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School Libraries as Knowledge Spaces: Connections and Actions Outcomes and Evidence

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Title: School Libraries as Knowledge Spaces: Connections and Actions Outcomes and Evidence


1
School Libraries as Knowledge SpacesConnections
and ActionsOutcomes and Evidence
  • DR ROSS TODD
  • Associate Professor
  • Department of Library and
  • Information science
  • Rutgers, The State University
  • of New Jersey
  • rtodd_at_scils.rutgers.edu
  • SLAV CONFERENCEAssessing the Evidence
  • Assessing the Learning

2

The Information Age school Get it right
3
OutlineHallmarks of Victorian School Libraries
  • CONNECTIONS Intellectual / information
    scaffolds for learning
  • ACTIONS Inquiry approaches to
    teaching and learning
  • OUTCOMES Making a real difference to
    student learning
  • EVIDENCE Charting the outcomes
    demonstrating the role and power of the school
    library

THE THINKING COMMUNITY
4
The Hole Truth
  • Consider the Drill

5
The Hole Truth
  • Consider the Drill
  • People don't buy a 1.0 cm drill bit because they
    want 1.0 cm drill bit, they buy a 1.0 cm drill
    bit because they want to create a 1.0 cm hole.

6
The Hole Truth
  • Consider the school Library
  • School administrators and teachers aren't
    interested in a good library because they want
    good libraries or good teacher-librarians.
    They're interested in libraries because they want
    students to read better, to research effectively,
    to discover new ideas, learn more, and to
    improve achievement.

7
The Hole Truth
  • Buying the drill is an expense
  • Creating the hole is an investment
  • Drills are boring the infrastructure
  • The focus is the hole the space
  • The school library from infrastructure and
    information to knowledge from place to space

8
What is your focus?
  • The Drill
  • the place? the infrastructure? the collection?
    the technology? the role? the image?
  • The Hole
  • student achievement? student learning outcomes?
    student engagement with information? knowledge
    and understanding?

9
Hallmarks of a Victorian School Library
  • But
  • Knowledge construction and human understanding,
    implemented through a constructivist,
    inquiry-based framework
  • Actions and evidences that show that it makes a
    difference to student learning
  • Not
  • Collections
  • Systems
  • Technology
  • Staffing, Positions
  • Image
  • Buildings Infrastructure
  • THESE ARE IMPORTANT

10
SHIFTING THE FOCUS OF SCHOOL LIBRARIES
  • From collections, position and advocacy
  • Through connections, actions and evidence-based
    practice centering on a shared philosophy and
    process of inquiry learning
  • To making a real difference to student learning
    outcomes

Developing knowledge and understanding A thinking
community
11
  • "If we always see as we've always seen, we'll
    always be as we've always been, and always do as
    we've always done"
  • (Author unknown)

12
School Libraries 3 Fundamental Beliefs
  • Information makes a difference to people.
  • Making a difference does not happen by chance
    Teaching-learning role is the central dimension
    of the professional role of teacher-librarians
  • Learning outcomes matter belief that all
    students can learn, and develop new
    understandings, and demonstrate outcomes

13
1. Information Makes a Difference to People
  • Effects conception of information
  • Move from a focus on thing and its management
    to effect outcome
  • Posits that people engage actively / highly
    selectively with information that surrounds them
    to some effect a persons existing knowledge is
    changed or transformed in some way.
  • Effects orientation faithful to Greek / Latin
    roots of information in within formere to
    shape or form that is, informations effect is
    inward forming.

14
2. Teaching-learning role is the central
dimension of the professional role of
teacher-librarians
  • IFLA / UNESCO Manifesto for School Libraries
    The core school library services center on
    supporting and enhancing educational goals as
    outlined in the school's mission and curriculum
  • Collaboration with individual teachers in
    designing authentic learning tasks and
    assessments and integrating the information and
    communication abilities required to meet subject
    matter goals and standards
  • Provide learning experiences that encourage
    students and others to become discriminating
    consumers and skilled creators of knowledge.

