March 2021 archive

The Principal and the Teacher Librarian

As I delve further into the course, I am having many lightbulb moments and I seem to be pinging at all hours, thinking through the flashes of realisation. My big lightbulb moment this week was the realisation that the TL’s role is so embedded and interconnected across all areas of the school that it would be hard to think of a school without a TL and library. An important relationship within the school is that of the TL and the principal and how this relationship affects both parties.

The principal is the manager of the school, so their role essentially makes or breaks the role of the library within the school. If a principal does not see the value of the library, then funding is not likely to be forthcoming. However, if the library is viewed as a valuable resource by the principal, then it becomes a hub of learning and collaboration. It has been shown that there is a ‘need for a library to support students’ literacy development’ (Hughes, 2013, p42) and that if a principal believes in a constructivist approach to teaching and learning then a literature-rich library will be realised (Farmer, 2007). In such a setting, collaboration between TL, teachers and principal can ensue. In saying that, the roles of each party need to be clear-cut and this is critical to the success of the collaboration (Haycock, 2007).

The TL needs to be proactive in voicing the needs of the teachers and students so that the principal can facilitate these needs. The principal can only act on what they know. It is up to the TL to demonstrate the value of the library resources and programs and in turn this enables the principal to be able to fulfil the needs. This requires strong collaboration from both the TL and the principal to support each other in their respective roles.

It is obvious that both the TL and the principal need to have a shared vision of the function of the library within the school (Haycock, 2007). If there is a break down in the collaboration between the TL and principal, then the learning outcomes for students is at risk.

 

References

Farmer, L. (2007). Principals: Catalysts for collaboration. School Libraries Worldwide, 13(1), 56-65.

Haycock, K. (2007). Collaboration: Critical success factors for student learning. School Libraries Worldwide, 13(1), 25-35.

Hughes, H. (2013). Findings about Gold Coast Principal’s views of school libraries and teacher librarians. Chapter 8, School libraries, teacher librarians and their contribution to student literacy development in Gold Coast schools. Research report.

Are school librarians an endangered species?

After watching Karen Bonanno’s keynote address I believe the take home message to be you are only redundant if you believe yourself to be so and to make sure you are not redundant it is important to have a plan in place in order to achieve your goals.

From the article, Bonanno shows direct relationship between literacy, library budget as well as and student access to teacher librarian support. The TL becomes the link between teachers planning curriculum and resources being used to teach. TLs need to stay on top of information trends and need to ‘ensure their knowledge and skills are kept up to date’ (Bonanno, 2015, p18).

 

References

Bonanno , K. (2015). A profession at the tipping point (revisited). Access, 29(1), 14-21.  http://kb.com.au/content/uploads/2015/03/profession-at-tipping-point2.pdf

Australian School Library Association. (2011). Karen Bonanno, Keynote speaker: A profession at the tipping point: Time to change the game plan. [Video]. vimeo. https :// vimeo .com/31003940

The TL in the Information Landscape

I was faced with a question today from a student asking if I could help them find information about sink holes for a Geography assessment task. I actually found this particular student wandering through the shelves of the non-fiction section trying to find what she was after. After checking the database together (and found that our library was lacking in such resources – another issue to be faced another day) she decided to set herself loose on the world wide web.

This interaction got me thinking about the information landscape and my role as a teacher librarian. I think back to how I would have researched at high school and it looks very different now. Students no longer drag heavy volumes of encyclopaedias off the shelf or search the CD-ROM of Encyclopaedia Britannica. Instead, they search through a few taps on the keyboard and a click of the mouse. However, after these taps and clicks, a mountain of information on a particular topic appears. Price (2015) sums it up very neatly. “Today, our best estimates suggest that at least 2.5 quintillion bytes of data is produced every day.”

To get my head around such a large number I had to research it.

(Quintillion Definition (Illustrated Mathematics Dictionary), 2018)

This is an enormous amount is information; A number so big that it is equal to a million million millions (Quintillion Definition (Illustrated Mathematics Dictionary), 2018). To say this is mind-boggling is an understatement. Remember, this number was produced in 2015. However, “by 2025, it’s estimated that 463 exabytes of data will be created each day globally – that’s the equivalent of 212,765,957 DVDs per day!” (Desjardins, 2019).

