Use VALUE Rubrics to improve learning and actual evaluation of evaluation libraries
The VALUE rules of AAC and U are the most recommended rules in higher education. The VALUE rule is part of the AAP and U LEAP programs. These rules are used in over 150 organizations. They provide a very effective and reliable means to evaluate the learning outcomes of the 16 major students. Many programs use these rules directly. You can also change them to meet the unique needs of your program. For details of the VALUE rule, please visit the AAC & US VALUE Rubric Web site. Rubric can be easily created using word processing software or spreadsheet software. However, there are many useful online gauge builders that automatically create gauges. These sites allow you to create, print, and save your own rules, and display the rules created by other users.
As part of AAC & U's free education and the American promises (LEAP) program, the VALUE standard will help college students across the country learn to evaluate conversations. Since the first publication of this title, more than 32,000 people visited the VALUE Web site for the first time between June 2010 and January 2014. More than 5,600 different institutions including schools and higher education have seen the VALUE Standards Association in the United States and around the world and 3,300 universities.
In 2013, BCC began to evaluate the effectiveness of the traditional "one-off" information literacy conference, using the effective undergraduate evaluation evaluation (VALUE) criteria of the American University Association (AAC & U) 1. These recommendations are also evaluated using the AAC and U VALUE criteria. Background In 2013, BCC participated in the Vision Project of the Massachusetts State Higher Education Committee across the campus using AAC and U VALUE evaluations. The BCC Library voluntarily uses Free Education and US Commitment (LEAP) Value Information Literacy Evaluation to evaluate the Library Information Literacy Course 2.
LEAP Rubric and Information Literacy Evaluation: We think that you need Chaser, Emily Z. Brown, Susan Souza - Mort, and Michel Tyrreus (normative contributor)