1,156 research outputs found
Alice B. Donahue and Nancy Appleby
Photograph - Alice B. Donahue and Nancy Appleby, Athabasca, Alberta. Note on back reads: Observing 'flood' water, July 198
Nancy Appleby, Alice B. Donahue and Berta Hees
Photograph - Three women (Nancy Appleby, Alice B. Donahue and Berta Hees) on the beach, Hawai
Nancy Appleby, Alice B. Donahue, Berta Hees and Ken Suitor
Photograph - Four people (Nancy Appleby, Alice B. Donahue, Berta Hees and Ken Suitor) sitting on a couch. Athabasca, Albert
The impact of revised ABA standard 606(a) on collection development and teaching
Peer reviewe
Are You Doing It Backward? Improving Information Literacy Instruction Using the AALL Principles and Standards for Legal Research Competency, Taxonomies, and Backward Design
AALL recently approved Principles and Standards for Legal Research Competency for law students and lawyers that can be used by academic law librarians to design curricula that will help correct deficiencies in law students' information literacy skills. These principles and standards focus on developing legal professionals' ability to conduct legal research, use and analyze information, transfer knowledge between subject areas, and reflect on learning experiences. Neither the principles themselves nor the publications on which they are based explain how the principles are to be incorporated into the curriculum. Backward design can be used by librarians to create information literacy instruction, assessments, and activities that facilitate student learning of the principles and standards
Imagining the Use of Intelligent Agents and Artificial Intelligence in Academic Law Libraries
Academic law librarians should consider ways to incorporate intelligent technology into their libraries in order to benefit the law school community. This article explains the distinction between intelligent agents and artificial intelligence, discusses current and potential future uses for both, provides examples of how academic law librarians can use them, and explores their benefits and drawbacks. Finally, it examines issues unique to law libraries, including how the ABA standards could affect the use of these technologies.Peer reviewe
Nancy Appleby
Photograph - Nancy Appleby at flooded campsite on the Athabasca River. Athabasca, AlbertaCampsit
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