
OER Curation: A Recipe for Subject Liaison Librariansīrittany Dudek, Holly Stevens, and Victoria West-Pawl The Perfect Mix: Leveraging Library Collections and Bookstore Partnerships for Textbook Affordability The Proof is in the Pudding: Building a Local Repository for Online Learning ObjectsĪrtisinal OER: Starting from Scratch at a Small Liberal Arts CollegeĬooking On All 4 Burners: Maximizing Campus Partnerships to Encourage the Adoption of OER Gone Walkabout: Door-to-Door Faculty Engagementĭeveloping a Podcast for Highlighting Faculty Teaching and ResearchĪllison N. Professional Development as a Piece of Cake: How to Host a Scholarly Communication Mini-conference The ScholComm Symposium Stew: Introducing Students to the Research Life Cycle IngredientsĬampus Engagement with Research, Competition and Opportunity: A Lighting Round Showcase Promoting Student Authorship and Research Skills through Campus Collaborations Research Strategies Certificate Program: A Recipe for Librarians Who Prefer Their Scholarly Communications Instruction Program Well DoneĪ Teaching-Focused Scholarly Communication Starter: Kneading Strategic Partnerships Souping Up Scholarly Communications via the Power of Co-Location Section I: Taking Your Program to the Next Level Chefs have also aligned recipes to standards and frameworks, including the ACRL Framework for Information Literacy for Higher Education, the ACRL Scholarly Communications Toolkit, and NASIG’s Core Competencies for Scholarly Communication Librarians. Each recipe includes outcomes for implementing the project, and many also include outcomes for end-users like workshop attendees. Recipes can be used by those new to scholarly communications, early-career librarians, and more experienced professionals looking for fresh ideas for their institution.
