C&RL News October 2019 528

Don’t give up.” “You’ve got this!” The manner in which we communicate 
with students is not always measurable 
when assessing a librarian’s performance. 
Nevertheless, honesty and encouragement 
factor into how I communicate with students 
during library instruction. This essay details 
an approach that I have used in eight years 
of teaching information literacy sessions to 
advocate for and talk with students on a 
human level.

Advocacy
Advocating for students is part of the evolv-
ing responsibility of librarians in the millen-
nium. In the context of library instruction, 
advocacy is a natural effect of the interac-
tions we have with students in showing 
them how to find credible sources. The 
dominant trend of assessment in libraries 
has influenced how librarians advocate, 
particularly with a focus on outcomes that 
clearly enumerate to stakeholders how stu-
dents benefit from having access to librar-
ians.1-4 

Administering pre-and-post tests show-
ing how students who received instruction 
performed and linking information literacy 
participation to graded course assignments 
are examples of quantifiable forms of student 
advocacy. Test results, the number of classes 
taught, and student attendance represent 
tangible data. Pairing that type of advocacy 
to assessment initiatives can make a strong 
case that librarians are needed despite budget 

Toccara D. Porter

Advocating for students  
through encouragement
Communication on a human level

Toccara D. Porter is digital reference and interlibrary 
services librarian at Tennessee State University’s Brown-
Daniel Library, email: tporter23@yahoo.com

© 2019  Toccara D. Porter

the way I see it

concerns. But the interaction librarians have 
with students is not always about analytics. It 
becomes situational. Librarians must do what 
the moment calls for whether the action is 
measurable or not. 

The way librarians talk to students
The early years of training as a diversity 
resident librarian taught me that the most 
practical way to advocate for students is to 
partner with the professor. When profes-
sors speak highly of the library, their words 
impact how their students use the library. 
Similarly, the way librarians talk to students 
can empower them to be assertive in the 
information-seeking process. 

For example, when teaching, I emphasize 
to students that “My job is to show you where 
and how to find credible sources. But the fi-
nal decision on which sources you choose to 
use is up to you.” As we continue searching 
and students are asked to give input on the 
relevance of articles found, their responses 
are in the affirmative: “Yes, that looks good” 
or “No, not that one.” Sometimes multiple 
students will chime in, even if the subject is 
not related to their own topics. 

Students taking ownership of the source 
selection process and using the power of 

mailto:tporter23%40yahoo.com?subject=


October 2019 529 C&RL News

their voice is a great thing to witness. This 
point touches on the value of democratic 
learning setups, where the instructional 
design approach is balanced for students 
to actively participate without concern for 
reprisal. Students are urged to ask questions, 
make mistakes, work collaboratively, and 
form opinions independent of the instruc-
tor. Library instruction is a way to have such 
moments with students.  

Encourage students
Librarians are in a unique position to up-
lift students. We understand and have ex-
perienced the range of emotions had by 
students during the information-seeking 
process: including uncertainty, anxiety, 
and doubt.5-7 But we also know strategies 
for successfully making it over to the other 
side of a journey that begins with selecting 
a topic, performing an array of searches, 
evaluating content clues, and finding cred-
ible information. 

Beyond the instructional guidance we 
provide, it is okay to speak words of en-
couragement. That is, to incorporate soft 
skills approaches with hard skills training. 
Being a teaching librarian does not mean 
we must instruct a student to do something. 
Instead, what may be needed are words of 
encouragement, praise, or reassurance. For 
instance, when a student shows me a draft 
of their paper, I can sense when there is a 
need for an authority figure to provide af-
firmation. In these moments I typically say, 
“You’ve got this!” 

There are also times when I see a student 
from a previous session and will follow-up 
about the progress of a paper. For example, 
one student wanted to write about fashion 
consciousness and body awareness. When 
early searches did not produce relevant 
sources, she talked of changing the topic. 

My suggestion was that she take more 
time to perform an exhaustive literature 
search before making a final decision be-
cause of her enthusiasm in discussing the 
topic. I communicated that I supported her 
decision either way. The point is when a 

student displays excitement about a sub-
ject, find ways to root for the student to 
not give up. 

Why encouragement is needed
Being a student represents a special jour-
ney that brings adversity from meeting 
course requirements to coming into one’s 
own independence. Librarians cannot be 
the balm for all the wrinkles that mark stu-
dents’ lives, but we can let them know they 
are not alone in the academic community. 
In a way, the instructional guidance that 
librarians perform is similar to coaching. 

Micki Holliday states, “A coach, by defini-
tion, helps workers grow and improve their 
job performance by providing suggestions 
and encouragement.”8 Librarians do this by 
working with student groups that include 
athletes and helping them apply the prin-
ciples of library and research concepts to 
their assignments. 