15
The reality
  • Survey of Principals 2002
  • 80 of principals believe that the school library
    and teacher-librarian play a key role in the
    school
  • 99 of principals believe that despite the growth
    of the Internet, school libraries will remain
    important in the school
  • 97 of principals believe that the school library
    plays a positive role in the overall value of the
    school
  • 94 of principals believe that there is a direct
    correlation between the strength and
    effectiveness of the school library and an
    increase in student achievement

16
The reality
  • 76 of principals identified that their
    teacher-librarian worked with classroom teachers
    as needed
  • 50 of principals saw their teacher-librarians
    working in the classroom
  • 52 of principals saw the role of the
    teacher-librarian to be that of caretaker of
    the library

17
Focus on the Hole instead of the DrillWhat
Concerns School Librarians? Australian Survey
2001
  • Impact of technology on library and role
  • Perceived lack of understanding of nature and
    dimensions of role
  • Perceived lack of value, importance and
    appreciation
  • Negative perceptions of image
  • Perceived lack of support for role
  • Not able to do the job I want to
  • Perceived low status
  • Advocacy for position
  • Funding
  • Professional development
  • Student learning-processes and outcomes

18
A PREFERRED FUTURE 3 CHALLENGES
  • Integration of information literacy and
    information technology into curriculum units
    development of conceptual, technical, and
    evaluative processes / scaffolds that underpin
    inquiry learning
  • Constructivist, inquiry-based approaches to
    learning building knowledge and understanding
  • Evidence-based practice demonstrating and
    documenting how the school library program makes
    a difference to student learning

19
The Research Evidence
  • Macro-Research Eg. In USA by Keith Curry Lance
    and colleagues focus on broad relationship of
    various library dimensions to student achievement
  • Micro-Research International Seeks to
    identify students use of information,
    information skills development, reading

20
Lance USA Findings
  • State test scores increase as teacher-librarians
    specifically spend more time
  • planning cooperatively with teachers
  • identifying materials for teachers
  • teaching information literacy to students
  • providing in-service training to teachers
  • managing a computer network through which
    librarys learning program reaches beyond its own
    walls to classrooms, labs and offices

21
The Micro-Research Evidence
  • Teaching information skills results in improved
    curriculum performance
  • A process approach results in students with more
    positive attitudes to learning, increased
    engagement in the learning environment, and more
    positive perceptions of themselves as
    constructive learners.
  • Teaching information skills is most effective
    when it is integrated into flexibly delivered
    classroom instruction at the point of need.
  • Teaching information skills is most effective
    when embedded in a constructivist, inquiry
    approach

22
Other Research Evidence
  • Active reading programs foster higher levels of
    reading, comprehension, vocabulary development
    and language skills.
  • There are benefits to students when school and
    public libraries communicate and co-operate more
    effectively.
  • Successful school library programs gather
    meaningful and systematic feedback on program
    impacts.
  • School leaders tend to be more supportive when
    they can see the library actively engaged in the
    teaching and learning process, and they see the
    difference this makes.

23
The Research evidence I.T.
  • Significant student learning dilemmas
  • Getting a focus on their search and structuring
    an appropriate search strategy (conceptual
    processes)
  • Working with search engines (technical processes)
  • Critiquing web sites and making quality
    assessments of the information (evaluative
    processes)
  • Moving from relevant web sites to pertinent web
    sites
  • Constructing personal responses that demonstrate
    development of understanding (conceptual
    processes)
  • Expectation of technology to make up for student
    weaknesses
  • Information management issues managing search
    process, time, workloads, deadlines

24
The Research evidence I.T.
Every research study published 1996-2002 that
focuses on the integration of information
technology into learning highlights one key
implication the development of the intellectual
and technical scaffolds for engaging with
information pedagogical intervention and the
development of a community of thinkers
25
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27
Can we believe what we see?
  • http//urbanlegends.about.com/library/blphoto-wtc
    .htm

28
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31
From Information Literacy to Knowledge
Construction
  • Information literacy instruction is part of
    making actionable all the information and
    knowledge that a school possesses or can access.
  • WHY?

