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December 29, 2006

2006 Kansas Reads to Preschoolers Features Bunny Cakes by Rosemary Wells

From the Kansas State Library Newsletter

by Vikki Jo Stewart, Special Projects Coordinator, State Library

November 13-19, 2006 marked a second successful Kansas Reads to Preschoolers reading initiative from the State Library of Kansas. Literally thousands of Kansas children, aged birth to five years old, were read to by a family member, librarians or special readers such as Mayors and council members. One very special reader was a Kansas Appellate Court Judge.

I’ve received so many e-mails about how much fun this project has been the past two years. Last year, No Matter What by Debbi Gliori was a huge hit all over Kansas and was even read in Iraq by Kansas troops reading via webcam to children and siblings.

This year’s selection of Bunny Cakes by Rosemary Wells proved to be a wonderful tool for Early Childhood advocates raising awareness about the importance of reading to preschoolers.

There are so many stories to tell about Children’s Book Week in Kansas. Here are just a few:

Governor Kathleen Sebelius was honorary chair for a second year of the Kansas Reads to Preschoolers reading initiative. She read Bunny Cakes at the opening ceremonies of the first Kansas Book Festival at the end of September.

Judge Joe Pierron, a Kansas Appellate Court Judge, did a headstand to get the attention of a room full of preschoolers. They watched him and then did their own headstand. They listened intently as Judge Pierron read Bunny Cakes while wearing bunny ears that he’d just colored. The next day Joe read to preschoolers and a very large high school parenting class. Many of the students had children and/or were expecting a baby. He told them that reading to their babies was a priceless gift they could give right now that would be a huge benefit and help their children learn throughout life.

In Syracuse, at the Hamilton County Public Library, the plans were whirling but it was too cold to paint the bunny tracks to the library. The cold did not slow down the library staff who braved the elements to draw bunny tracks in chalk all over town. The idea being to follow the bunny tracks to the library. That was a good idea! Joyce Armstrong baked hundreds of bunny cakes for the special week’s activities.

Ottawa Public Library created a DVD of the Mayor reading Bunny Cakes to preschoolers. The DVD was very well done. It had an introduction to the reading initiative by the youth librarian that emphasized the importance of getting outside the library to reach children who don’t normally come to the library.

Rosemary Wells donated four original watercolors to the 2006 Kansas Reads Project. The watercolors will be given to libraries and an Early Childhood program by the end of December, along with ten autographed posters to participants posting on the www.kansasreadstokids.org website.

Watch for information about the next Kansas Reads to Preschoolers project coming in 2008!

December 28, 2006

Getting Ready to Read

From Kansas Libraries the Official Newsletter of the State Library of Kansas

by Jennifer Adams, Children’s Services Manager, Manhattan Public Library

I admire my cousin who teaches first grade and experiences the many challenges and rewards of teaching children to read. I remember my first grade teacher and classroom well, and the way reading surrounded us in everything we did that year. But reading doesn’t come easily for every child, and certainly teachers will be the first to point out the wide discrepancy in their students’ readiness to read.

Research also shows that more and more children are entering first grade without many of the skills needed to become good readers. Some statistics are quite staggering and scary. Children may have as few as 25 hours of one-on-one picture book reading with an adult before entering school, as compared with other children who may have more than 1,500 hours. Statistical research shows that “the knowledge of alphabet letters at entry into kindergarten is a strong predictor of reading ability in 10th grade.” These facts can seem daunting, but research also shows that there are many things we can do for children to make sure they are ready to be readers. Helping a child develop into a good reader starts long before first grade or even kindergarten.

“Early literacy” is the big buzz word among early childhood educators and students, as we discover more about the developing brains of young children and the stimulation they need to develop and be successful. Early literacy is strongly linked to a child’s ability to learn to read and to succeed in school. Early literacy does not mean teaching 3-year-olds how to read. Rather, it is a term used to refer to everything a child knows about reading before he or she actually learns how to read. It includes being aware of the printed word, enjoying books, knowing letters and sounds, knowing the names of things, as well as being able to tell stories to others. What might be shocking to some is that building these early literacy skills begins in infancy.

Yes, long before a child can identify the letter A or speak a single word, he is acquiring the knowledge necessary to be able to read aloud to you six years in the future. Early literacy for babies consists of babbling, touching and exploring things around them, hearing stories and songs, and imitating sounds they hear other people and animals making. Reading to babies from birth (or even before) is essential to their development and will help the babies associate books and reading with pleasurable experiences that they want to repeat.

If you have tried reading to a squirming 8-month-old, you might think that sounds a little crazy. But even the most active children will listen to books for short periods of time, especially if reading is part of their daily routine. Parents and caregivers must make the extra effort to take time for reading aloud. Remember to keep it fun, and allow little ones to explore books at their own pace and in their own way sometimes.

Early literacy continues as the baby becomes a toddler, now capable of repeating words and eventually sentences, able to sit and listen to longer stories, and eager to interact with others. At this stage, reading to a child should become an interactive event, with adults encouraging a child to explore illustrations by asking “what” questions and giving the child freedom to make up stories to go with the pictures.

Sometimes books just won’t work at all, but early literacy doesn’t begin and end with books. Word and sound games can entertain young children while honing their literacy skills at the same time. For example, older toddlers and preschoolers can recognize words that begin with the same sound. Pick a sound that is easy for the child to say, and then look for words with that sound. Write the letter that goes with the sound in the sand or dirt, and let the child imitate you.

Another way to promote literacy with children is to visit the library. Allow children the freedom to wander the aisles, to touch and look at lots of different books, and to check some out to take home. Join in on a storytime or special event that makes books extra fun.

The key to early literacy is awareness among parents and care providers. Libraries are joining in at all levels to help promote early literacy. The “Every Child Ready to Read @ Your Library” initiative from the American Library Association provides research and information about early literacy. We are fortunate that several librarians at Manhattan Public Library have been trained in this program and can present information to interested groups.

The “Kansas Reads…to Preschoolers” in November during National Children’s Book Week encouraged all Kansans to participate in early literacy by reading the chosen picture book, Bunny Cakes by Rosemary Wells, to a young child. The goal was that all children in the state from birth to age 5 would be read to that week, and that a new awareness of the importance of books would spark more reading in Kansas homes and child care centers every day.

At the Manhattan Library, we gave away free books during storytimes the week of November 13-19, as well as at our special storytime event on November 16 at 7:00 p.m., courtesy of the Manhattan Library Association. A child who loves books and stories is a child who will find success in school and in life. And everyone can be a part of that success story.

IMLS Calls for 2007 Coming Up Taller Award Nominations

The President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities (PCAH), in partnership with the Institute of Museum and Library Services, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the National Endowment for the Humanities, is proud to announce the availability of the 2007 Coming Up Taller nomination application. By honoring excellence in after-school and out-of-school arts and humanities programs, the Coming Up Taller awards promote a creative, engaged, skilled, and confident generation of young people.

Each year the Coming Up Taller awards recognize and reward outstanding after-school and out-of-school arts and humanities programs for underserved children and youth. Award recipients receive $10,000 each, an individualized plaque, and an invitation to attend the annual Coming Up Taller Leadership Enhancement Conference. PCAH and its partners encourage programs initiated by museums, libraries, performing arts organizations, universities, colleges, arts centers, community service organizations, schools, businesses, and eligible government entities to participate. Nomination guidelines and the application are available at: www.imls.gov/pdf/2007CUTApplication.pdf

Every Child Ready to Read® @ your library® Wiki Goes Live!

