(via Nicole Pagowsky, University of Arizona)
The publication C&RL (College & Research Libraries) is seeking proposals for a special issue on library instruction and the one-shot. This guest editorial provided context surrounding these conversations, and this special issue will offer a platform to continue the discussion. Agreement, disagreement, and anything in between are welcomed and encouraged.
Goals of this issue include to advance understanding of the pedagogy of one-shots, our relationships with campus, instruction program structures, impact on EDI, and libraries’ own internal functioning. The hope for this issue is to get a variety of perspectives.
Proposal submissions may include, but are not limited to, the following topics.
- how one-shots help or hinder our campus-wide instruction efforts
- how pedagogy is affected by one-shot models, with focus on learning models, educational theory, or critical pedagogy
- burnout, turnover, and low morale of instruction librarians engaged in one-shot-focused teaching
- burnout, turnover, and low morale related to tenure and retention for BIPOC librarians and others from marginalized groups engaged in one-shot-focused teaching
- one-shots as white supremacy or faux-neutrality
- the effects of expectations for positivist teaching approaches in one-shots that erase or leave out other ways of knowing (such as Indigenous research practices)
- how one-shots fit into relational and care work-based instruction programs
- one-shots’ impact on instruction as feminized labor
- other labor-related or critical models that speak to the impact of one-shots
- assessment, measurement, and analytics in terms of the one-shot
- dreaming and imagination: where do we go, what is ideal? (Submissions in this category can be less formal, and creative or exploratory.)
Approaches to exploring these topics can take multiple approaches, such as theoretical, practical, qualitative, quantitative, philosophical, and other ways of knowing. Manuscripts (~3,000-6,000 words) will go through a peer-review process. C&RL uses The Chicago Manual of Style, 16th Ed. See more on author guidelines here.
Proposals should include the following information.
- author name(s), contact information, and affiliation
- tentative title or focus
- a proposal/abstract of no more than 500 words
Submit proposals through this form by Thursday, July 1. Contact the guest editor, Nicole Pagowsky, with any questions, at nfp@arizona.edu. Also, please contact her if you have expertise in any of these areas and would like to be a peer-reviewer for this special issue, regardless of if you submit a proposal or not.
Please be sure to read the guest editorial that introduces the topic and CFP, and discusses the topic more in depth before submitting. The title of the article is “The Contested One-Shot: Deconstructing Power Structures to Imagine New Futures”. Click here to access it.