“We hope that libraries will always exist as places for learners to find information, resources, services, and instruction. But formats, technologies, learning needs, and our schools are evolving. And so are students themselves. Our entire information and communication landscapes have shifted—and this shift will only continue.” Valenza & Johnston (October 2009) School Library Journal.
Introduction to the school library
School library role
School library and the school community
Library information landscape
School library and National Library
School library and the Public Library
School library and specialist libraries
School library and NZ curriculum
Key competencies
Values
The school library is central to learning and plays a key role as a place for encouraging innovation, curiosity, and problem solving. Your library is a catalyst for literacy and reading and for teaching and scaffolding inquiry learning. School libraries make a difference to students’ understanding and achievement and provide support for teaching and learning throughout the school. The school library is an important part of the school community and reflects and welcomes this community.
Your school library plays a key role in the cultural and social life of the school. It can be a central point for engagement with all kinds of reading, cultural activities, access to information, knowledge building, deep thinking and lively discussion.
The vision, principles and management of your school library can be recorded in your school library management statement. This document reflects your school’s vision for learning and underpins your library’s services, and organisation.
Learning and teaching. The school library provides a model for inquiry learning and building knowledge and confidence in seeking and processing information. The school library is pivotal to developing 21st century learners.
There is a large and growing body of evidence showing the impact of the school library on student achievement.
It is a fundamental resource for supporting students’ learning, and a key support for teaching staff. Your school library reflects and encourages collaborative learning and sharing of ideas.
Literacy and reading. School libraries are places for learning and thinking, and play a key role in supporting and developing enjoyment of reading and multiple literacies.
A sanctuary, a mine of treasure, a house of maps to secret lives in secret worlds… - the library became my other home.” Joy Cowley.
There is a Pedagogy of the Library which informs and guides the services of New Zealand School Libraries. This document based on current and future focused thinking reflects libraries that engage and support all learners.
Your school library can also play a key role in building a learning community. A school library reflects students’ identities through ensuring that the languages and cultures of the school community are an integral part of the library’s collection, services, and environment.
The library is a place for inclusiveness. See The School Library and learning in the information landscape, p.13 where the whole second paragraph under role and learning in the information landscape begins: “An important quality of the school library is its potential for inclusiveness.
The International Federation of Library Association’s (IFLA) Manifesto states:
“The school library provides information and ideas that are fundamental to functioning successfully in today’s information and knowledge-based society. The school library equips students with lifelong learning skills and develops the imagination, enabling them to live as responsible citizens” (2008).
The school library is a learning environment for the whole school community. You can explore the principles of the School Library as a Learning Commons by using these links.
School libraries are unique but they are also part of a much wider information landscape. The school library is an ideal place to learn about the way that libraries work and how to use libraries. For some students their school library will be their first experience of a library.
The school library can connect with other libraries, including public libraries, for a diverse range of information resources.
Jim Rettig President, ALA, (American Library Association) 2008-09, describes libraries as “ the only providers of universally accessible lifelong learning opportunities.”
National Library Curriculum Services centres in Auckland, Christchurch and Palmerston North provide a wide range of resources, covering all curriculum areas for primary and secondary schools.
High interest topics are resourced through curriculum–linked web-based resources and tools.
Te Puna Matauranga o Aotearoa, The National Library of New Zealand website provides a rich selection of digital resources.
Index New Zealand (INNZ) provides access to abstracts and descriptions for approximately 1,000 journals, magazines and newspapers and includes general interest material, social research, the environment, science, agriculture, current affairs, the arts and humanities. The National Library Collection Delivery will provide full text articles as a PDF file emailed to your school.
Public Libraries are for the whole community. Many school libraries work closely with their local public libraries and encourage their students to become library users both within and beyond the school library environment.
Regular visits to the public library as part of your school’s learning programme will enrich students’ reading and build their confidence as library users.
Successful collaboration with your local public library can also have benefits for whole families with school students encouraging their parents and siblings to go to the public library after school and during the weekends and school holidays.
Public library holiday reading programmes have been shown to reduce the ‘summer reading slump’ and in many cases increase literacy levels and a love of reading.
Secondary schools in particular can alert their students to digital and sometimes print resources available through specialist libraries.
For example senior secondary history students may access Archives New Zealand and the Alexander Turnbull Library. For further details on access to primary and secondary information sources, see Sources & Resources
New Zealand government organisations also have libraries where information may be accessed to support student research.
The school library is an integral part of teaching and learning in the school and therefore scaffolds and provides access to resources which support the New Zealand curriculum.
The school library embodies the principles of the New Zealand curriculum promoting cultural diversity and inclusion, reflecting Treaty of Waitangi principles, and developing all learners in a quality and coherent learning environment.
The library plays a key role in enabling community engagement, and promotes outward thinking and future focused thought and discussion.
School libraries incorporate and reflect the key competencies and values of the New Zealand curriculum, and develop “ confident, connected, actively involved life-long learners.
See also the New Zealand Curriculum and Inquiry Learning.
Your school library can promote and model each of the key competencies. You can critically evaluate your library through looking at how the key competencies are represented and modelled.
Thinking
Using language, symbols and texts
Managing self
Relating to others
Participating and contributing
Excellence
Innovation, inquiry & curiosity
Equity
Community & participation
Ecological sustainability
Integrity
Respect
“Values are the ideals that give significance to our lives; that are reflected through the priorities that we choose, and that we act on consistently and repeatedly.” Julia Atkin (PDF).
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