
pmid: 22559181
Professional guidelines state that higher-order thinking skills are a desirable outcome of pharmacy education. In this context, courses in pharmaceutics at the University of Southern California are taught in a learner-centered manner that requires use of chemical reference sources and interpretation of physicochemical information for drug molecules. To facilitate these activities, a librarian worked with faculty to design a class on reference sources and primary literature. Students believed the librarian instruction was beneficial. After the intervention, faculty fielded fewer information-related questions and the librarian received more sophisticated questions. The class emphasizes the importance of collaboration between librarians and faculty in achieving these results.
Libraries, Medical, Education, Pharmacy, Organizational Case Studies, Humans, Information Storage and Retrieval, Curriculum, California
Libraries, Medical, Education, Pharmacy, Organizational Case Studies, Humans, Information Storage and Retrieval, Curriculum, California
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