HUMAN UNDERSTANDING
32
From Information Literacy to Knowledge
Construction
  • Information literacy instruction is part of
    making actionable all the information and
    knowledge that a school possesses or can access.
  • WHY?
  • DOING information skills is not the answer.
  • The development of an information literate
    student is integral to BECOMING and BEING

33
By developing information literacy skills, what
do we want students to become?
  • The destination is not an information literature
    student, but rather, the development of a
    knowledgeable and knowing person, one who is able
    to engage effectively with a rich and complex
    information world, and who is able to develop new
    understandings, insights and ideas.
  • The development and use of human knowing, the
    construction of understanding and meaning is what
    learning is all about, and that defines the
    central purpose of the school library

34
  • Empowerment, connectivity, engagement, and
    interactivity define the actions and practices of
    the school library, and their outcome is
    knowledge construction new meanings, new
    understandings, new perspectives

35
  • The Library as a Knowledge Space, not an
    Information Place

36
FROM INFORMATION SKILLS INSTRUCTION TO AN INQUIRY
APPROACH TO LEARNING
  • Focuses on the process of thinking that builds
    understandings by engaging students in
    stimulating encounters with information and
    ideas.
  • Students learn by constructing their own
    understandings of these experiences by building
    on what they already know to form a personal
    perspective of the world.
  • The process of construction is an active ongoing
    process of learning that continues throughout
    life.

37
Characteristics of Inquiry-Based Learning
  • Students motivated to know
  • Students able to raise the focus questions that
    lead to new knowledge I need to know more
  • Students own the search process and its outcome
    they know why they are in the library
  • Supported by information skills that provide
    scaffolds for connecting and engaging with
    information
  • Conversation and sharing of ideas throughout the
    searching process
  • Construction of personal understanding from
    diverse perspectives another part of their
    world has been opened

38
Challenges of Inquiry-Based Learning
  • Moving beyond doing information skills or
    treating information skills as a laundry list
  • The critical role of exploration and
    formulation in the search process making
    provision for situations that build background
    knowledge and promote seeking a focus during a
    search
  • Developing formal interventions which enable
    students to stay focused and not wander away from
    the learning task
  • Engaging students who perceive task of searching
    as primarily one of gathering information to a
    task of forming a focused perspective from the
    information encountered

39
  • Model of the Information Search Process
  •  
  •  
  • Tasks Initiation Selection
    Exploration Formulation Collection
    Presentation
  • --------------------------------------------------
    --------------------------------------------------
    ------------------------------------------------?
  • Feelings uncertainly optimism confusion
    clarity sense of
    satisfaction or
  • (affective) frustration
    direction/ disappointment
  • doubt
    confidence
  • Thoughts vague-----------------------------------
    --?focused
  • (cognitive) ---------------------------
    --------------------?
  • increased interest
  • Actions seeking relevant information-----------
    -----------------?seeking pertinent information
  • (physical) exploring
    documenting

Professor Carol Kuhlthau
40
School Libraries Empowering Learning The
Evidence
  • Making concrete the links between library and
    learning
  • Making concrete the links between information
    access and provision and growth of knowledge
  • Practices that demonstrate tangible power of our
    contribution to schools learning goals
  • Local, immediate evidence local successes,
    local improvements

41
Evidence-BasedPractice (EBP)
42
Origins of EBP
  • New paradigm for professional service
  • 1990s Medicine and Health Care fields
  • Duty of Care, Informed Decision Making
    Optimal Outcomes
  • Commitment to making a tangible difference to the
    lives of people
  • Concept now strong in professional arenas such as
    education, social work, law

43
Evidence-Based PracticeTwo Key aspects
  • Conscientious, explicit and judicious use of
    current best research findings in making
    decisions about the performance of your role and
    understanding the learning needs of your students
  • Combining professional expertise, insight,
    experience and leadership with ability to
    collect, interpret, and integrate valid research
    evidence to ensure significant outcomes

44
Teacher-Librarians and Research
  • Librarians use of research is low (McClure
    Bishop, 1989, Turner, 2002).
  • Applied research that seeks to resolve
    operational concerns is most widely used.
  • Research is not consulted because it is perceived
    to inadequately address the real concerns of
    practice.
  • Research not presented in ways that foster
    understanding and application.
  • To busy to read research.

