who students ask for assistance with regard to finding information (e.g., Seamans, 2002); teaching and learning for information literacy (e.g., Denke et al., 2020;Peter et al., 2017), including the need for collaborative partnerships between teaching faculty and librarians (Wu & Lee Kendall, 2006), the assessment of information literacy (e.g., Kingsley et al., 2011;Mery et al., 2011;Podgornik et al., 2016;Sommer et al., 2021), how students can understand the framework of information literacy presented by the ACLR (e.g., Hofer et al., 2012;Lundstrom et al., 2014;Tucker et al., 2014), and reconceptualizing information literacy frameworks (e.g., Jacobson & Mackey, 2013). ...

Librarians and instructors developing student learning outcomes: Using frameworks to lead the process
  • Citing Article
  • August 2014

European Journal of Marketing