The Mathlete Program at the University of Oregon Libraries

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Date

2017

Authors

Zeidman-Karpinski, Annie
Schaak, Genevieve

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ABC-CLIO

Abstract

This chapter examines the University of Oregon’s math homework help program, which is entirely staffed by students working for the Libraries. These student employees, called Mathletes, provide drop-in homework help for all underclass mathematics courses in the reading room of the Math Library. The program has proved successful, with patron participation far exceeding initial projections. However, the real success of the program has been what the Mathletes themselves have gained as peer to peer instructors, through meaningful work experience and a supportive community. We will describe our training process, which emphasizes leadership, mentoring and problem solving throughout. In order to ascertain the benefits of peer-assisted learning on the Mathletes, we conducted a qualitative and quantitative survey assessment of our program. Results of this assessment reveal that the work has meaning above and beyond the amount that students earn as an hourly wage. Finally, providing this program has been a wonderful way to connect to both an academic department that can be difficult to serve and the greater UO community.

Description

22 pages

Keywords

Peer assisted learning, Mathletes, peer tutoring, student employees, higher education, academic libraries, high-impact practice, student employment, work experience, Student assistants

Citation

Schaack, G & Zeidman-Karpinski, A. (2017). The Mathlete Program at the University of Oregon Libraries. Peer-assisted learning in academic libraries, edited by Erin Rinto, John Watts, & Rosan Mitola. Santa Barbara, California: Libraries Unlimited, an Imprint of ABC-CLIO, LLC.