Library Faculty are the information literacy (info lit) experts. Info lit is a discipline that focuses on finding, evaluating, utilizing, creating, and disseminating information in a variety of formats. It incorporates critical thinking, analytical, and problem-solving skills. It is relevant across the curriculum and is ranked by employers as an important skill for graduates to have. Instruction is customized to support the learning outcomes of an assignment or course. Instruction is available in-person, live online, and online on your time.
Information literacy instruction is not just for traditional research papers and projects. It can help students learn how to:
prepare for a research project by developing a research strategy
find information using library resources, Google, and GenAI
identify, fact-check, and analyze various sources of information
keep up with news and trends in their fields
research careers
use, share, and create information ethically and legally
Learn more about our instructional offerings.
Research Databases: Search for full-text ebooks, articles, streaming videos, images, and more. Sources can be easily embedded or linked directly within Canvas courses.
How to Guides to help you navigate through the online research process
Hack the SCC Library Video Series: short videos to help you get the most out of the library.
Research Assignment Consults: We'll help you design an effective research assignment
Lexile searching: Many of the databases have the option to search for a specific Lexile score or range. This can help you to find materials appropriate for different reading levels.
Course Reserves: Place textbooks and other course materials on reserve for short-term student use.
Purchase Recommendations: Suggest a title for the library to purchase
Library Display/Exhibit Space: Request space to display student work
Interlibrary Loan: Request materials not owned by the Maricopa Community College Libraries
Ask a Librarian: 24/7 chat for research assistance
Contact us for more information!
Name | Phone | |
---|---|---|
Krissy Cwengros, Department Chair | 480.425.6641 | kristine.cwengros@scottsdalecc.edu |
Robin Amado, Library Faculty | 480.425.6970 | robin.amado@scottsdalecc.edu |
Nancy Deegan, Library Faculty | 480.423.6648 | nancy.deegan@scottsdalecc.edu |
Serene Rock, Library Faculty | 480.253.6654 | serene.rock@scottsdalecc.edu |
This book serves as a compass, guiding educators through the uncharted territory of AI-powered education and the future of teaching and learning.
In Shift Teaching Forward, Kelly Cassaro gives educators the knowledge, insight, and practical advice they need to prime students for the social, emotional, and behavioral skills they need to thrive in tomorrow's workplace. This book is ideal for secondary, postsecondary, and vocational educators and administrators.
This volume offers a range of responses to the problem of "disposable assignments," essays written just for a grade and then thrown away. The scholars collected here explore how renewable assignments can contribute to public knowledge, eliciting student work that is shared across networks of learning.
Faculty-Librarian Collaborations collects chapters, case studies, and lesson plans detailing why these collaborations are important, how to develop and execute them, specific lesson plans, and ideas for assessing their effectiveness.
This book offers faculty practical strategies to engage students that are research-grounded and endorsed by students themselves. Through student stories readers will discover why professor actions result in changed attitudes, stronger connections to others and the course material, and increased learning.
Designed to be incorporated into workshops, professional development programs, and courses, educators and administration will find the ideas and information presented in Trends in Assessment a useful resource on assessment and improvement in contemporary higher education.
From the history of media manipulation to practical applications of media literacy, this book will offer a thorough grounding in teaching students to defend themselves from mis-and dis-information.
This book is intended to help widen and deepen the conversations between librarians and compositionists. How can we further build and strengthen teaching partnerships that invite students to engage in writing and information seeking and use as processes of inquiry, critical reflection, and meaning making?
This rich resource offers: processes and protocols for documenting learning and analyzing data; resources and planning tools to help you design and execute your own projects; and a digital documentation notebook that you can download for guidance, inspiration, and examples.