LIBR 234-10
Intellectual Freedom Seminar
Fall 2006 Greensheet
Carrie Gardner
E-mail
| Greensheet Links Textbooks and Resources Course Requirements |
Resources Blackboard Blackboard Tutorials |
Please check MySJSU Messaging for information about Blackboard enrollment.
Course Description
Focuses on current intellectual freedom issues and the centrality of intellectual freedom to librarianship.
Student Learning Outcomes
At the end of this course, the student will:
- Understand the concept of patron privacy and be familiar with relevant state and federal laws.
- Understand how the First Amendment and numerous laws relate to Libraries and patron access to information.
- Know the philosophical underpinnings of selection and censorship of library resources.
- Understand how Internet Filtering software influences access to information.
- Define Intellectual Freedom and understand how the American Library Association illustrates it’s existence in library service
LIBR 234 supports the following SLIS Core Competencies:
- articulate the ethics, values and foundational principles of library and information professionals and their role in the promotion of intellectual freedom;
- recognize the social, cultural and economic dimensions of information use.
In addition, this section supports the following SLIS Core Competencies:
- contribute to the cultural, economic, educational and social well-being of our communities.
Textbooks and Resources
Required Textbook
Intellectual Freedom Manual, 7th edition. American Library Association. amazon.com.
It is also available from the American Library Association at 800-545-2433.
IFACTION
Everyone will monitor IFACTION, a news-only, no-discussion e-list of the Intellectual Freedom Action Network (IFAN) and the Office for Intellectual Freedom (OIF) of the American Library Association.
- To Subscribe to IFACTION
- Send a message to listproc@ala.org
- Leave the subject line blank. In the body of the message, type:
subscribe ifaction yourfirstname yourlastname
- To Unsubscribe from IFACTION
- send a message to listproc@ala.org
- Leave the subject line blank. In the body of the message, type:
unsubscribe ifaction
- To Receive IFACTION in Digest Form
To receive ALA e-lists in digest form, send the following command as the only text in an e-mail message to listproc@ala.org. Leave the subject line blank. In the body of the message, type:
set NAMEOFELIST mail digest
Course Requirements
Blackboard
This course will be conducted using the Blackboard Software. Registration information will be posted via MySJSU Messaging. The blackboard software will be available by August 23, 2006. If you would like a head start, secure the textbook and read pages 55-211.
Communication
Because this class is delivered entirely online, below are some helpful hints to facilitate communication.
- My cell phone number is in the Blackboard software. Please do not hesitate to call me.
- There are no required chat times for this class.
- If you e-mail me and do not have an answer within 36 hours, please e-mail or call again. When I teach an online class, I read my e-mail many, many times a day. I am very prompt in answering it. If you have not received an answer, that means I didn't receive the e-mail. Please e-mail or call again. I have taught online classes for the last 7 years and I know that sometime e-mails are lost and not delivered.
- Please use the email subject line: 234.
- Please check the accuracy of the email address programmed into the Blackboard Software.
Assignments
Detailed information about each assignment is included in Blackboard.
| Assignment | Points | Date Available to Students | Date Due | Filename for Dropbox |
| Library Bill of Rights | 20 | August 23 | September 24 | Yourlastname.lbr |
| Librarian Interview | 20 | August 23 | November 26 | Yourlastname.interview |
| Resource Selection Policy | 15 | September 10 | October 15 | Yourlastname.selection |
| Filter Assignment | 15 | September 24 | October 29 | Yourlastname.filter |
| Privacy and Confidentiality | 20 | October 8 | November 12 | Yourlastname.privacy |
| Class Participation via Software discussion mechanism |
10 | All Semester | All Semester |
Reading lessons will be presented approximately every three weeks. Students are expected to complete all readings and participate in the corresponding class discussions. You are welcome to express opinions but in order to gain all of the class participation points, posts should include examples from the literature and real libraries. In depth discussion of the issues should be obvious.
Helpful Hints
- Please submit all assignments via the dropbox feature in the Blackboard software. Please note: It is possible to place an assignment in the dropbox and not send it to the instructor. Please take care to send it to me. See the Blackboard Tutorial for instructions.
