Joe Eshleman is senior librarian at Central Piedmont Community College in Charlotte, North Carolina. He was previously the instruction librarian at the Johnson & Wales University Library– Charlotte from 2008 to 2015 and was head librarian for two years at the JWU Providence library. He received his MLIS degree from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro in 2007. He has completed the Association of College & Research Libraries’ Immersion Program, an intensive program of training and education for instruction librarians. Eshleman is a coauthor of Fundamentals for the Academic Liaison (2014), The Mindful Librarian (2016), and The Dysfunctional Library: Challenges and Solutions to Workplace Relationships (2017). He is also a coauthor of Librarians and Instructional Designers: Innovation and Collaboration (2016) and a contributor to The Personal Librarian: Enhancing the Student Experience (2014). He has presented at numerous conferences on instructional librarianship and other topics.

Librarians and Instructional Designers: Collaboration and Innovation — print/e-book Bundle
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Samples
- Description
- Table of Contents
- About the Authors
- Reviews
With online education options more ubiquitous and sophisticated than ever, the need for academic librarians to be conversant with digital resources and design thinking has become increasingly important. The way forward is through collaboration with instructional designers, which allows librarians to gain a better understanding of digital resource construction, design, goals, and responsibilities. In this book, the authors demonstrate that when librarians and instructional designers pool their knowledge of curriculum and technology, together they can impact changes that help to better serve faculty, students, and staff to address changes that are affecting higher education. Illustrated using plentiful examples of successful collaboration in higher education, this book
- introduces the history of collaborative endeavors between instructional designers and librarians, sharing ideas for institutions of every size;
- reviews key emerging issues, including intellectual property, digital scholarship, data services, digital publishing, and scholarly communication;
- addresses library instruction, particularly the new information literacy framework and threshold concepts, and how the movement towards online library instruction can be supported through collaboration with instructional designers;
- describes the complementary roles of librarians and instructional designers in detail, followed by a case study in collaboration at Davidson College, an evolving digital project that mirrors changes in technology and collaboration over more than a decade;
- shows how librarians and instructional designers can work together to encourage, inform, train, and support both faculty and students in the use of digital media, media databases, online media, public domain resources, and streaming media tools;
- highlights creative opportunities inherent in the design and use of the Learning Management System (LMS); and
- looks ahead to how emerging technologies are already leading to new jobs at the intersection of librarianship and technology, such as the instructional design librarian.
With a firm foundation on best practices drawn from a variety of institutions, this book maps out a partnership between academic librarians and instructional designers that will lead to improved outcomes.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Changing Environment of Higher Education
Joe Eshleman and Kristen Eshleman
Chapter 2 Comparisons and Collaborations between the Professions
Richard Moniz
Chapter 3 Best Practices and Opportunities for Collaboration
Richard Moniz
Chapter 4 Collaborating to Accomplish Big Goals
Joe Eshleman
Chapter 5 Where Librarians and Instructional Designers Meet
Joe Eshleman
Chapter 6 Innovation and Cooperative Ventures
Joe Eshleman and Kristen Eshleman
Chapter 7 Digital Media in the Modern University
Karen Mann
Chapter 8 Integrating the Library and LMS
Karen Mann
Chapter 9 What's Next for Librarians and Instructional Designers?
Joe Eshleman
About the Authors
Index
”As two sides of the same coin, librarians and instructional designers need to work together to achieve the best outcomes for their libraries. This book is directed at academic libraries, but can be applied to any setting."
— VOYA
”Providing a purposeful introduction and index, the authors also give evidence in nine solid chapters on how to cultivate relations with curriculum development in mind. Chapters have a clean design with satisfactory balance between white space and text using subtopic divisions, visual figures, and highlighted information boxes … An excellent resource for administrators, librarians and instructional designers at the collegiate and postcollegiate level. Highly recommended."
— ARBA
”Wide-ranging and thoroughly researched."
— Library Journal