The Every Child Ready to Read® @ your library® program was developed by PLA and the Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC) to provide public libraries with vital tools to help prepare parents for their critical role as their child’s first teacher. Since the program’s training and materials were made available in 2004, hundreds of libraries have held programs for parents and caregivers to help them help children get ready to read. To learn more about the program, visit the Every Child Ready to Read® @ your library® Web site.

In order to make new and current users of the Every Child Ready to Read® @ your library program aware of the best practices and innovative ideas that have been developed by program users, PLA/ALSC have created a wiki to both share information and to solicit ideas and feedback. If you have used the Every Child Ready to Read® @ your library® materials, ideas or training, please share your successes, challenges or materials on the wiki. If you are new to the program, check out the wiki for ideas you can use today!

Continuing Education

e-Learning@PLA

e-Learning @ PLA: Register Now for Popular Online Courses

E-Learning @ PLA is offering new start dates for two of its popular online professional development courses. The New Planning for Results and Creating Policies for Results courses will be offered on the following dates:

  • February 5, 2007
  • March 5, 2007
  • April 7, 2007

For more information or to register for a course, visit e-Learning @ PLA.

December 21, 2006

Improving Literacy Through School Libraries

 

Department of Education Calls for Comments on Proposed Priority for LSL
As in years past, the Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education has proposed a priority under the Improving Literacy Through School Libraries Program, and the Department of Education is calling for comments regarding this proposed priority. Comments would need to be received by January 19, 2007.

American Library Association
Washington Office Newsline


ALAWON
Volume 15, Number 126
December 21, 2006


Improving Literacy Through School Libraries is a federal grant program and each year priority for the grants is given to projects that exhibit a specific trait; e.g. elementary school libraries, urban school libraries, etc.

This year's proposition is that priority would go to "projects that demonstrate in their grant applications that the proposed literacy project services are comprehensive and aligned with a school or district improvement plan."
  
According to the notice: "We intend for this priority to help strengthen the connection between school libraries and the instructional programs in these schools and districts."

Address all comments about this proposed priority to Irene Harwarth, U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue, SW., room 3W227, Washington, DC 20202-6200. If you prefer to send your comments via email, use the following address: lslcomments@ed.gov. You must include the term "Comments on FY 2007 LSL Priority'' in the subject line. Again, comments would need to be received by January 19, 2007.

Also, it would be very helpful if you sent your comments to Melanie Anderson in the ALA Washington Office. That way, when we submit comments of our own  we'll be better equipped to represent you!

The full text for this proposed priority, as listed in the Federal Register, is available here.

For further information on this proposed priority, contact Irene Harwarth at (202) 401-3751 or Miriam Lund at (202) 401-2871.

For more information on the Improving Literacy Through School Libraries Program, please click here.


Click here or the logo above to:

  • Jump to ALA's Legislative Action Center
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Manatee County Pulls the Plug on MySpace

Patrons of the Manatee County (Fla.) Library System no longer have access to the social networking website MySpace.com, effective December 11. Manager of Library Services John Van Berkel told American Libraries that the decision was made by county administrators rather than the library. “But it’s not a new policy,” he added. “It’s an enforcement of our current policy,” which prohibits chat-room access, e-mail, and recreational uses.

The news was not welcome to at least one library user, who utilizes the computers at the Island branch to keep in touch with friends and family. John Cole III of Holmes Beach said in the December 14 Bradenton Herald that “MySpace had become the main access for e-mail for many people. I use MySpace to communicate with my relatives in Texas.”

Van Berkel told AL that the county also blocks access to YouTube videos, and that all public and staff computers in the county system use filtering software, although the library staff “can ask the computer department to unblock specific sites.” He said in the Herald that county administrators considered that MySpace.com did not serve educational purposes.

But Cole also wrote a letter to the Herald disputing that view. “As this is written, I am at the public library,” he wrote. “Is the woman checking her boarding pass with Delta doing educational work? Is the man on the other side who is checking the latest NFL stats for his fantasy football team having an educational experience?” Cole said that like other young adults he did not own a computer and had to use the library’s.

Van Berkel said he did not expect the county to reverse its decision, as Cole was the only patron he was aware of who had complained.

Harry Potter Wins Third Georgia Challenge

A Georgia mother of four Gwinnett County elementary-school students has lost her third attempt to get the Harry Potter series banned from the county schools’ libraries and classrooms. The Georgia Board of Education ruled December 14 that Laura Mallory had failed to prove her contention that the series “promote[s] the Wicca religion,” and therefore that the books’ availability in public schools does not constitute state-sponsored advocacy of a religion.

William Bradley Bryant, vice chairman for appeals at the Georgia Board of Education, wrote in a four-page decision that the only evidence presented by complainant Laura Mallory at her previous appeal to the county school board in May “consisted of unverified hearsay that she obtained from the internet.” Bryant went on to say that, despite testimony to the county school board “that claimed the books caused a child to engage in witchcraft and that the books instilled a fear response in children . . . the hearing officer found, these were only ‘cause-and-effect assumptions’ that failed to establish that the behavior would not have occurred but for the Harry Potter books.”

Mallory, however, remains adamant that the series is an evil influence on youngsters. “It’s mainstreaming witchcraft in a subtle and deceptive manner, in a children-friendly format,” she said in a December 14 Associated Press report. She added that she is unsure whether she will appeal to the Gwinnett Superior Court, although she acknowledged having already contacted an expert witness just in case. Regardless of winning a subsequent appeal, Mallory asserted that “If even one parent or one child has looked into this more closely, it’s worth it.”

Posted December 15, 2006.

December 14, 2006

How to Bring Our Schools Out of the 20th Century



  • Sunday, Dec. 10, 2006
    How to Bring Our Schools Out of the 20th Century

    There's a dark little joke exchanged by educators with a dissident streak: Rip Van Winkle awakens in the 21st century after a hundred-year snooze and is, of course, utterly bewildered by what he sees. Men and women dash about, talking to small metal devices pinned to their ears. Young people sit at home on sofas, moving miniature athletes around on electronic screens. Older folk defy death and disability with metronomes in their chests and with hips made of metal and plastic. Airports, hospitals, shopping malls--every place Rip goes just baffles him. But when he finally walks into a schoolroom, the old man knows exactly where he is. "This is a school," he declares. "We used to have these back in 1906. Only now the blackboards are green."

    American schools aren't exactly frozen in time, but considering the pace of change in other areas of life, our public schools tend to feel like throwbacks. Kids spend much of the day as their great-grandparents once did: sitting in rows, listening to teachers lecture, scribbling notes by hand, reading from textbooks that are out of date by the time they are printed. A yawning chasm (with an emphasis on yawning) separates the world inside the schoolhouse from the world outside.

    For the past five years, the national conversation on education has focused on reading scores, math tests and closing the "achievement gap" between social classes. This is not a story about that conversation. This is a story about the big public conversation the nation is not having about education, the one that will ultimately determine not merely whether some fraction of our children get "left behind" but also whether an entire generation of kids will fail to make the grade in the global economy because they can't think their way through abstract problems, work in teams, distinguish good information from bad or speak a language other than English.

