Elizabeth Hoiem joins GSLIS faculty

Elizabeth Hoiem
Elizabeth Hoiem, Assistant Professor

This fall GSLIS will welcome Elizabeth Hoiem as an assistant professor teaching and conducting research in youth services. She comes to GSLIS from East Carolina University, where she has been an assistant professor since Fall 2013.

While a doctoral student and instructor at Illinois, Hoiem was named in the List of Teachers Ranked as Excellent by Their Students for four semesters. She teaches in the areas of children’s literature, history of children’s literature, and fantasy literature. In her research and teaching, she explores the history of technological innovations in children’s literature—from early children’s books and toys to contemporary applications of digital pedagogy—and looks at modern technology through a historical lens. 

"My research recovers the history of new pedagogical media and emerging literacies of the industrial era," Hoiem explained. "With such diverse faculty and students, GSLIS is an ideal place to explore what these past pedagogical shifts can tell us about our digital age. At GSLIS, I look forward to engaging with the material culture of childhood and child literacy, past and present, while approaching children's literature as a dynamic, applied field that our future professionals will help redefine."

Hoiem is active in several professional organizations, including the Children's Literature Association, International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts (IAFA), and the Modern Language Association. She served as the student caucus president for IAFA for two years and has co-organized several interdisciplinary conferences.

In addition to literature and the history of literature, Hoiem's research interests include community engagement—specifically, the importance of literature to contemporary youth—and digital humanities. She worked as a digital humanities graduate assistant on the Metadata Offer New Knowledge (MONK) project, a joint effort by GSLIS and the University Library at Illinois to assist humanities scholars in the discovery and analysis of text patterns in a digital environment. Currently, she is developing a project in the digital humanities that uses statistical analysis to explore the separation of literature for children and adults.

"We are delighted that Liz will be joining us at GSLIS. Her wide range of interests and activities in the history of children's literature will be a very valuable addition to our top-ranked youth services specialty. And particularly timely is her broad historical perspective on how a society's conceptualization of childhood learning can be subtly and powerfully entwined with prevailing notions of influential technologies. There are, without any doubt, lessons here that will help us understand and navigate challenges that face us today," said Allen Renear, GSLIS interim dean.

Hoiem received bachelor's degrees in English and communication design from the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, in 2002. She received an MA in literary and cultural studies from Carnegie Mellon University in 2004 and a PhD in English from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 2013.

Updated on
Backto the news archive

Related News

Trainor receives the Karen Wold Level the Learning Field Award

Senior Lecturer Kevin Trainor has been selected by the Division of Disability Resources and Educational Services (DRES) to receive the 2024 Karen Wold Level the Learning Field Award. This award honors exemplary members of faculty and staff for advocating and/or implementing instructional strategies, technologies, and disability-related accommodations that afford students with disabilities equal access to academic resources and curricula. 

Kevin Trainor

Seo coauthors chapter on data science and accessibility

Assistant Professor JooYoung Seo and Mine Dogucu, professor of statistics in the Donald Bren School of Information and Computer Sciences at the University of California Irvine, have coauthored a chapter in the new book Teaching Accessible Computing. The goal of the book, which is edited by Alannah Oleson, Amy J. Ko and Richard Ladner, is to help educators feel confident in introducing topics related to disability and accessible computing and integrating accessibility into their courses.

JooYoung Seo

iSchool instructors ranked as excellent

Fifty-five iSchool instructors were named in the University's List of Teachers Ranked as Excellent for Fall 2023. The rankings are released every semester, and results are based on the Instructor and Course Evaluation System (ICES) questionnaire forms maintained by Measurement and Evaluation in the Center for Innovation in Teaching and Learning. 

iSchool Building

ConnectED: Tech for All podcast launched by Community Data Clinic

The Community Data Clinic (CDC), a mixed methods data studies and interdisciplinary community research lab led by Associate Professor Anita Say Chan, has released the first episode of its new podcast, ConnectED: Tech for All. Community partners on the podcast include the Housing Authority of Champaign County, Champaign-Urbana Public Health District, Project Success of Vermilion County, and Cunningham Township Supervisor’s Office.

Community Data Clinic podcast logo

New study shows LLMs respond differently based on user’s motivation

A new study conducted by PhD student Michelle Bak and Assistant Professor Jessie Chin, which was recently published in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association (JAMIA), reveals how large language models (LLMs) respond to different motivational states. In their evaluation of three LLM-based generative conversational agents (GAs)—ChatGPT, Google Bard, and Llama 2—the researchers found that while GAs are able to identify users' motivation states and provide relevant information when individuals have established goals, they are less likely to provide guidance when the users are hesitant or ambivalent about changing their behavior.