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Serving and supporting students as whole people: Leisure reading for information literacy, lifelong learning, and mental and emotional well-being - Elizabeth Brookbank

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Serving and supporting students as whole people: Leisure reading for information literacy, lifelong learning, and mental and emotional well-being - Elizabeth Brookbank

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Serving and supporting students as whole people: Leisure reading for information literacy, lifelong learning, and mental and emotional well-being - Elizabeth Brookbank

  1. 1. Serving and supporting students as whole people: Leisure reading for information literacy, lifelong learning, and mental and emotional well-being
  2. 2. SUBTITLE: ARIAL BOLD/REGULAR Body copy in Arial, use normal sentence case. Bullet list • Bullet one • Bullet two • Bullet three
  3. 3. Connection to information literacy? • Leisure reading  academic achievement (Gallik, 1999; Kelly et al., 2009; Krashen, 2004; MacAdam, 1995) • Leisure reading  creativity & mental well-being (Gelade, 2002; Hurst, 2017; Kelly, 2005; Wycoff, 2003) • Leisure reading  empathy (Mar 2019; Fong, Mullin, and Mar, 2013)
  4. 4. Connection to information literacy? • Leisure reading  academic achievement (Gallik, 1999; Kelly et al., 2009; Krashen, 2004; MacAdam, 1995) • Leisure reading  creativity & mental well-being (Gelade, 2002; Hurst, 2017; Kelly, 2005; Wycoff, 2003) • Leisure reading  empathy (Mar 2019; Fong, Mullin, and Mar, 2013) 68% of academic libraries have leisure collections! (Brookbank, Davis, Harlan, 2018)
  5. 5. Social constructivism & critical pedagogy • Life experiences and the whole person • Authentic learning • Lifelong learning
  6. 6. Social constructivism & critical pedagogy • Life experiences and the whole person • Authentic learning • Lifelong learning
  7. 7. Research questions • Are students reading for leisure in order to realize all the benefits? – If so, why do they read? • How much and what are they reading? • Where are they getting their books? – If not, why not? • Do students know about and use leisure reading collections in academic libraries? – Is having a leisure collection enough? – How do academic libraries encourage leisure reading?
  8. 8. Research design • Interviews – 10 questions w/sub-questions depending on responses • Observations – 1-2 hours at a time, 2-3 sessions per site
  9. 9. Results
  10. 10. Results
  11. 11. Results
  12. 12. Results
  13. 13. Results “[I read] for personal development. Reading is important. It gives you that chance to think about things from new perspectives, which is what I like to do as well. I like to see things from a different point of view. And I think reading novels or any type of other literature—not school-wise, but book- wise—gives me the opportunity to do that.”
  14. 14. Results “[Reading] gives you a break. So, a lot of time I'll read when I'm just too stressed, I want to read and just go into another world.” “[I read] to get rid of anxiety and depression. I've been through a lot of anxiety for a long time, so I have been reading books to help.”
  15. 15. Results “It has to be educational for me. So I have to see value in it. I don't read anything…that doesn't have value for me. It has to educate me in a certain way. I don't read books just for the sake of being submerged in the story, that's not me. I read something so that I can get information, knowledge out of it.”
  16. 16. Results “You know, if I spend too much time reading Twitter I get a little disappointed in myself. I just feel like reading for leisure has more benefits overall, rather than just scrolling through social media. I've never spent hours on social media and felt good about it, but if I spend a few hours with some book I usually feel like it was time well spent.”
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  23. 23. Results “There's very large lettering that says [what] it [is].” “When I started going to school here…I just saw it when I first started using the library. I was like, ‘Oh, look at all these colorful, pretty, new books.’ So I saw it because of the display element I guess.”
  24. 24. Results
  25. 25. Results “They are usually books that staff or someone has donated, so they're all kind of similar things. So not a lot of them are ones...I've either already read them, I already have them, or they're not my thing.”
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  31. 31. Takeaways • Students are reading! • …But maybe not using your leisure collection  • There are things you can do to increase its use – Responsive to student reading habits – Updated regularly – Promoted to students—tell them about it! – Centrally located – Recommendations/picks – Visible and fun displays – Genre information • Students don’t use the public library in their university town, so it is up to us to serve their needs.
  32. 32. SUBTITLE: ARIAL BOLD/REGULAR Body copy in Arial, use normal sentence case. Bullet list • Bullet one • Bullet two • Bullet three
  33. 33. Takeaways “Reading should be fun as well as for work.” “...it's fun to explore your interests - it makes you feel like more of a person. “I think a lot of people in uni come to hate reading…So, it's kind of nice that the library has that balance of a reminder that you can just enjoy this.”