    This week the conversation will burst onto the front page, when the New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce, a high-powered, bipartisan assembly of Education Secretaries and business, government and other education leaders releases a blueprint for rethinking American education from pre-K to 12 and beyond to better prepare students to thrive in the global economy. While that report includes some controversial proposals, there is nonetheless a remarkable consensus among educators and business and policy leaders on one key conclusion: we need to bring what we teach and how we teach into the 21st century.

    Right now we're aiming too low. Competency in reading and math--the focus of so much No Child Left Behind (NCLB) testing--is the meager minimum. Scientific and technical skills are, likewise, utterly necessary but insufficient. Today's economy demands not only a high-level competence in the traditional academic disciplines but also what might be called 21st century skills. Here's what they are:

    Knowing more about the world. Kids are global citizens now, even in small-town America, and they must learn to act that way. Mike Eskew, CEO of UPS, talks about needing workers who are "global trade literate, sensitive to foreign cultures, conversant in different languages"--not exactly strong points in the U.S., where fewer than half of high school students are enrolled in a foreign-language class and where the social-studies curriculum tends to fixate on U.S. history.

    Thinking outside the box. Jobs in the new economy--the ones that won't get outsourced or automated--"put an enormous premium on creative and innovative skills, seeing patterns where other people see only chaos," says Marc Tucker, an author of the skills-commission report and president of the National Center on Education and the Economy. Traditionally that's been an American strength, but schools have become less daring in the back-to-basics climate of NCLB. Kids also must learn to think across disciplines, since that's where most new breakthroughs are made. It's interdisciplinary combinations--design and technology, mathematics and art--"that produce YouTube and Google," says Thomas Friedman, the best-selling author of The World Is Flat.

    Becoming smarter about new sources of information. In an age of overflowing information and proliferating media, kids need to rapidly process what's coming at them and distinguish between what's reliable and what isn't. "It's important that students know how to manage it, interpret it, validate it, and how to act on it," says Dell executive Karen Bruett, who serves on the board of the Partnership for 21st Century Skills, a group of corporate and education leaders focused on upgrading American education.

    Developing good people skills. EQ, or emotional intelligence, is as important as IQ for success in today's workplace. "Most innovations today involve large teams of people," says former Lockheed Martin CEO Norman Augustine. "We have to emphasize communication skills, the ability to work in teams and with people from different cultures."

    Can our public schools, originally designed to educate workers for agrarian life and industrial-age factories, make the necessary shifts? The Skills commission will argue that it's possible only if we add new depth and rigor to our curriculum and standardized exams, redeploy the dollars we spend on education, reshape the teaching force and reorganize who runs the schools. But without waiting for such a revolution, enterprising administrators around the country have begun to update their schools, often with ideas and support from local businesses. The state of Michigan, conceding that it can no longer count on the ailing auto industry to absorb its poorly educated and low-skilled workers, is retooling its high schools, instituting what are among the most rigorous graduation requirements in the nation. Elsewhere, organizations like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and the Asia Society are pouring money and expertise into model programs to show the way.

    What It Means to Be a Global Student

    Quick! How many ways can you combine nickels, dimes and pennies to get 20¢? That's the challenge for students in a second-grade math class at Seattle's John Stanford International School, and hands are flying up with answers. The students sit at tables of four manipulating play money. One boy shouts "10 plus 10"; a girl offers "10 plus 5 plus 5," only it sounds like this: "Ju, tasu, go, tasu, go." Down the hall, third-graders are learning to interpret charts and graphs showing how many hours of sleep people need at different ages. "¿Cuantas horas duerme un bebé?" asks the teacher Sabrina Storlie.

    This public elementary school has taken the idea of global education and run with it. All students take some classes in either Japanese or Spanish. Other subjects are taught in English, but the content has an international flavor. The school pulls its 393 students from the surrounding highly diverse neighborhood and by lottery from other parts of the city. Generally, its scores on state tests are at or above average, although those exams barely scratch the surface of what Stanford students learn.

    Before opening the school seven years ago, principal Karen Kodama surveyed 1,500 business leaders on which languages to teach (plans for Mandarin were dropped for lack of classroom space) and which skills and disciplines. "No. 1 was technology," she recalls. Even first-graders at Stanford begin to use PowerPoint and Internet tools. "Exposure to world cultures was also an important trait cited by the executives," says Kodama, so that instead of circling back to the Pilgrims and Indians every autumn, children at Stanford do social-studies units on Asia, Africa, Australia, Mexico and South America. Students actively apply the lessons in foreign language and culture by video-conferencing with sister schools in Japan, Africa and Mexico, by exchanging messages, gifts and joining in charity projects.

    Stanford International shows what's possible for a public elementary school, although it has the rare advantage of support from corporations like Nintendo and Starbucks, which contribute to its $1.7 million-a-year budget. Still, dozens of U.S. school districts have found ways to orient some of their students toward the global economy. Many have opened schools that offer the international baccalaureate (I.B.) program, a rigorous, off-the-shelf curriculum recognized by universities around the world and first introduced in 1968--well before globalization became a buzzword.

    To earn an I.B. diploma, students must prove written and spoken proficiency in a second language, write a 4,000-word college-level research paper, complete a real-world service project and pass rigorous oral and written subject exams. Courses offer an international perspective, so even a lesson on the American Revolution will interweave sources from Britain and France with views from the Founding Fathers. "We try to build something we call international mindedness," says Jeffrey Beard, director general of the International Baccalaureate Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. "These are students who can grasp issues across national borders. They have an understanding of nuances and complexity and a balanced approach to problem solving." Despite stringent certification requirements, I.B. schools are growing in the U.S.--from about 350 in 2000 to 682 today. The U.S. Department of Education has a pilot effort to bring the program to more low-income students.

    Real Knowledge in the Google Era

    Learn the names of all the rivers in South America. That was the assignment given to Deborah Stipek's daughter Meredith in school, and her mom, who's dean of the Stanford University School of Education, was not impressed. "That's silly," Stipek told her daughter. "Tell your teacher that if you need to know anything besides the Amazon, you can look it up on Google." Any number of old-school assignments--memorizing the battles of the Civil War or the periodic table of the elements--now seem faintly absurd. That kind of information, which is poorly retained unless you routinely use it, is available at a keystroke. Still, few would argue that an American child shouldn't learn the causes of the Civil War or understand how the periodic table reflects the atomic structure and properties of the elements. As school critic E.D. Hirsch Jr. points out in his book, The Knowledge Deficit, kids need a substantial fund of information just to make sense of reading materials beyond the grade-school level. Without mastering the fundamental building blocks of math, science or history, complex concepts are impossible.

    Many analysts believe that to achieve the right balance between such core knowledge and what educators call "portable skills"--critical thinking, making connections between ideas and knowing how to keep on learning--the U.S. curriculum needs to become more like that of Singapore, Belgium and Sweden, whose students outperform American students on math and science tests. Classes in these countries dwell on key concepts that are taught in depth and in careful sequence, as opposed to a succession of forgettable details so often served in U.S. classrooms. Textbooks and tests support this approach. "Countries from Germany to Singapore have extremely small textbooks that focus on the most powerful and generative ideas," says Roy Pea, co-director of the Stanford Center for Innovations in Learning. These might be the key theorems in math, the laws of thermodynamics in science or the relationship between supply and demand in economics. America's bloated textbooks, by contrast, tend to gallop through a mind-numbing stream of topics and subtopics in an attempt to address a vast range of state standards.