With that is mind, as librarians we need to be able to understand current information trends and this is a daunting task to say the least.

To assist students to navigate the information landscape effectively, teacher librarians need to have strong skills as information specialists (“What is a Teacher Librarian?”, 2019). TLs cannot possibly be able to be experts in all areas but need to be able to adapt to changing requirements in technology and needs of staff and students alike. As a result of these needs, TLs are required to be life-long learners in order to adapt and change with the adapting and changing information landscape of which we are all a part. We are the stepping-stone for students to learn how to navigate emerging areas of the information landscape and to equip them with the skills to sift through the vast amounts and types of information available, and to make discerning choices about what is useful and what is not.

During the week I came to the conclusion that the teacher librarian is an important link between students and their navigation of the information landscape. The variety of ways to access information has changed and will continue to change over time.

 

References

Desjardins, J. (2019). How Much Data is Generated Each Day?. Visual Capitalist. Retrieved 11 March 2021, from https://www.visualcapitalist.com/how-much-data-is-generated-each-day/.

Price, D. (2015). Facts and stats about the big data industry. Cloud Tweaks.

Quintillion Definition (Illustrated Mathematics Dictionary). Mathsisfun.com. (2018). Retrieved 10 March 2021, from https://www.mathsisfun.com/definitions/quintillion.html.

What is a Teacher Librarian?. Asla.org.au. (2019). Retrieved 10 March 2021, from https://asla.org.au/what-is-a-teacher-librarian.

Role of the teacher librarian

Prior to working as a teacher librarian (TL), I had never really put much thought into my understanding of the role and what TLs do. I have been in my current TL role for several years now so to reflect on my previous experiences I need to cast my mind back. Before I became interested in becoming a TL I taught in both primary and high school settings all over Australia. The idea of becoming a TL crept into my mind several years ago when I was approached to cover the school TL while she was on long-service leave. I was working at the school as the Japanese teacher and had never contemplated stepping into the TL role before. My idea of the role at the time included reading a story to each class every week, helping students with borrowing, putting books back on the shelves, and organising and handing out BookClub orders. It seems that I was on the right track to understanding a fraction of the role as this aligns with the School Library Association of South Australia (2015) which describes one of the roles of a TL is Literature Promotion, specifically guiding ‘students in their reading choices’.

Several years ago, while teaching in a school in Sydney, the TL would take my Year 3 class for a 1-hour session each week. At the beginning of the term we would discuss what I would like her to cover during these lessons. Unbeknownst to me at the time, this TL was fulfilling a vital role by working collaboratively with me to plan and teach units of work in order to assist the students to develop information literacy” (School Library Association of SA, 2015) and was ‘involved in curriculum planning’(What is a Teacher Librarian?, 2021). My view of her role was to cover a unit of work that I wasn’t covering in class, such as a geography unit. The TL was also very good at locating resources that I needed for my class, so I didn’t have to dig through and find them.

I also viewed part of her role as being the caretaker of the operation of the library which required tasks such as returning of books to shelves, managing the borrowing system, looking after book ordering, ensuring books are in a satisfactory condition to remain within circulation, and entering of new books into the catalogue. How hard could it be?

The other role that I have always felt the TL fulfilled is that of ‘silence-enforcer’ within the library space, but at the same time, promoting it as a space to have literary conversations. It has always seemed a bit of a contradiction, but a role that the TL needs to fulfil none-the-less. The TL must be able to find the appropriate balance between these requirements of different library users.

On reflection I can see that the role of the teacher librarian is multi-faceted and complex and involves being able to make appropriate judgements in managing the library space and services. Since working as a TL I know there is more to the role and I still have a lot of learn.

 

References

School Library Association of SA. Slasa.asn.au. (2015). Retrieved 3 March 2021, from http://slasa.asn.au/Advocacy/rolestatement.html.

What is a Teacher Librarian?. Asla.org.au. (2021). Retrieved 6 March 2021, from https://asla.org.au/what-is-a-teacher-librarian.