45
Teacher-Librarians and research Principals
study
  • 33 of principals said that the school librarian
    made them familiar with current research of
    library programs and student achievement
  • 35 of principals were made familiar with current
    research on library programs and reading
    development

46
Not Engaging in the Research of our Profession
  • Devalues both the profession as a thinking and
    informed profession
  • Cuts off the profession from advances in
    knowledge which shape sound practice
  • A profession without reflective practitioners
    willing to learn about the advances in research
    in the field is a blinkered profession, one that
    is disconnected from opportunities for
    constructing best practice the school library as
    central to the learning process.

47
Research in Teacher-Librarianship Prof. Ken
Haycock
  • Learn from our research and build on its precept
    in order to become the force for excellence that
    is within our grasp. We have evidence that we
    can make a difference through cooperative program
    planning and team teaching and flexible
    scheduling we have the principles for the
    effective initiation, implementation and
    institutionalization of change.
  • Now we need only do it.

48
The Research Challenge
  • Urgent need to analyse and synthesise the
    emerging body of information-learning research
    into meaningful generalizations with practical
    utility for the whole school
  • teacher-librarians, as the information literate
    experts (with information literacy competencies
    centring on the ability to analyse, organize,
    synthesise and evaluate information, and
    especially the information of their discipline)
    can surely play a central role here, bringing
    insights as the reflective practitioners to the
    research and its outcomes for practice.

49
Evidence-Based PracticeTwo Key aspects 2
  • Ensuring that your daily efforts put some focus
    on learning outcomes evaluation that gathers
    meaningful and systematic evidence on dimensions
    of teaching and learning that matter to the
    school and its support community
  • Evidences that clearly convey that learning
    outcomes of your school are continuing to improve

50
Outcomes-Based Education
  • Emphasis given to specifying learning outcomes,
    establishing measurable indicators of these
    outcomes, providing feedback on achievement of
    outcomes
  • Method of teaching that focuses on what students
    can do after they are actually taught(Lorenzen,
    1999)
  • Learner-centered, results-oriented system
    founded on belief that all individuals can learn
    (Towers, 1996)
  • Clear, observable demonstrations of student
    learning that occur after a significant sent of
    learning experiences (Spady Marshall, 1996)

51
Evidence-Based Practice
  • Gathering evidence in YOUR local school
  • You are able to provide convincing evidence that
    answers these questions
  • What differences do my school library and its
    learning initiatives make to
  • student learning outcomes?
  • What are the differences, the tangible learning
    outcomes and learning benefits of my school
    library?

52
EBP Issues and Concerns
  • Accountability Taking responsibility for the
    performance of students on achievement measures
    or other types of educational outcomes

53
ACCOUNTABILITY
  • Threat to professional authority and autonomy it
    questions authority and curtails professional
    freedom
  • Perception that roles and responsibilities are
    immune from accountability calls
  • Fear of exposing what isnt happening when
    matched against role and responsibility
    statements
  • Proving our worth Push to get rid of
    teacher-librarians by publicly showing that their
    involvement in collaborative curriculum
    initiatives is quite low

54
A professional guarantee of information as
effect
  • ACCOUNTABILITY
  • And Teacher-Librarians

55
I HAVE TO BE A RESEARCHER!!
  • EBP demands precision in identifying learning
    outcomes, establishing indicators, analysing and
    synthesising evidence to establish specific
    achievements in learning outcomes
  • intellectual skills required to undertake
    evidence-based practice are not formal
    quantitative and qualitative research
    methodologies and complex statistical analyses

56
Evidence-Based Practice is
  • Examining and identifying specific student
    learning goals and needs
  • Selecting appropriate learning outcomes
  • Identifying indicators of these outcomes
  • Establishing systematic approaches to locating
    and gathering evidence of achieving learning
    outcomes
  • Analysing and synthesising the evidence
  • Presenting and celebrating the learning outcomes

57
  • Evidence-based practice is about IDENTIFYING,
    LOCATING, SELECTING, ORGANISING, PRESENTING and
    ASSESSING INFORMATION. The information process
    that has guided the information literacy
    initiatives of school libraries and which has
    been the espoused educational platform for almost
    two decades is the very process of evidence-based
    practice.
  • Evidence-based practice is thus a call for
    teacher- librarians to be pedagogical exemplars
    of their rhetoric to practice what they preach.