    Depth over breadth and the ability to leap across disciplines are exactly what teachers aim for at the Henry Ford Academy, a public charter school in Dearborn, Mich. This fall, 10th-graders in Charles Dershimer's science class began a project that combines concepts from earth science, chemistry, business and design. After reading about Nike's efforts to develop a more environmentally friendly sneaker, students had to choose a consumer product, analyze and explain its environmental impact and then develop a plan for re-engineering it to reduce pollution costs without sacrificing its commercial appeal. Says Dershimer: "It's a challenge for them and for me."

    A New Kind of Literacy

    The juniors in Bill Stroud's class are riveted by a documentary called Loose Change unspooling on a small TV screen at the Baccalaureate School for Global Education, in urban Astoria, N.Y. The film uses 9/11 footage and interviews with building engineers and Twin Towers survivors to make an oddly compelling if paranoid case that interior explosions unrelated to the impact of the airplanes brought down the World Trade Center on that fateful day. Afterward, the students--an ethnic mix of New Yorkers with their own 9/11 memories--dive into a discussion about the elusive nature of truth.

    Raya Harris finds the video more convincing than the official version of the facts. Marisa Reichel objects. "Because of a movie, you are going to change your beliefs?" she demands. "Just because people heard explosions doesn't mean there were explosions. You can say you feel the room spinning, but it isn't." This kind of discussion about what we know and how we know it is typical of a theory of knowledge class, a required element for an international-baccalaureate diploma. Stroud has posed this question to his class on the blackboard: "If truth is difficult to prove in history, does it follow that all versions are equally acceptable?"

    Throughout the year, the class will examine news reports, websites, propaganda, history books, blogs, even pop songs. The goal is to teach kids to be discerning consumers of information and to research, formulate and defend their own views, says Stroud, who is founder and principal of the four-year-old public school, which is located in a repurposed handbag factory.

    Classes like this, which teach key aspects of information literacy, remain rare in public education, but more and more universities and employers say they are needed as the world grows ever more deluged with information of variable quality. Last year, in response to demand from colleges, the Educational Testing Service unveiled a new, computer-based exam designed to measure information-and-communication-technology literacy. A pilot study of the test with 6,200 high school seniors and college freshmen found that only half could correctly judge the objectivity of a website. "Kids tend to go to Google and cut and paste a research report together," says Terry Egan, who led the team that developed the new test. "We kind of assumed this generation was so comfortable with technology that they know how to use it for research and deeper thinking," says Egan. "But if they're not taught these skills, they don't necessarily pick them up."

    Learning 2.0

    The chairman of Sun Microsystems was up against one of the most vexing challenges of modern life: a third-grade science project. Scott McNealy had spent hours searching the Web for a lively explanation of electricity that his son could understand. "Finally I found a very nice, animated, educational website showing electrons zooming around and tests after each section. We did this for about an hour and a half and had a ball--a great father-son moment of learning. All of a sudden we ran out of runway because it was a site to help welders, and it then got into welding." For McNealy the experience, three years ago, provided one of life's aha! moments: "It made me wonder why there isn't a website where I can just go and have anything I want to learn, K to 12, online, browser based and free."

    His solution: draw on the Wikipedia model to create a collection of online courses that can be updated, improved, vetted and built upon by innovative teachers, who, he notes, "are always developing new materials and methods of instruction because they aren't happy with what they have." And who better to create such a site than McNealy, whose company has led the way in designing open-source computer software? He quickly raised some money, created a nonprofit and--voilà!--Curriki.org made its debut January 2006, and has been growing fast. Some 450 courses are in the works, and about 3,000 people have joined as members. McNealy reports that a teenager in Kuwait has already completed the introductory physics and calculus classes in 18 days.

    Curriki, however, isn't meant to replace going to school but to supplement it and offer courses that may not be available locally. It aims to give teachers classroom-tested content materials and assessments that are livelier and more current and multimedia-based than printed textbooks. Ultimately, it could take the Web 2.0 revolution to school, closing that yawning gap between how kids learn at school and how they do everything else. Educators around the country and overseas are already discussing ways to certify Curriki's online course work for credit.

    Some states are creating their own online courses. "In the 21st century, the ability to be a lifelong learner will, for many people, be dependent on their ability to access and benefit from online learning," says Michael Flanagan, Michigan's superintendent of public instruction, which is why Michigan's new high school graduation requirements, which roll out next year, include completing at least one course online.

    A Dose of Reality

    Teachers need not fear that they will be made obsolete. They will, however, feel increasing pressure to bring their methods--along with the curriculum--into line with the way the modern world works. That means putting a greater emphasis on teaching kids to collaborate and solve problems in small groups and apply what they've learned in the real world. Besides, research shows that kids learn better that way than with the old chalk-and-talk approach.

    At suburban Farmington High in Michigan, the engineering-technology department functions like an engineering firm, with teachers as project managers, a Ford Motor Co. engineer as a consultant and students working in teams. The principles of calculus, physics, chemistry and engineering are taught through activities that fill the hallways with a cacophony of nailing, sawing and chattering. The result: the kids learn to apply academic principles to the real world, think strategically and solve problems.

    Such lessons also teach students to show respect for others as well as to be punctual, responsible and work well in teams. Those skills were badly missing in recently hired high school graduates, according to a survey of over 400 human-resource professionals conducted by the Partnership for 21st Century Skills. "Kids don't know how to shake your hand at graduation," says Rudolph Crew, superintendent of the Miami-Dade school system. Deportment, he notes, used to be on the report card. Some of the nation's more forward-thinking schools are bringing it back. It's one part of 21st century education that sleepy old Rip would recognize.


    With reporting by Carolina A. Miranda
  • Billie M. Levy Travel and Research Grants

    Introduction
    The Archives & Special Collections of the University of Connecticut Libraries, housed in the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, supports the research of scholars throughout the United States and from abroad. In recognition of the substantial contribution Ms. Billie M. Levy has made to the Northeast Children's Literature Collection and the genre of children's literature in general, an annual travel and research grant has been established to facilitate the use of the Collection by worthy applicants. Travel Grants are intended to encourage use of unique materials in the Northeast Children's Literature Collection and to provide partial support to researchers who must travel long distances to consult them. Research Grants are intended for those researchers in the vicinity who need financial support in order to undertake a research project within the Collection. Grants are awarded once each year, on a competitive basis, to promising undergraduate, graduate and post-doctoral students, established scholars, educators, authors and illustrators who plan to conduct research at the Dodd Center.

    Awards

    Awards ranging from $500 to $1200 will be made based on the quality of the application and the research project presented.

    Selection

    Travel grants are awarded on a competitive basis to applicants who are selected by a committee composed of Dodd Research Center staff and persons involved in the collection, preservation, and research in the field of children's literature. Criteria for selection include the significance of the individual's research project, his or her scholarly research credentials and letters of support, and an identified need to use the Northeast Children's Literature Collection.

