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WISE COURSES FOR SUMMER
SESSION 2007 [May-August 2007]
- Please remember than only 3-5 spaces in total are available
in each course for WISE students in All the
participating institutions. There is no guarantee that there
will be space for you in any of these courses.
- You should not request a space in a WISE course unless you
are reasonably sure you will actually take the course. It causes
logistical problems to "take up" a space then drop
the course at the last minute.
- All courses have
the four MLIS Core Courses as required pre-requisites: LIBR
500, LIBR 501, LIBR 502 & LIBR 503. Other
required pre-requisites are noted in the individual course descriptions.
If you are in the MAS program you should ask Mary Sue Stephenson
[MLIS Chair] about whether or not you have taken the relevant
equivalent courses in the MAS program.
- Only students in the MAS, MLIS and Joint MAS/MLIS programs are eligible to take WISE courses. Students in other SLAIS programs [MACL, CAS & Ph.D.] are NOT eligible to take WISE courses.
- Students who wish to take one of the available courses will
be registered in LIBR
593: Seminar
- Students may take a maximum of two WISE courses [6 credits]
as part of their MLIS or Joint MAS/MLIS program
- Student must agree to the course parameters of the host institution
including course management tools, grading, and dates of term
- Student must have access to technology necessary for completion
of course
- Student must have the technical knowledge to complete course
successfully
- Marks given by the program offering the course will be converted
to UBC marks using only the WISE
Marking Matrix. Please read over this document carefully
as it will be the sole source used to convert marks from WISE
instituions to UBC marks.
- To register for one or more of the WISE courses please follow
the registration instructions distributed to all SLAIS students
via email
- Once you have completed course registration at the
WISE website, please send Mary Sue Stephenson
a separate e-mail [mss@interchange.ubc.ca]
for each course giving this information:
- Your name
- Your program [MLIS, Joint MAS/MLIS, MAS]
- Your UBC student number
- The name, number, and institution of the course you
wish to take
- IMPORTANT-
If you are in the stand-alone MAS - before we can send your
request to WISE to take a course you must have first completed
the "Application for Credit for External' Courses Form": http://www.slais.ubc.ca/RESOURCES/students/RequestExternalCourses.pdf
It must also be signed by your MAS adviser as well as Terry Eastwood as SLAIS
Graduate Adviser before the WISE registration process can take place.
When you send your request to take a class to Mary Sue Stephenson please
indicate that the form has already been submitted and approved. If you forget
to tell her or you haven't completed the approval process it will delay the
process of trying to secure a seat for you in one of the WISE courses. Given
the small number of seats, it will likely keep you from obtaining one of
the seats.
NOTE: Registration
for Summer 2007 session WISE courses opens on March 5,
2007
- Chief
Information Officers in the Public and Private Sectors
- Description coming soon
- Institution: Syracuse University
- Class Number: IST
700
- Course tool: Web-CT
- Faculty: Scott
Bernard
- Start Date: 5/21/2007
- End Date: 8/10/2007
- Last Add Date: 5/11/2007
- Syllabus Link: coming soon
- Class Disclaimer: Students agree to the course parameters
of the host institution, including but not limited to:
course management tools, grading, any required residencies,
possible synchronous sessions, and academic calendars.
Students are expected to meet deadlines as outlined in
course syllabus and to contribute to class participation.
- Does
the Shoe Fit? Fairy Tales as Literature for Children
- In
this course we will look deeply at the complications
and complexities of fairy tales. Among other things
we will examine the definitions, histories, and variations
of fairy tales. Additionally, we will investigate how
fairy tales have been used to instruct and entertain
children. Finally, we will consider how children's
literature creators interpret and re-interpret fairy
tales.
- Institution: Rutgers
University
- Class Number: 611:561
- Course Tool: eCollege
- Faculty: Edinger/Feldman
- Start Date: 6/25/2007
- End Date: 8/15/2007
- Last Add Date: 6/25/2007
- Syllabus Link: http://www.scils.rutgers.edu/programs/pds/litandtechcourses.jsp
- Class Disclaimer: This
course is part of our Youth Literature Online Certificate
Program, a 15 credit post-degree online course of study
for librarians, teachers, and others concerned with
preserving and passing on the rich literary heritage
to children and young people in a technological age.