58
EBP AND LIFELONG LEARNING
  • Our goal is lifelong learning, so how can we
    identify outcomes?
  • Lifelong learning is not some distant, elusive
    endpoint, but a process made up of multiple
    moments in time, from now till then
  • Providing learners with explicit feedback on how
    they are learning in their formative years is
    fundamental to effective teaching and learning

59
EBP DETRACTS FROM THE JOB
  • Concerns about limited staff, budget
  • Not able to get my job done as it is, without
    taking on board EBP
  • This begs TWO questions
  • What is my job?
  • What are the potential implications and
    outcomes of not engaging in EBP?
  • If there is no personal motivation to engage in
    in professional initiatives that enable the
    profession to construct its preferred future,
    then we need to consider why we are in it, and
    what we might be better of doing

60
Benefits of EBP
  • Articulates concrete links between librarys
    initiatives and learning outcomes
  • Shows how library can play a key role in shaping
    attitudes, values, and development of
    self-concept
  • Models information process to teaching colleagues
  • Basis for targeting time, energies and scarce
    resources
  • Helps you not to do things that do not work or
    that do not matter
  • Reflective, iterative process of informing
    instructional process it informs, not misleads
    or detracts from day-to-day practice
  • Job satisfaction and confidence in the central
    role that library plays in the school

61
Benefits of EBP
  • Provides evidence at local school level that the
    school library program makes a difference to
    student learning outcomes
  • Moves beyond anecdotal, guess work,
    hunches,advocacy, touting research findings not
    connected to local actions
  • Takes away the uncertainty surrounding role,
    value and position

62
Seeing is Believing
  • Many people, including educators, are suspicious
    of research and researchers. Research conducted
    closer to home is more likely to be considered
    and perhaps to be viewed as trustworthy
  • (Oberg, Access, 2001)

63
But the Principal Wont Listen!!!
64
But the Principal Wont Listen!!!
Then tell someone who cares
65
Evidence-basedpractice
What is the finger print of your library on
learning?
66
Collecting the Evidence
  • Identify specific learning outcomes
  • Establish indicators of outcomes
  • Gather evidence through assessment test,
    assignment, project scores checklists, rubrics,
    journals, portfolios library data, system wide
    test scores other data collection instruments
    used by schools
  • Systematic analysis and synthesis of evidence
  • Establish clear statements of outcomes
  • Inform school community and celebrate
  • Reflect on evidence to improve teaching
    approaches

67
LOCAL EVIDENCE
  • Not a cook book approach
  • Will vary from school to school
  • Acknowledges and integrates local processes, ways
    of doing
  • Not just assessment it is analyses and syntheses
    of assessment to create learning outcomes
    profiles, and articulate differences and impacts
  • Building strategies into collaborative
    initiatives that enable you to show the impact /
    outcomes

68
Alternatives to Evidence
  • Beating around the bush
  • Jumping to conclusions
  • Throwing my weight around
  • Dragging my heals
  • Pushing my luck
  • Making mountains out of molehills
  • Bending over backwards
  • Jumping on the bandwagon
  • Running around in circles
  • Mouthing on
  • Pulling out the stops
  • Adding fuel to the fire
  • Going over the edge
  • Picking up the pieces

69
My Vision for Librarians and School Libraries
  • Inquiry learning is the central philosophy and
    practice of school library
  • The school library an open invitation for
    mystery, intrigue, discovery - an invitation to
    dance the knowledge dance
  • Some focus on measuring student outcomes
  • Strong evidence that we make a difference to
    student learning outcomes

70
Leadership is action, not position
  • formational
  • transformational
  • informational
  • Instructional
  • evidential
  • constructing
  • connecting
  • empowering
  • envisioning
  • scaffolding
  • energizing
  • i

71
Björk New Worlds in Selmasongs album
  • If living is seeing
  • Im holding my breath
  • In wonder I wonder
  • What happens next?
  • A new world, a new day to see
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