    Travel Grant Recipient Responsibilities

    Travel grants recipients agree to conduct their research at the Dodd Center as indicated in their proposal, agree to meet with University faculty and library staff to discuss their research, and give a public lecture based on the outcome of their research performed at the Dodd Center in the Northeast Children's Literature Collection.
    Awards are advertised electronically and in printed scholarly publications. Applicants should submit the following materials:
    • A summary description (no more than two pages) of their research project and the need to consult the Northeast Children's Literature Collection in connection with their research.
    • A current resume.
    • Two letters of support attesting to the value of the research.
    The deadline for Billie M. Levy Travel/Research Grants applications is March 1 for the following summer and academic year. Awards are announced on April 1.
    Send applications to:
    Terri J. Goldich, Curator
    Archives & Special Collections
    Thomas J. Dodd Research Center
    University of Connecticut
    405 Babbidge Road, Unit 1205
    Storrs, Connecticut 06269-1205
    For more information contact Terri J. Goldich, Curator, Thomas J. Dodd Research Center or call (860) 486-3646.

    YALSA announces new electronic discussion list

    CHICAGO - The Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA), the fastest growing division of the American Library Association (ALA), is pleased to announce a new open discussion list, YA-MUSIC.

     

    The purpose of this discussion list, which is open to both members and non-members, is to discuss how libraries can use music in all its forms to serve the teens in their communities.  Librarians are encouraged to discuss recommended practices in collections and programming, as well as specific media, including CDs, MP3s and new emerging technologies. People wishing to subscribe to YA-MUSIC may do so online at http://lists.ala.org/wws/info/ya-music

     

    "To most teens, music is as natural as breathing--and just as important,” said Joseph Wilk, convener of YALSA’s Teen Music Interest Group.  “Music accompanies teens when they read, do homework, play video games and hang out with friends.  Music collections and services are critical for any teen-friendly library.”

     

    “According to the National Center for Education Statistics, the circulation of audio and video collections keeps increasing,” said YALSA President Judy Nelson.  “YALSA’s new list, YA-MUSIC, allows librarians a place to connect virtually and talk about these popular collections.”

     

    The YA-MUSIC list joins many other YALSA discussions lists, such as YALSA-BK, which invites subscribers to discuss specific titles, as well as other issues concerning young adult reading and young adult literature; YA-YAAC, that offers information on programming, teen advisory groups, professional development, and just about everything else; and YALSA-L which provides news and information about ALA and YALSA programs and activities and provides subscribers a channel of communication for feedback to ALA and YALSA.  For information on these lists, as well as other electronic resources from YALSA, please visit the Electronic Resources section of the YALSA site at www.ala.org/yalsa

     

    For nearly 50 years, YALSA has been the world leader in selecting books, videos, and audio books for teens.  For more information about YALSA or for lists of recommended reading, viewing and listening, go to www.ala.org/yalsa/booklists, or contact the YALSA office by phone, 800-545-2433, ext. 4390; or e-mail: yalsa@ala.org

            

     

    December 11, 2006

    Chris Crutcher headlines Freedom to Read Foundation

    Chris Crutcher
    CHICAGO – Chris Crutcher, who has been one of the most frequently challenged authors over the past two decades, will be the featured speaker at a fundraiser for the Freedom to Read Foundation on Sunday, January 21, 2007.  Doors will open at 5:45, and Crutcher’s talk will begin at 6:30 p.m., to be followed by a book signing.  The event will take place at the Seattle Public Library.
    The Spokane-based Crutcher, whose books include “Whale Talk,” “Athletic Shorts,” “The Sledding Hill” and “Running Loose,” is one of the most popular authors in the Young Adult genre.  He is the winner of YALSA’s 2000 Margaret A. Edwards Lifetime Achievement Award, Writer Magazine’s 2004 Writers Who Make A Difference Award, the National Council of Teachers of English’s 1998 National Intellectual Freedom Award and the prestigious ALAN Award, given by the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents. 
    According to Freedom to Read Foundation president John W. Berry, “Chris Crutcher is a remarkably strong voice for young adult readers and for intellectual freedom.  He has stood with schools and libraries as they have faced challenges to his materials.  He’s an advocate as well as a writer.  He gets it.  More to the point, he’s a truly engaging speaker with great stories about writing, reading, and intellectual freedom.  Don’t miss this chance to hear Chris speak!”
    Refreshments will be provided. Space is limited. The suggested donation to attend the event is $25.
    • You may use the secure online donation form to donate now. Go to http://tinyurl.com/ylvzts
    • Please indicate in the comments section that the donation is to attend the Chris Crutcher Fundraiser.
    • You may call the Freedom to Read Foundation office with your credit card information.  Call (800) 545-2433 x4226.
    • You also may write a check, payable to the Freedom to Read Foundation (memo line: Chris Crutcher Fundraiser) and mail it to FTRF,
      50 East Huron Street, Chicago, IL 60611
      .
    • Donations (by cash, checks, or credit card) also will be accepted at the event based on space availability.
    For more information, visit http://www.ala.org/chriscrutcher or contact Jonathan Kelley at jokelley@ala.org or (800) 545-2433 x4226.
    Visit Chris Crutcher’s homepage at www.chriscrutcher.com to learn more about Crutcher’s life and work.
    Copies of Crutcher’s books will be on sale at the event, and all donations from sales will go to the Freedom to Read Foundation.
    The event is being held in conjunction with the 2007 American Library Association Midwinter Meeting, and is sponsored in part by HarperCollins.
    The Seattle Public Library is located at
    1000 Fourth Street
    (206-386-4636), between Spring and Madison Streets.  The library is approximately half a mile (six blocks) from the Washington State Convention and Trade Center (
    Seventh Ave.
    and
    Pike St
    .).  Parking is available nearby.

    Board Refuses to Bar Teen Titles

    The Journey Out cover, one of the challenged titles

    From ALA Direct online:

    The board of the Cape May County (N.J.) Library voted unanimously November 15 to accept the recommendation of Director Andrew Martin to retain three books about adolescent issues that had been challenged by a patron:

     

    • Real Girl/Real World: Tools for Finding Your True Self by Heather M. Gray and Samantha Phillips explores issues such as body image, emerging sexuality, and feminism.
    • The Notebook Girls, by Julia Baskin, Lindsey Newman, Sophie Pollitt-Cohen, and Courtney Toombs, is comprised of the entries four New York City high-school students made in a shared journal in the aftermath of the September 11 terrorist attacks.
    • The Journey Out: A Guide for and about Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Teens by Rachel Pollack and Cheryl Schwartz, a self-help book for young adults who may be coming to terms with being gay, was the only one of the three challenged titles not to be found on the library shelves, which made a challenge to it moot, Martin advised trustees. He added, “It has gone out once in 11 years.”

    “Parents don’t address these things,” library Commissioner Eileen Massey contended before the vote on the titles. “Some of them do,” Martin replied, according to the November 22 Cape May County Herald. “Most of the topics are seen on television.”

    Martin, who addressed the challenge as one of his last actions before retiring November 30, told the Herald that so far as he knew, the library has “never removed anything.”

    Posted December 1, 2006.

