University of Wisconsin Madison
Job Summary
Under the general supervision of the Director of the Information School (iSchool), teach LIS 517: Digital Health: Information and Technologies Supporting Consumers and Patients and/or LIS 612: User Experience 2 in an online format for the spring semester of the 2025-26 academic year.
This position is 33.4% FTE for one course or 66.7% FTE for two courses.
Key Job Responsibilities
Develops instructional design and curriculum relevant to a course of instruction
Serves as an initial point of contact for students as it relates to specific course or series content and expectations
Facilitates classroom, online and/or laboratory instruction for one or more courses, including assessment of student performance
Department College of Letters & Science, Information School (iSchool)
Compensation Minimum academic salary: $50,113 at 33.4% time for a total of $8,326 for one course or 66.7% time for a total of $16,652 for two courses.
Required Qualifications
LIS 517: Knowledge of appropriate and accurate materials for consumer health and family education; the ethical and organizational policy issues that arise when providing consumer and family health information in different settings; the role of the public media in disseminating health information; the health‑related information needs and preferences of racial/ethnic minority populations. Experience with health information technologies, from search engines to websites to apps, that put people in charge of managing their own health information.
LIS 612: Experience working on UX, UI and other iterative design projects employing user research and testing required. Be able to lead students through iterative cycles of ideation, prototyping and testing to develop UX design projects. Expertise in prototyping methodologies and tools, both basic and advanced required. Knowledge of visual design basics and common patterns for the screen preferred. Knowledge of ideation methodologies to assist students in brainstorming new designs is preferred. Knowledge of basic user testing methodologies to evaluate draft designs is preferred.
Preferred Qualifications
Experience teaching graduate students.
Education Minimum of a Master’s degree in Library and Information Studies or a related field.
How to Apply Click the "Apply" button to start the application process. You will be prompted to upload the following documents: - Resume - Cover Letter
Applicants should attach a cover letter and resume detailing their training and experience relating to the required and preferred qualifications referenced above. The application reviewers will rely on written application materials to determine which qualified applicants will advance in the recruitment process.
Please note, there is only one attachment field. You must upload all your documents in the attachment field.
Contact Information Questions about the course(s) may be directed to Steve Sylte, ssylte@wisc.edu. Relay Access (WTRS): 7‑1‑1. See RELAY_SERVICE for further information.
Institutional Statement on Diversity Diversity is a source of strength, creativity, and innovation for UW–Madison. We value the contributions of each person and respect the profound ways their identity, culture, background, experience, status, abilities, and opinion enrich the university community. We commit ourselves to the pursuit of excellence in teaching, research, outreach, and diversity as inextricably linked goals.
The University of Wisconsin‑Madison is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to, including but not limited to, race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, age, pregnancy, disability, or status as a protected veteran and other bases as defined by federal regulations and UW System policies.
For more information regarding applicant and employee rights and to view federal and state required postings, visit the Human Resources Workplace Poster website.
To request a disability or pregnancy‑related accommodation for any step in the hiring process (e.g., application, interview, pre‑employment testing, etc.), please contact the Divisional Disability Representative (DDR) in the division you are applying to. Please make your request as soon as possible to help the university respond most effectively to you.
Employment may require a criminal background check. It may also require your references to answer questions regarding misconduct, including sexual violence and sexual harassment.
The University of Wisconsin System will not reveal the identities of applicants who request confidentiality in writing, except that the identity of the successful candidate will be released. See Wis. Stat. sec. 19.36(7).
The Annual Security and Fire Safety Report contains current campus safety and disciplinary policies, crime statistics for the previous 3 calendar years, and on‑campus student housing fire safety policies and fire statistics for the previous 3 calendar years. UW‑Madison will provide a paper copy upon request; please contact the University of Wisconsin Police Department.
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This position is 33.4% FTE for one course or 66.7% FTE for two courses.
Key Job Responsibilities
Develops instructional design and curriculum relevant to a course of instruction
Serves as an initial point of contact for students as it relates to specific course or series content and expectations
Facilitates classroom, online and/or laboratory instruction for one or more courses, including assessment of student performance
Department College of Letters & Science, Information School (iSchool)
Compensation Minimum academic salary: $50,113 at 33.4% time for a total of $8,326 for one course or 66.7% time for a total of $16,652 for two courses.
Required Qualifications
LIS 517: Knowledge of appropriate and accurate materials for consumer health and family education; the ethical and organizational policy issues that arise when providing consumer and family health information in different settings; the role of the public media in disseminating health information; the health‑related information needs and preferences of racial/ethnic minority populations. Experience with health information technologies, from search engines to websites to apps, that put people in charge of managing their own health information.
LIS 612: Experience working on UX, UI and other iterative design projects employing user research and testing required. Be able to lead students through iterative cycles of ideation, prototyping and testing to develop UX design projects. Expertise in prototyping methodologies and tools, both basic and advanced required. Knowledge of visual design basics and common patterns for the screen preferred. Knowledge of ideation methodologies to assist students in brainstorming new designs is preferred. Knowledge of basic user testing methodologies to evaluate draft designs is preferred.
Preferred Qualifications
Experience teaching graduate students.
Education Minimum of a Master’s degree in Library and Information Studies or a related field.
How to Apply Click the "Apply" button to start the application process. You will be prompted to upload the following documents: - Resume - Cover Letter
Applicants should attach a cover letter and resume detailing their training and experience relating to the required and preferred qualifications referenced above. The application reviewers will rely on written application materials to determine which qualified applicants will advance in the recruitment process.
Please note, there is only one attachment field. You must upload all your documents in the attachment field.
Contact Information Questions about the course(s) may be directed to Steve Sylte, ssylte@wisc.edu. Relay Access (WTRS): 7‑1‑1. See RELAY_SERVICE for further information.
Institutional Statement on Diversity Diversity is a source of strength, creativity, and innovation for UW–Madison. We value the contributions of each person and respect the profound ways their identity, culture, background, experience, status, abilities, and opinion enrich the university community. We commit ourselves to the pursuit of excellence in teaching, research, outreach, and diversity as inextricably linked goals.
The University of Wisconsin‑Madison is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
Qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to, including but not limited to, race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, national origin, age, pregnancy, disability, or status as a protected veteran and other bases as defined by federal regulations and UW System policies.
For more information regarding applicant and employee rights and to view federal and state required postings, visit the Human Resources Workplace Poster website.
To request a disability or pregnancy‑related accommodation for any step in the hiring process (e.g., application, interview, pre‑employment testing, etc.), please contact the Divisional Disability Representative (DDR) in the division you are applying to. Please make your request as soon as possible to help the university respond most effectively to you.
Employment may require a criminal background check. It may also require your references to answer questions regarding misconduct, including sexual violence and sexual harassment.
The University of Wisconsin System will not reveal the identities of applicants who request confidentiality in writing, except that the identity of the successful candidate will be released. See Wis. Stat. sec. 19.36(7).
The Annual Security and Fire Safety Report contains current campus safety and disciplinary policies, crime statistics for the previous 3 calendar years, and on‑campus student housing fire safety policies and fire statistics for the previous 3 calendar years. UW‑Madison will provide a paper copy upon request; please contact the University of Wisconsin Police Department.
#J-18808-Ljbffr