This is not a course within the Rutgers MLIS program;
however with permission of an adviser MLIS students
may take the class for credit towards their degree.
The class is offered online asynchronously.
- Feminism,
Librarianship and Information
- Examines
the nature of librarianship as a profession,
issues related to information, and practices
of information services from gendered perspectives
using applicable feminist theoretical interpretations.
OBJECTIVES: Upon completion of the course
a student will better understand the gendered
construction:
• of librarianship as a
profession,
• of the philosophy and practices
of library and information work, and
• of
information as a global entity.
S/he will
also be able to apply feminist theoretical
concepts to information use and service.
- Institution: The
University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
- Class Number: L&I
SCI 891
- Course Tool: Desire2Learn
- Faculty: Hope
Olson
- Start Date: 6/11/2007
- End Date: 8/3/2007
- Last Add Date:5/15/2007
- Syllabus Link: coming soon
- Information
Architecture for Internet Services
- Building
and management of Internet information services, including
information organization, information management, and
information dissemination. Understanding of the use
of Internet technologies within an organizational context.
Practice with current technologies.
- Institution: Syracuse University
- Class Number: IST
553
- Course tool: Web-CT
- Faculty: Vadim
Parkansky
- Start Date: 5/21/2007
- End Date: 8/10/2007
- Last
Add Date: 5/11/2007
- Syllabus Link: http://wiseeducation.org/documents/syllabi/Syracuse%20University-IST%20553-Summer%202007(2.7.2007).pdf
- Class Disclaimer: Students agree to the course parameters
of the host institution, including but not limited to:
course management tools, grading, any required residencies,
possible synchronous sessions, and academic calendars.
Students are expected to meet deadlines as outlined in
course syllabus and to contribute to class participation.
- Organizational
Information Security
- Personnel/organizational
skills for information security managers and officers:
staffing, training, certification, incentives, and
evaluation of information security personnel, non-security
IT personnel, etc.; organizational development related
to security awareness, threats, and responses; and
ethics/codes of behavior in information security.
- Institution: Syracuse University
- Class Number: IST
629
- Faculty: Saira
Haque
- Start Date: 5/21/2007
- End Date: 8/10/2007
- Last Add Date: 5/11/2007
- Syllabus Link: http://wiseeducation.org/documents/syllabi/Syracuse%20University-IST%20629-Summer%202007(2.7.2007).pdf
- Class Disclaimer: Students agree to the course parameters
of the host institution, including but not limited to: course
management tools, grading, any required residencies, possible
synchronous sessions, and academic calendars. Students are
expected to meet deadlines as outlined in course syllabus
and to contribute to class participation.
- Technology
in the School Library Media Center
- This
course will prepare the library media specialist
for integrating emerging technologies successfully
within the work environment. Topics will include
resources for curriculum development, such as multimedia
programs and the Internet, as well as automated library
systems. There will be an opportunity for hands-on
learning, and for discussion of issues arising from
technology implementation. In-service education,
with the role of the library media specialist as
an active resource person and a leader in technology
implementation, will be emphasized throughout the
course. Students will communicate with the instructor
and each other via real-time conversations using
Skype software and a class wiki.
- Institution: Simmons
College
- Class Number: LIS
460
- Faculty: Linda
W. Braun
- Start Date: 6/16/2007
- End Date: 8/1/2007
- Last Add Date: 6/5/2007
- Syllabus Link: http://wiseeducation.org/documents/syllabi/Simmons
College-LIS 460-Summer 2007(2.18.2007).pdf
- Class Disclaimer: LIS
460 will be delivered via a class wiki. Students are
required to regularly add content to the course wiki,
develop podcasts and screencasts, communicate with the
instructor and classmates via IM, discussion boards,
and VOIP. Those in the course must have access to a computer
microphone or digital voice recorder and computer speakers.
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Last
updated
August 21, 2009
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School of Library, Archival
and Information Studies
Irving K. Barber Learning Centre
Suite 470 - 1961 East Mall
Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z1
voice: 604- 822-2404
fax: 604-822-6006
e-mail slais@interchange.ubc.ca
webmaster: mss@interchange.ubc.ca |
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