      

    Chicago Mayor Hosts Reading Summit

    Mayor Richard M. Daley

    From ALA Direct online:

    Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley has called for librarians, educators, health and recreation officials, and parents to join him in a “call to action to ensure Chicago’s future.” During an all-day conference titled “Creating a City of Readers, Starting at Birth,” held at the Chicago Public Library November 30, the mayor spoke with more than 300 key representatives from city government and from dozens of private educational and philanthropic organizations.

    “The highest priority in our society,” said Daley, “should be the education we give our children.” He observed that “if children are not reading at grade level by the 3rd grade, they will never catch up,” adding that in the Chicago Public Schools—which he took control of managing in 1995—“we require every student to have a library card.” Student scores have risen consistently since his management team took over, and his support for the Chicago Public Library has earned Daley a national reputation for innovation; 52 branch libraries have been renovated or constructed since he became mayor in 1989.

    Keynote speaker Mem Fox, an Australian writer whose books for children have become bestsellers around the world, effectively demonstrated the value of reading to children by reading to the delighted conference attendees. Children must be read to from birth, she insisted, “but that is not enough, they must also be engaged in the text.” The human interaction is fundamental, she urged: “The cuddles and the laughs are the secret of education.”

    Laysha Ward, vice president for community relations for Target Corporation, one of the program’s sponsors (along with the Chicago Community Trust and the Chicago Public Library Foundation), announced that the retailer will launch a program to revitalize school libraries in 2007. “Target recognizes that reading is the foundation for lifelong learning,” she said, noting that by next year the company’s philanthropic level will have reached $3 million a week, much of it for reading initiatives.

    Attendees emerged from the conference with four fundamental objectives and a mandate to spread the word:

    • Get a library card and use it.
    • Read aloud with a child for 20 minutes a day.
    • Have books in your home.
    • Get caught in the act of reading.

    Posted December 1, 2006.

    December 07, 2006

    HomeworkKansas Gets Good Grade



    by Marc Galbraith, Deputy State Librarian

    If it were up to the students, you’d have to give HomeworkKansas an “A.”

    During the first twenty days of the service, Kansas school kids logged 1,654 sessions. Those are pretty impressive numbers for a brand new program, but even more impressive is what those same students have had to say about HomeworkKansas. Responding to an exit survey students were given a chance to say whatever they liked about the tutoring service. Here are a few very representative quotes from those students:

    I was going to blow this assignment off and not do it, but the tutor helped me find info, and pass with an A!!! Thanks

    YOU GUYS ARE SOOOOOOOOOOO HELPFUL!!!

    The help was great. It was explained in a way that I could understand. Thanks Mr. Jeremy B.!

    This website rocks! I thought that I’d never be able to finish this

    Awesome!

    This is the coolest thing!

    I've never had so much explanation and patience. Thanks again

    My tutor and session were very helpful in this regard.

    Moms will love it !!!!!

    Scott was an excellent teacher

    That was a very great session!~!

    I loved this and it really helps. I am hoping I can still use it when I have my baby in 4 weeks!! I would recommend this to anyone with kids that need help and the parents don't know what they are doing.
    very good:)

    My tutor was great!! I love this site.

    TSCPL Director Gina Millsap and Deputy State Librarian Marc Galbraith help students with HomeworkKansas
    HomeworkKansas was officially launched on September 6 with media events at the Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library, the Johnson County Library, and the Wichita Public Library. Other Kansas libraries have also been staging media events to help create awareness of HomeworkKansas.

    Governor Kathleen Sebelius joined the event in Topeka and she talked about how she took her responsibility as a parent very seriously. She also said she wished there had been something like HomeworkKansas when her kids were younger. The Governor jumped right in and helped 4th graders from Lowman Hill Elementary School as new users of HomeworkKansas.

    Use data from the first few weeks of HomeworkKansas service also show that students are going to HomeworkKansas from all regions of the state. The State Library staff is currently working with Tutor.com on the formatting and distribution of HomeworkKansas usage reports.

    December 06, 2006

    HTLC (Harper Library Library Council). This group of kids (ages 5th grade - 12th grade) are active, involved & great!

    Just putting out the word that in Harper we have the HTLC (Harper Library Library Council).  This group of kids (ages 5th grade - 12th grade) are active, involved & great! 

    They hold fund raisers for various "projects" at the library.  We are scheduled to go buy some new chairs for the library with the money from their last fund raiser.  Next will be a fund raiser to buy the paint for the interior of the library, then we will schedule a painting day to do the work!  The Council has a constitiution & something I, as the Library Director, that they put in was that in order to hold an office a member has to put in at least one hour of "library work" per month.  They do it too!  Rather it is sesonal decorating, putting away books, collecting money from cans (they placed cans in local businesses to collect money) or whatever comes up.  They are an awesome bunch of kids & I am honored to be working with them.
    Harper Public Library
    Harper, KS
    Tina Welch

    December 05, 2006

    Library moving into 21st century

    from the Cincinnati Enquirer

    BY LORI KURTZMAN | ENQUIRER STAFF WRITER
    You enter through the automatic doors, slightly confused. You’re not sure what you want and you haven’t a clue where to find it. So you fiddle with the racks. You pace up and down the aisles. Finally you hear a voice – “Can I help you?” – and you look up to see a smiling face, a name badge and a headset.
    Help has arrived.
    Sounds a little like Old Navy, but this is not a clothing store. This is the future of the downtown library, which is about to undergo a restructuring that will change the way it addresses customer needs – which have shifted dramatically since the library opened 50 years ago at Eighth and Vine streets.

    The Main Library for the 21st Century plan – ML/21 for short – calls for nearly $1 million in physical changes. These include the creation of a first-floor “popular library” that would house high-demand materials, including DVDs, CDs and fiction books, and the installation of informational kiosks throughout the building. Other additions include a teen center to hold programs and collections geared toward teens, a homework help space and a technology center staffed with computer-savvy workers.

    “We’re looking at ways to serve our customers better,” said public relations director Amy Banister.

    The changes, which are about a year away, came after a “tremendous amount of research,” Banister said. Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County officials surveyed employees and patrons, studied 12 similar libraries and observed more than 23,000 visitors to the main library to see who they were, where they went in the library and what they were doing there.

    The results surprised them. They found customers were using the library more as a place – a lounge, a meeting space – than as a place to find answers to their questions, Banister said.

    They also found that visitors preferred to find information quickly and on their own – after all, what can’t a person find on Google? – Reference desk queries had dropped 40 percent during the past 15 years.

    “It really varied from the way we thought customers were using the library,” Banister said.

    On a recent day, library visitors came for a variety of reasons, but few said they had cause to swing by a reference desk.

    Jerry Banks, sitting in a chair with a book, said he stopped by the library to “get out of the cold.” Banks said he visits the library daily, mainly to hang out and browse books.

    Ramona Jones, on the other hand, was there for more traditional reasons – she was passing the time while her daughter, Noelle, did research for a high school paper. (Jones said her daughter might have consulted a librarian but preferred to do research on her own.)

    “We try to come here on a weekly basis,” the Pleasant Ridge woman said, noting that the main library has more resources than some of its branches.

    ML/21 streamlines staff – roughly 24 positions will be cut through attrition or reassignment – and puts the customer at the center of what the library does. It’s out with the pinched-face librarian sitting behind a an intimidating oak reference desk and in with roving librarians, who will approach you to help you figure out how much your car is worth or where you can find that book on keeping roaches as pets.

