Embedding academic literacy in disciplinary courses. Presented at STHLE 2013. June 19-22 2013. Cape Breton University, NS.

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Date

2013-11-03

Authors

Bury, Sophie
Sheese, Ron

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Abstract

The growth of the Learning Commons concept has fostered increased adoption of an integrated approach to the support of student learning. Academic support services associated with reading, writing, library research, and learning skills collaborate to offer programming that recognizes the recursive, non-linear nature of scholarly processes. Academic literacy becomes a central focus as educational development offices work with other campus support services to develop faculty-support partnerships and embed literacy instruction within disciplinary courses.

A librarian, writing professor, and literacy studies graduate student will describe how the York University Learning Commons is striving to move beyond the library and into the classroom. We will describe our recent efforts to encourage the integration of academic literacy instruction into disciplinary courses through work with instructors on assignment design and curriculum development.

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Keywords

academic literacy, information literacy, critical skills, faculty, educational development, learning commons, qualitative research

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