Management: From Infancy to Adolescence: Seven Lessons for Creating a Sustainable Graduate Student Orientation Program
Abstract
In recent years, academic librarians have been strengthening the suite of orientation opportunities they offer students and placing a priority on familiarizing them with collections and services to support their academic endeavor. At most universities, the primary—if not the exclusive—target of these efforts is the undergraduate population. Yet graduate students also need a thorough orientation to their postgraduate environment and what the library has to offer. But for a variety of reasons, that audience can be shortchanged. In this column, Harriet Lightman provides an overview of a successful program crafted specifically for doctoral students at a research university. Lightman shares her success story, as well as the lessons learned throughout more than a decade of adapting the program to meet students’ changing needs.—Editor
References
Harriet Lightman and Ruth N. Reingold, “A Collaborative Model for Teaching E-Resources: Northwestern University’s Graduate Training Day,” portal: Libraries and the Academy 5, no. 1 (January 2005): 23–32, accessed November 16, 2014, http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/portal_libraries_and_the_academy/v005/5.1lightman01.html.
Harriet Lightman and Marianne Ryan, “Innovation in Changing Times: Two New Approaches to User Services” (paper presented at the 77th IFLA World Library and Information Congress, San Juan, PR, August 18, 2011), accessed November 16, 2014, http://conference.ifla.org/past-wlic/2011/197-lightman-en.pdf.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5860/rusq.54n3.12
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