And, like a coach, my role is to share 
knowledge with students, outwardly express 
belief in students’ abilities, and hope from 
the sidelines that the instruction will be use-
ful. Hence, when wrapping up a session, my 
comments to students are intentional. “Don’t 
give up.” “You can do it!” “If I don’t see you 
again, best wishes to you all for success 
the rest of the semester.” These comments 
serve to remind students of their potential 
for success in academia. 

Conclusion
Encouragement can help students mentally 
stay persistent in completing the task that 
is ahead. This stance is appropriate within 
academia, where students are driven to 
maintain constant activity from complet-
ing the next assignment, enrolling in the 
next class, etc. In all these things, we 
must not forget the human element. With 
everything that students are asked to do, 
librarians must tell students that we be-
lieve in their ability to do the work, not 
waiting until they reach the mountaintop, 
but voicing the sentiments throughout 
their uphill climb.



C&RL News October 2019 530

Notes
1. Debra E. Kachel, “School Librarians as 

Equity Warriors: Advocating for All Students,” 
Teacher Librarian 46, no. 2 (December 
2018): 44–46. 

2. Judi Moreillon, “Building Collaborative 
Relationships with Students,” School Library 
Monthly 31, no. 5 (2015): 27–28. 

3. Debra Kay Logan, “Putting Students 
First,” American Libraries 39, no. 4 (January/
February 2008): 56–59.

4. Mark Ray, “Aiming Higher for Success-
ful Advocacy,” Teacher Librarian 41, no. 5 
(June 2014): 61–62. 

5. Barbara Wildemuth, “Library Anxiety 

have a campus culture in which professors are 
extremely proactive in placing reserves requests 
and providing students with access to personal 
copies, we have an opportunity to increase 
access to materials by meeting professors half-
way and being proactive in placing items on 
reserve on our own initiative. This work has 
begun with the pilot of our textbook donation 
program, but can be even further expanded as 
we move forward. 

This is perhaps a good model to follow for 
campuses, like ours, who do not have dedi-
cated funding for reserves collections, and is a 
creative solution to the problem of the expense 
of replacing damaged books. Additionally, it 
may be worth looking into seeking sources of 
funding to purchase new materials, as some 
campuses successfully do, to fill in gaps, espe-
cially in providing textbooks for large general 
education courses with multiple sections and 
expensive materials. 

Lastly, it seems fair to suggest that engage-
ment should also include understanding what 
the campus community wants from a reserves 
program. Survey research, perhaps in partner-
ship with students in social sciences disciplines, 
is needed to assess what works currently for 
most students and what could use improve-

ment, and to solicit more ideas for where we 
could possibly go. Through these three types 
of engagement—engaging faculty and students 
through outreach, engaging library staff to be 
proactive, and engaging students by soliciting 
advice—course reserves services will con-
tinue to expand, increase access to important 
materials, and help continue to keep library 
services relevant and appreciated in campus 
communities. 

Notes
1. Donald A. Barclay, “No Reservations: 

Why the Time Has Come to Kill Print Text-
book Reserves,” College & Research Libraries 
News 76, no. 6 (2015): 332–335, doi:10.5860 
/crln.76.6.9331.

2. Stephanie Pitts-Noggle and Ryan Raf-
ferty, “Investigating Textbook Reserves: A 
Case Study of Two Models for Reserves 
Collections,” College & Research Libraries 
News 78, no. 1 (2017): 66-79, doi:10.5860 
/crl.v78i1.16568.

3. Anne Christie, et al., “Student Strategies 
for Coping with Textbook Costs and the Role 
of Library Course Reserves,” portal: Libraries 
and the Academy 9, no. 4 (2009): 491–510, 
doi:10.1353/pla.0.0077. 

(“In defense of course reserves,” cont. from page 522)

Impedes College Students’ Library Use, but May 
Be Alleviated Through Improved Bibliographic 
Instruction,” Evidence Based Library & Informa-
tion Practice 12, no. 4 (2017): 275–80.

6. Erin L. McAfee, “Shame: The Emotional 
Basis of Library Anxiety,” College & Research 
Libraries 79, no. 2 (March 2018): 237–56.

7. Alison Cleveland, “Library Anxiety: 
A Decade of Empirical Research,” Library 
Review 53, no. 3 (2004): 177–85.

8. Micki Holliday, Coaching, Mentoring 
and Managing: Breakthrough Strategies to 
Solve Performance Problems and Build Win-
ning Teams, 2nd. ed. (Franklin Lakes, New 
Jersey: Career Press, 2001), x. 

https://doi.org/10.5860/crln.76.6.9331
https://doi.org/10.5860/crln.76.6.9331
https://doi.org/10.5860/crl.v78i1.16568
https://doi.org/10.5860/crl.v78i1.16568
https://doi.org/10.1353/pla.0.0077