  34. 34. References • Behler, A. (2011). Leisure Reading Collections in College and University Libraries: Have Academic Librarians Rediscovered Readers’ Advisory? In Zabel, D (Ed.), Reference reborn: Breathing new life into public services librarianship (pp. 133-142). Libraries Unlimited. • Brookbank, E., Davis, A. M., & Harlan, L. (2018). Don’t Call It a Comeback: Popular Reading Collections in Academic Libraries. Reference & User Services Quarterly, 58(1), 33-34. • Chen. (2007). Extracurricular Reading Habits of College Students in Taiwan: Findings From Two National Surveys. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 50(8), 642–653. https://doi.org/10.1598/JAAL.50.8.3 • Critten, J. and Stanfield, A. G. (2016). Social constructivism and critical information literacy. In Pagowsky N. and McElroy, K. (Eds.), Critical Library Pedagogy Handbook, Association of College and Research Libraries, a division of the American Library Association. • Elliot, J. (2007). Academic Libraries and Extracurricular Reading Promotion. Reference & User Services Quarterly, 46(3), 33-43. • Eskin, Mehmet, et al. (2016). Suicidal behavior and psychological distress in university students: A 12‐nation study. Archives of Suicide Research, 20(3), 369-388, doi.org/10.1080/13811118.2015.1054055. • Fong, K., Mullin, J.B., & Mar, R.A. (2013). What you read matters: the role of fiction genre in predicting interpersonal sensitivity. Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts, 7(4), 370–376. • Gallik, Jude. (1999). Do they read for pleasure? Recreational Reading Habits of College Students. Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 42(6), 480-488. • Gelade, G. A. (2002). Creative style, personality, and artistic endeavor. Genetic, Social, and General Psychology Monographs, 128, 213-234. • Gilbert and Fister B., (2011). Reading, Risk, and Reality: College Students and Reading for Pleasure. College & Research Libraries, 72(5), 474-495. https://doi.org/10.5860/crl-148 • Hurst, Susan, et al. (2017). Cats, Comics, and Knausgård: Promoting Student Reading at a U.K. Academic Library with a Leisure Reading Collection. New Review of Academic Librarianship, 23(4), 442-452, doi:10.1080/13614533.2017.1371612. • Kelly, K. E. (2005). The relationship between worry and creative personality. Counseling and Clinical Psychology Journal, 2, 75-80. • Kelly, K. E. and Kneipp, L.B. (2009). Reading for Pleasure and Creativity among College Students. College Student Journal, 43(4), 1137-1144. • Krashen, S. D. (2004). Power of Reading: Insights From the Research (2nd ed.). Libraries Unlimited.
  35. 35. References continued… • Lacy, M. (2014). The slow book revolution: Creating a new culture of reading on college campuses and beyond. Libraries Unlimited. • Mar, R. A., et al. (2009). Exploring the Link Between Reading Fiction and Empathy: Ruling Out Individual Differences and Examining Outcomes. Communications: The European Journal of Communication Research, 34(4), 407-428. • Marks, S. (1976). Browsing Rooms Redivivus. American Libraries, 7(2), 94-95. • Milliot, J. (2018). Nonfiction Categories Continued to Grow in 2017. Publisher’s Weekly. https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/75877-nonfiction-categories- continued-to-grow-in-2017.html • Milliot, J. (2021). Print Book Sales Rose 8.2% in 2020. Publisher’s Weekly. https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/bookselling/article/85256-print-unit-sales-rose- 8-2-in-2020.html • Milliot, J. (2022). Print Books Had a Huge Sales Year in 2021. Publisher’s Weekly. https://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/industry-news/financial-reporting/article/88225-print-book- sales-rose-8-9-in-2021.html • National Endowment for the Arts. (2004). Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary Reading in America. http://www.nea.gov/pub/readingatrisk.pdf • Nicholson, H. (2012). How to Be Engaging: Recreational Reading and Readers' Advisory in the Academic Library. Public Services Quarterly, 8(2), 178-186. • Rathe, B. & Blankenship, L. (2006). Recreational Reading Collections in Academic Libraries. Collection Management, 30(2), 73-85. • Smith, R. (2008). Giving Pleasure Its Due: Collection Promotion and Readers' Advisory in Academic Libraries. Journal of Academic Librarianship, 34(6), 520-526. • Stallman, Helen. (2010). Psychological distress in university students: A comparison with general population data. Australian Psychologist, 45(4), 249-257, doi.org/10.1080/00050067.2010.482109. • Ward-Griffin, Emma, et al. (2018). Petting away pre‐exam stress: The effect of therapy dog sessions on student well‐being. Stress and Health, 34(3), 468-473, doi.org/10.1002/smi.2804. • Wycoff, E. B., & Pryor, B. (2003). Cognitive processing, creativity, apprehension, and the humorous personality. North American Journal of Psychology, 5, 31-44. • Zauha, J. (1993). Recreational reading in academic browsing rooms: Resources for readers’ advisory. Collection Building, 12(3/4), 57-62.
  36. 36. Elizabeth Brookbank Associate Professor / Instruction Librarian Western Oregon University Email: brookbanke@wou.edu Twitter: @elizabethbrookb

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