    “The goal is to be more proactive,” said Greg Edwards, library services manager for the main library. “We’re going out there and asking them, ‘Do you need help?’ ”

    E-mail lkurtzman@enquirer.com.

     

    21st century library

    Some highlights of the plan to revamp the main branch of the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County:
    -- Reference service.
    The new model has roving librarians who will approach library visitors and a central reference desk instead of 11 subject reference desks. A remote reference center would field phone or online questions. Rather than being arranged by divided into subject departments, as it is now, the nonfiction collection would be organized in straight Dewey Decimal System order.
    -- Popular library
    A “library within the library.” This first-floor collection would house the library’s most popular items, including DVDs, CDs and fiction books. Designed to be a quick in-and-out location.
    -- Technology center
    Most computers will be consolidated into this area, which will be staffed by workers with expertise in software and technology.
    -- Genealogy and local history department
    More focused collections and trained staff in the areas of genealogy, river history, Cincinnati history and African-American history.

    AVIAN FLU/PANDEMIC PREPARATION

    Blue Skyways Home Page

    KANSAS STATE LIBRARY
    300 SW 10th, Topeka, KS 66612
    785-296-3296 / 800-432-3919
    email: infodesk@kslib.info
    http://www.kslib.info/ref/

    Information Desk


    SOME LINKS TO INFORMATION ON:

     

    AVIAN FLU/PANDEMIC PREPARATION

     


    provided by the Kansas State Library Research and Information Division
    last updated June 9, 2006

     


    SEARCHING OUR ONLINE CATALOG (ATLAS)
    http://lib.wuacc.edu/search/

    Click on any of the following headings to browse through lists of material available at the Kansas State Library and other research libraries in Topeka, Kansas.

    Avian Influenza
    Influenza
    Epidemics

    Medicine, Preventive
    Influenza Vaccination [and] Influenza Vaccines
    Public Health Administration--Kansas

    If you see something you'd like to borrow from the Kansas State Library or have further questions feel free to contact us

    The State Library also has an extensive newspaper clippings file with articles from several Kansas daily newspapers covering health issues in Kansas. This collection does not circulate but is available in the library for research.
    You can view a list of recent articles available in the library at:
    http://www.kslib.info/ref/misc/clipp/clipp.html

     



    KANSAS GOVERNMENT LINKS

    Bird Flu and You
    http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/news/sty/2006/bird_flu050506.htm
    (Basic information for families and individuals from Kansas State University Research & Extension)

     

    Kansas Pandemic Influenza Preparedness and Response Plan
    http://www.kdheks.gov/flu/download/KS_Pan_flu_10_05.pdf
    (Available from the Kansas Dept. of Health and Environment. Adobe Acrobat softerware is needed for viewing)

     

    Other Kansas Department of Health and Environment web pages:
  • http://www.kdheks.gov/flu/avian_influenza.htm (Avian Influenza Information)
  • http://www.kdheks.gov/flu/ (Influenza Information)
  • http://www.kdheks.gov/flu/pandemic_influenza.htm (Pandemic Influenza Information)
  • http://www.kdheks.gov/wash_em/index.html (The importance of washing your hands)

    Avian Influenza Prevention in Gamebird and Ratite Facilities
    http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/library/LVSTK2/Mf2114.pdf
    (A 1996 document published by the Kansas State University Research and Extension. Adobe Acrobat software is required for viewing)

    Kansas Dept. of Wildlife and Parks
    http://www.kdwp.state.ks.us/hunting/migratory_birds/bird_flu
    (Information provided by KDWP on hygiene issues in handling birds for hunters and others)

    OTHER KANSAS RESOURCES

    Google Links to articles on the avian flu in the Lawrence Journal World
    http://www.google.com/search?q=+%22avian+flu%22+site:ljworld.com&hl=en&lr=&as_qdr=all&start=30&sa=N

    Pandemic Influenza
    http://www.sedgwickcounty.org/healthdept/ada/pandemic_influenza%20.htm
    (Information from the Sedgwick County Health Department)

    U.S. GOVERNMENT RESOURCES

    PandemicFlu.gov
    http://www.pandemicflu.gov/
    (One-stop access to U.S. Government avian and pandemic flu information. Managed by the Department of Health and Human Services)

    Pandemic Flu Planning Checklist for Individuals and Families
    http://www.pandemicflu.gov/planguide/checklist.html
    (This checklist from PandemicFlu.gov will help you gather the information and resources you may need in case of a flu pandemic)

    Other Links at Pandemic.gov:

  • http://www.pandemicflu.gov/vaccine/ (Tests, Vaccines & Medications)
  • http://www.pandemicflu.gov/outbreaks/ (Monitoring Outbreaks)
  • http://www.pandemicflu.gov/news/birdfluinamerica.html (Comments on ABC TV Movie: Fatal Contact: Bird Flu in America)

     

    Avian Flu Fact Sheet
    http://travel.state.gov/travel/tips/health/health_1181.html
    (Information from the U.S. Secretary of State's Office)

    Avian Flu Information at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control Web Site

  • http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/ (CDC's Avian Flu Web Site)
  • http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/professional/infect-control.htm (Infection control in Health-Care Facilities)
  • http://www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/gen-info/facts.htm (Key Facts About Avian Influenza)
  • http://www.cdc.gov/germstopper/ (Healthy Habits Keep You Well) )

    Guidance for Protecting Workers Against Avian Flu
    http://www.osha.gov/dsg/guidance/avian-flu.html
    (From the U.S. Occupational Safety & Health Administration)

    Avian Influenza Information from the U.S. National Wildlife Health Center
    http://www.nwhc.usgs.gov/disease_information/avian_influenza/
    (Tracks the movements of birds and reported cases of avian flu. Includes an Avian Influenza News which is available on email subscription)

    OTHER RESOURCES

    Avian influenza news, statistics and other information from the World Health Organization
    http://www.who.int/csr/disease/avian_influenza/en/

    Animal Health/Avian Flu Influenza
    http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/subjects/en/health/diseases-cards/special_avian.html
    (Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations web page)

    Avian Influenza / by Timm C. Harder and Orturd Werner
    http://www.influenzareport.com/ir/ai.htm
    (Chapter from online book, Influenza Report, 2006 found at: http://www.influenzareport.com/)

    Avian influenza
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avian_flu
    (Article from Wikipedia)

     

    A service of the Kansas State Library Reference Division
    Located in the State Capitol, 300 S.W. 10th Ave., Room 343-N, Topeka, KS 66612
    800_432_3919 (in Kansas) or 785_296_3296  ·  E_mail: infodesk@kslib.info
  • Next Generation Librarianship: Where Do We Go from Here?

    From the Kansas State Library Newsletter, November 2006

    by Mickey Coalwell, Northeast Kansas Library System

    • Do you believe generational differences are a factor in today's library workplace?
    • What steps could libraries take to recruit a new generation of library workers? Why do we need to think about this today?
    • How do you see libraries changing over the next few years? How do you see younger and/or newer library staff being involved in these changes?
    • What steps can libraries take to create a healthy work environment for all staff? Why is this particularly important in a 21st Century library?
    These were some of the important questions posed by renowned author, blogger, and Library Journal columnist Rachel Singer Gordon to library staff and trustees attending her workshop sessions in September, sponsored by the Northeast Kansas Library System.

