Library Research Skills for Pre-Health Students
Partnering with the Pre-Health Advising Office
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18060/28649Keywords:
Pre-health students, Transfer students, Information literacy, systematic review, library instructionAbstract
Introduction
This brief report describes a library initiative to deliver health professions-specific information literacy instruction to students in a college-wide Health Professions Advising Program at Hunter College, a four-year institution within the City University of New York (CUNY) system. The Pre-Health Advising Office “assists students on their path to becoming a doctor, dentist, optometrist, podiatrist, veterinarian, and select allied health fields, such as physical therapy (PT), physician assistant (PA), pharmacy, and occupational therapy. Pre-Health students . . . receive advising, skills development, access to programs and resources, application planning and review, and guided support."1 Many of these students come to Hunter as transfers from two-year programs within the CUNY system or at other institutions; others may be freshmen, post-baccalaureate, or non-degree seeking students. In connection with a college-wide task force designed to increase retention and graduation rates among transfer students, the Hunter College Libraries formed a Transfer Committee to examine how the library can better support transfer students. In the Fall 2022 semester, after discussion with the director of pre-health advising, this committee reached out to librarians at the Hunter Health Professions Library (HPL) to conduct information literacy sessions for all students in the Health Professions Advising Program.
Methods
HPL librarians offer a “two-shot” series of workshops via Zoom every semester. Scheduling and other information for each 80-minute session is tracked in the library’s LibCal software and a Zoom link is provided by the director of the Pre-Health Advising Office. The first workshop covers basic library resources and services, developing a research question, and search strategies in databases. The second workshop, delivered one to two weeks later, focuses on advanced topics such as literature reviews, evidence synthesis, and systematic review tools and methods. The librarians provide a LibGuide on the Hunter College Libraries website which summarizes and expands upon the content of both sessions.
Results
Informal feedback has been positive. The Pre-Health Advising Office now requests the two sessions every semester. While the size of cohorts has varied from semester to semester, these workshops consistently reach much larger numbers of students than do typical library instruction sessions. The authors presented results from this program at the Annual Meeting of the Liberty Chapter of the Medical Library Association in October 2024.
Discussion
These findings will be of interest to health sciences librarians who provide instruction and research support to students pursuing admission to graduate health professions programs, including transfer students. The workshops offered in conjunction with the Pre-Health Advising Office greatly increased the outreach of HPL librarians’ instruction efforts. These workshops can also have an enduring impact as they address skills and concepts that will remain relevant for these students at varying stages of their academic careers or future employment; to the authors’ knowledge, no other examples exist of workshops covering systematic review methods for pre-health students. Further study will be needed to assess how or whether the content taught in these sessions has contributed to student success within the Health Professions Advising Program.
References
Pre-Health Advising Office. About the pre-health program [Internet]. New York: Hunter College Pre-Health Advising Office; 2024 [cited 2024 Nov 8]. Available from: https://www.hunter.cuny.edu/prehealth/prospective-undergraduate-students/about-pre-health-program
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Copyright (c) 2025 John Carey, Ajatshatru Pathak

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