“…For intensive research-focused upper level courses, the ten high-impact practices defined by the American Association of Colleges and Universities (AAC&U) also helped librarians create measureable outcomes around these concepts, especially for writing-intensive courses and undergraduate research (Murray, 2015). By moving from theory to practice using information literacy concepts and high-impact practices as guidelines, librarians were able to focus on working with faculty to create assignments with specific outcomes and measureable assessment criteria (Millet, Donald, & Wilson, 2009;Harris, 2013;Saunders, 2012;Porter, 2014;Jumonville, 2014). While there has been some speculation as to whether these initiatives would be sustainable after the QEP funding had been spent (Jumonville, 2014), the literature suggests that librarian collaboration with faculty and support centers on campus has remained and grown as a vital part of library outreach by: creating course-specific LibGuides with faculty input (Little, Fallon, Dauenhauer, Balzano, & Halquist 2010); supporting interdisciplinary research across departments (Knapp, 2012;Gauder & Jenkins, 2012); partnering with campus writing centers (Ferer, 2012); co-teaching and assignment design (Ferer, 2012); incorporating learning theories and ACRL concepts to create measureable outcomes (Porter, 2014;Jumonville, 2014); and embedding librarians in semester-long courses (Knapp, 2012;Reale, 2016).…”