    Shannon Roy’s article in last month’s KSL Newsletter discussed generational differences in terms of four different age cohorts:

    Traditionalists (b. 1922-1943) take job obligations seriously, respect authority, and like workplace rules to be clear and fair. They currently represent about 5% of the workforce.

    Boomers (b. 1943-1960) like direct communication, teamwork, and consensus building. They seek money and recognition, and tend to be spenders rather than savers. They represent about 45% of the workforce today.

    Generation X (b. 1960-1980) are self-reliant, pragmatic and informal. They value autonomy and are technology users who grew up in a diverse, global economy. They represent about 40% of the current workforce.

    Millennials (b. 1980-2000) are confident, “street smart” multi-taskers who naturally use and adapt to rapidly-changing technology tools. They put their work and personal lives on par, and respond to immediate rewards. They are about 10% of the workforce, but growing quickly.

    These age cohorts are all represented in the Kansas library community, and their clashing values, styles and preferences can often lead to sparks in the workplace.

    Gordon has been studying the multigenerational library workforce, and her book, The NextGen Librarian's Survival Guide, is aimed at new librarians, library school students, and those considering the profession of librarianship.

    Singer, herself a NextGen librarian, focuses a lot of her attention on librarians between 20 and 35, since it will be this generation's task to bridge the chasm between the analogue and digital generations.

    Gordon emphasized the importance of mutual respect among library workers, regardless of their age: “When I surveyed people for The NextGen Librarian's Survival Guide, I got some amazing comments, ranging from, ‘Boomers need to retire already and let us get on with it; they're too stuck in their ways and can't deal with change’ to ‘Younger librarians have no work ethic and no understanding of librarianship; all they can do is push buttons and they're lost when the network goes down.’”

    Along with respect and understanding, Gordon stressed the need for effective succession planning in libraries, as graying leaders and administrators retire. Many libraries have avoided the inevitable issues of succession and leadership, and Singer issued a wake-up call to libraries who think they don’t need to consider these issues now.

    She encouraged ongoing exploration and discussion of generational issues in local libraries, in library board meetings, and in regional conference settings. Gordon applauded the interest this topic has garnered in professional circles of late.

    “If anything comes out of this outpouring of generational programs and presentations, I hope it's an awareness of our underlying assumptions and of the necessity to combine our diverse skills, strengths, and generations to work together productively in a 21st century library.”

    Rosemary Wells is Very Serious about Early Childhood Literacy!

    From the November Kansas State Library Newsletter

    by Vikki Jo Stewart, Special Projects Coordinator

     
     
    Rosemary Wells, author of Bunny Cakes, the book chosen for the 2006 Kansas Reads to Preschoolers, visited Kansas on Thursday, October 12, 2006. It was a day full of activities and opportunities for Rosemary and for the Kansas library community.

    I first met Rosemary last April when the Kansas State Department of Education (KSDE) invited her to be a speaker for their teacher conference in Wichita. Jackie Lakin, KSDE, knew that Rosemary’s book, Bunny Cakes, was selected for the State Library’s preschooler reading initiative for 2006. Jackie told me she thought it might be helpful for me to meet her and get acquainted. I was grateful for the opportunity. Meeting Rosemary in April gave us a chance to plan for the Kansas Reads to Preschoolers project in the fall. We spent much of our time planning Rosemary’s visit to Topeka in October.

    Rosemary had autographed 350 Max’s ABC’s and 350 My Shining Star posters for Kansas public libraries and Early Childhood programs. Each library system and each urban library received autographed posters, as well as several hundred 4x6” fliers in September.

    After many months of negotiations, e-mails and phone calls with Penguin Group, Rosemary Wells and several of her helpers chose Thursday, October 12, for her trip to Topeka. Rosemary would fly in early that morning to Kansas City International Airport. Penguin Group offered Kansas libraries and Early Childhood programs an opportunity to get copies of Bunny Cakes for 40% off with free shipping. Penguin Group also picked up the airfare, hotel, and transportation expenses for Rosemary Wells.

    I had approached the Executive Director, Gary Brunk, Kansas Action for Children (KAC), to collaborate with the State Library for Rosemary’s visit. KAC, an effective children’s advocacy organization, offered to do a
    Rosemary Wells Signing Bunny Cakes at TSCPL
    reception for Rosemary with a focus on legislators, other children’s organization leaders, and library leaders. KAC wanted to have a staff person pick Rosemary up at the airport so they could get acquainted. I escorted Rosemary for the rest of her stay. Rosemary also had lunch with Christie Brandau (State Librarian), Rosanne Seimens (KLA Executive Director), Betty Jean Neal and Jeff Dawson (Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library). Rosemary’s first activity was a book signing at Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library (TSCPL) in the LINGO room for librarians. Barnes and Noble brought copies of Bunny Cakes for sale. Rosemary signed all the books and then gave a talk about the importance of early literacy and her appreciation of libraries in the effort to make sure babies and preschoolers are prepared to come to school ready-to-learn!

    Following the book signing I took Rosemary to my hotel room at the Capitol Plaza. She was interviewed by the Communications Director for KAC. That interview appears on www.kansasreadstokids.org and on KAC’s homepage. In that interview, Rosemary emphasized the importance of reading to children. Parents should teach their children to love books. They should also teach them to talk about books and ask questions. That does a lot to prepare children to be taught in school. Too many children still come to school without having had someone read to them.

    Rosemary did an OPAL presentation about writing and illustrating children’s books with the help of Cindi Hickey, State Library. The OPAL presentation is also available on the Kansas Reads to Preschoolers website.

    The invitation-only reception at the Topeka & Shawnee County Public Library was beautifully decorated and a wonderful opportunity for Rosemary to share her enthusiasm for early literacy to legislators and others. Library leaders attending were: Christie Brandau, State Librarian; Gina Millsap, TSCPL director; Rosanne Siemens, KLA Executive Director; Joyce Davis, Emporia State University; Hans Fischer, KLTA President; Laura Loveless, KCKPL-West Wyandotte; Denise Smith, Stanton County Public Library, Johnson; and Joyce Armstrong, Hamilton County Public Library, Syracuse.

    I took Rosemary to Barnes and Noble for a book signing following the reception. She signed all their stock copies of Bunny Cakes, My Shining Star, and other Rosemary Wells books. Rosemary offered advice on how to display and sell the copies at Christmas to store staff.

    After a full and wonderful day Rosemary was hungry and wanted a Kansas steak. I took her to Timberline Steakhouse in Topeka. She and I had the very best bacon-wrapped filet mignons ever prepared in the Midwest.

    I drove her to the Hilton at the airport and arrived about 11 p.m. She was very happy with the day’s activities and hopeful for Kansas children.

    Now the planning begins locally for the 2006 Kansas Reads to Preschoolers reading initiative November 13-19, 2006! Judge Joe Pierron, Kansas Appellate Court Judge and past emcee for the KLA Give-KLA-a-Leg-Up bees the past three years, will do two programs in Wichita that week. He believes, as Rosemary does, that reading to children is very important to helping children get to school ready-to-learn!

    Check out the website at www.kansasreadstokids.org