Library instruction sessions can be held in person, through pre-recorded or written materials, or live over the internet. In-person sessions can, as part of a formal class, in small groups, or one-on-one. Course-related instruction, while perceived as effective, is a staff-intensive process led by
professors and not librarians. Library instruction can also benefit from the utilization of
video games and gaming designed for information literacy. When incorporating
design principles from gaming into information literacy instruction, instructional librarians can teach students how to succeed through long, complex, and difficult tasks while still keeping the learning experience engaging. Library instruction and active learning information literacy workshops can also be facilitated by
theater techniques, by the rules of
hospitality or by
humor.
Critical library instruction Critical library instruction is rooted in the idea that knowledge is culturally situated, and thus, instruction must be as well. Characterized by a
praxis-based approach that is deeply connected to the context and information needs of the learner, critical library instruction always begins with an assessment of the learner's context and their information needs. Critical library instruction problematizes traditional methods of teaching information literacy skills as privileging particular ways of knowing in academic contexts, and instead advocates a method of teaching that emphasizes the learner's frame of reference and information needs. Influenced by
critical pedagogy, an educational philosophy that address problems and questions of particular relevance to the lives of students, critical library instruction aims to provide the same approach to students’ information needs and practices. From
critical literacy, critical library instruction approaches literacy as political and literacy instruction as a political act; thus, critical library instruction requires instructors to maintain awareness of power dynamics,
identity intersections, and to challenge their own definitions of literacy in order to provide meaningful instruction to their particular students. ==See also==