- After I grade an assignment, I post the grade in the gradebook feature of Blackboard and return an electronic file with my comments via the dropbox. Please check there for my feedback.
- I only enter the dropbox when I am retrieving assignments or sending them back. Please do not place questions for me there. It is highly likely that I won’t see it for many days.
- I reserve the right to deduct points for grammar issues, poor spelling and late work.
- Please use the APA Style manual for all citations.
Grading
Grades will be posted no sooner than the day after the assignment is due. Usually I grade on the weekends, so grades are available the weekend after the assignment is due.
Grading Scale
The standard SJSU SLIS Grading Scale is utilized for all SLIS courses:
| 97-100 | A |
| 94-96 | A- |
| 91-93 | B+ |
| 88-90 | B |
| 85-87 | B- |
| 82-84 | C+ |
| 79-81 | C |
| 76-78 | C- |
| 73-75 | D+ |
Presenting the CourseUsing A Constructivist Approach
Constructivist learning is based on the student's active participation in problem solving. Students construct their own knowledge by testing ideas and approaches based on past knowledge, experiences and new concepts. The social interaction of class and team members will add to the experiences as the student constructs their learning. Learning is assessed through performance based projects. The teacher acts as a guide for the students in their learning.
Academic Integrity
Your own commitment to learning, as evidenced by your enrollment at San José State University, and the University's Academic Integrity Policy requires you to be honest in all your academic course work. Faculty are required to report all infractions to the Office of Judicial Affairs.
Academic integrity is essential to the mission of San José State University. As such, students are expected to perform their own work (except when collaboration is expressly permitted by the course instructor) without the use of any outside resources. Students are not permitted to use old tests, quizzes when preparing for exams, nor may they consult with students who have already taken the exam. When practiced, academic integrity ensures that all students are fairly graded. Violations to the Academic Integrity Policy undermine the educational process and will not be tolerated. It also demonstrates a lack of respect for oneself, fellow students and the course instructor and can ruin the university's reputation and the value of the degrees it offers.
We all share the obligation to maintain an environment which practices academic integrity. Violators of the Academic Integrity Policy will be subject to failing this course and being reported to the Office of Judicial Affairs for disciplinary action which could result in suspension or expulsion from San José State University.
Read the SJSU Academic Integrity Policy
http://www.sjsu.edu/senate/F06-1.pdf
Cheating
At SJSU, cheating is the act of obtaining or attempting to obtain credit for academic work through the use of any dishonest, deceptive, or fraudulent means. Cheating at SJSU includes but is not limited to:
- Copying in part or in whole, from another's test or other evaluation instrument;
- Submitting work previously graded in another course unless this has been approved by the course instructor or by departmental policy;
- Submitting work simultaneously presented in two courses, unless this has been approved by both course instructors or by departmental policy;
- Altering or interfering with grading or grading instructions;
- Sitting for an examination by a surrogate, or as a surrogate; any other act committed by a student in the course of his or her academic work which defrauds or misrepresents, including aiding or abetting in any of the actions defined above.
Plagiarism
At SJSU plagiarism is the act of representing the work of another as one's own (without giving appropriate credit) regardless of how that work was obtained, and submitting it to fulfill academic requirements. Plagiarism at SJSU includes but is not limited to:
- The act of incorporating the ideas, words, sentences, paragraphs, or parts thereof, or the specific substances of another's work, without giving appropriate credit, and representing the product as one's own work; and
- representing another's artistic/scholarly works such as musical compositions, computer programs, photographs, painting, drawing, sculptures, or similar works as one's own.
Reasonable Accommodation of Disabilities
If you need course adaptations or accommodations because of a disability,
please e-mail me as soon as possible. Presidential Directive 97-03 requires
that students with disabilities register with the Disability Resource Center
(DRC) to establish record of their disability.
No matter where students reside, they should contact the SJSU DRC to register. The DRC Web site: http://www.drc.sjsu.edu/


