Gazing the Diversity Stance in North America: Bringing Practitioner Inquiry into the LIS Classroom

Date
2016-04
Authors
Irvin, Vanessa
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Publisher
Association for Library and Information Science Education
Volume
57
Number/Issue
2
Starting Page
151
Ending Page
160
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Abstract
This article is an exploration of ways in which LIS educators can consider culture, heritage, and identity as a framework for becoming participatory agents of their teaching practices in the LIS classroom. To support this framework, this discussion introduces the research methodology, practitioner inquiry, as a meaningful approach to studying pedagogical practice and identity in the LIS classroom as a means to LIS educators becoming more self-reflective and aware of the impacts of their own identity construction in their teaching. In this article I am affirming the case for a diversity stance within the North American LIS curriculum. I am also posing additional questions and challenges about LIS identity construction and professional practice as we teach and learn in the classroom.
Description
Keywords
Library science, pedagogy, diversity, identity
Citation
Irvin, Vanessa. (2016). Gazing the Diversity Stance in North America: Bringing Practitioner Inquiry into the LIS Classroom. Journal of Education for Library and Information Science, 57(2), 151-160.
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10
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States
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