Accession & Acquisition: a few thoughts

I’ve just turned a recent discussion forum post into a blog post (see below). I want to make sure these thoughts are captured and stay on my blog, because it may be interesting to see in the coming year how my thinking develops. At least, (I hope), I’ll be more knowledgeable and confident in the library management side of the TL combination! Collection development, management, budgeting appear pretty daunting to me – I’m just so outside of my comfort zone.  I really appreciated the simplicity of the templates provided in ALIA’s A manual for developing policies and procedures in Australian school library resource centres, they de-mystified things somewhat. I’m also going to ask our high school TL what model of budgeting (as explained in ALIA, 2007, pp. 12-13) she does and what challenges and opportunities she faces in this area.  For sure, I totally see myself in Debowski’s (2001) comment: “many users only see the small aspect that directly supports their needs, and often fail to see the overall scope of the library collection” (p. 126) – and indeed what goes into the management of a library. 

I’m really aware though that I may become somewhat annoying with pestering our TLs with my newbie questions.  We are a tight expat community who lives and works closely together and I just need to tread with care. 

In regards to budgeting…we were asked in Module 3 the question “Is it preferable that the funding for the school library collection be distributed to teachers and departments so they have the power to determine what will be added to the library collection?”

Let’s be honest, as classroom teachers, any amount of small control we can have over our everyday school life is usually welcomed 🙂 So when I first read this question, I thought, for sure teachers and departments should have the power to determine what resources they need to stock the collection. Then I reflected on my experience of being Head of Department for Individuals and Societies (Grades 9-12) and it was hard enough getting a consensus around the table about small things, let alone agreeing on resources 🙂 And then I remember the times when I tripped merrily down to the library to ask for a resource to be ordered and I was, on occasion, shown very SIMILAR resources that were already in stock that could also fit the bill quite nicely.  Based on these examples, I’m going to err on the side of……give the TL access to curriculum and let them know of pertinent resource needs…..but let the TL (in conference with the principal) decide! It will be interesting to see if my thoughts change on this or not.

Response to Discussion Forum 3.1: Using output measures as tools for purchasing

It made me really think about my usage (as a classroom teacher) of the library collection. From my (limited) understanding, we have a pretty healthy budget for the high school library. But I do wonder about wastage. Whenever we get an email in regards to new possible subscriptions, I’m always in – especially as so much stuff/content can fit somewhere under the banner of MYP Individuals & Societies. But I can think of some subscriptions that in the past I have indicated to the TL that I will use for sure use….and then really haven’t. I too wonder how this usage is tracked. Jason spoke of reports generated by Clickview, I’m presuming this would be available on other platforms too – but I think they may only sometimes be available under the more expensive ‘premium’ or upgrade of a licence. The threads in this discussion prompt have made me more aware of my own usage (and lack of).

I also wonder about resourcing our current MYP units in our international school. Some subjects do follow standards, so are less prone to changing units (for example, MYP Science uses Next Generation Science Standards – US based, Math uses Common Core, the British section of the school uses the English National Curriculum (gosh we really are a hodge-podge) but I&S doesn’t follow set standards.  It’s fantastic in some ways – it gives flexibility, teacher and student directed units etc. But if a teacher leaves and another comes in with a very different set of ideas (which still meet the MYP criteria and makes sense regarding vertical alignment) but requires alternate resources, then there are funding issues here. I wonder how our TL handles these requests. 

References

Australian School Library Association & Victorian Catholic Teacher Librarians. (2007). A manual for developing policies and procedures in Australian school library resource centreshttp://www.asla.org.au/policy/policy-development-manual.aspx

Debowski, S. (2001). Collection program funding management. In K. Dillon, J. Henri & J.McGregor (Eds.). Providing more with less: collection management for school libraries (2nd ed., pp. 126-136). 

Reflections on the first three weeks

 

I’m just a few weeks into my teacher librarianship (TL) training.  I thought this might be a good time to reflect a little.  These are my thoughts (in no particular order):

  1. Wow, I really had no idea that the TL world was so intricate, diverse, thoughtful, complicated, outward looking, people driven, technological…I struggle to find just the right adjectives! Only three weeks, and I have managed to navigate (although poorly), new terminology, such as: patron driven acquisition, bundled sets, selection aids, collection development and management, library ‘nostalgia’, the data-knowledge continuum, information landscape, artefacts, positivism vs interpretivism….the list could go on and on.  In many ways, I feel that I have entered into another universe. 
  2. I’m starting to see the overlaps. I was reading a research paper commissioned by the International Baccalaureate Organisation for ETL503, trying to get to the heart of the definition of international mindedness, when I realised, that I could use the same paper for a discussion forum for INF 447. Somehow, my brain had switched gears and I was picking out the research paradigm used (social constructivism) and the limitations of the research.  It was an ‘aha’ moment. I absolutely love it when students have that ‘aha’ moment when they link concepts from one subject to another, (the trans-disciplinary ‘got it’ realisation), so to have my own quiet moment was encouraging. 
  3. I’ve been in our high school library a lot over the past week. After many years, I’ve stepped out of full time subject teaching and moved on to a one-year permanent substitute teaching contract at my school. My 15 year-old son is virtual learning full-time (government regulations due to Co-vid). Therefore, it’s not good if we are both bouncing around the apartment, with me nagging him to death about paying attention when he is on Zoom lessons. My retreat has often been the library. It has been really interesting to watch from a distance the comings and goings of students, teachers and administration with varying needs and requests and to see how our TL has handled them all. She is also in the process of coordinating final Extended Essay drafts and running sessions on referencing and formatting. I was lucky enough to spend some time with her yesterday morning, in which I got to pepper her with questions such as…

Q. Do we have a collection development policy with selection criteria + a challenged resource policy? A. We do (and now I have copies!)

Q.What library management system do we currently use? A. Follet School Solutions  / Destiny, which apparently many international libraries use – US based.

Q. Although our high school population overall has a high reading level, there is a small group of EAL students or students who struggle with long texts. How do we cater for these? A. Our TL recommends Orca, a Canadian company that publishes books which have a “High-Low” focus – high interest/engagement for lower reading levels.

Q. How well is the high school library budgeted? A. Very well, but she stressed the importance of budget maintenance…..advocating for the library, demonstrating its continued central importance in teaching and learning.

Q. Do we use bundled sets? A. No, our TL sources books on an individual basis.

Q. What are her ‘go to’ selection aids and book review sources?? A. The main ones she relies on are Titlewave (Follet’s selection aid which is very extensive, and books can be delivered ‘shelf ready), Booklist, School Library Journal and a Facebook group, International School Library Connection.

Further questions I’d like to ask (if she has the time in the future) would be:

Q. How do we cater for our mother tongue populations? (I have a feeling this area could use some work as it is not visible just on a ‘walk-through’, which doesn’t mean to say it is not there.)

Q. What current issue/trend does she find challenging as a TL at this present time?

Q. Does she have many members for our wider school community using the high school library? (parents/guardians/other caregivers?) What is our community “reach”? Do we intentionally “reach out” and if so, how? 

Figure 1: Christmas cheer in our high school library

References

Seewald, A. (2020). [Christmas cheer in our high school library] [Photograph].

 

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