On March 25th, 2019, I met with Traci Morrison, the librarian
at Herbert A. Wood Elementary
School, to discuss the AASL National School
Library Standards for Learners, School Librarians, and School Libraries Shared Foundations. Mrs.
Morrison chose to discuss the Shared Foundation I., Inquire. I asked Mrs. Morrison questions that
were outlined in our instructions from SLIS 794. The Competencies addressed by
Mrs. Morrison were based on the following statements:
A.
Think - School librarians teach learners
to display curiosity and initiative when seeking information.
B.
Create - School librarians promote new
knowledge generation.
C.
Share - School librarians guide learners
to maintain focus throughout the inquiry process.
D. Grow
- School librarians implement and model an inquiry-based process.
When
I asked Mrs. Morrison what some examples were of how she implemented the Shared
Foundation Engage, she gave me an extended example of a research unit that she
teaches with one of the teachers at her school. In this unit, students are supposed to select an animal that
they are personally interested in and the do research about that animal. Mrs. Morrison said that she models the
selection process by first talking to the students about an experience she had
where she and her husband got to do a nighttime sea turtle watch and how she
was able to help make sure that newly hatched turtles made it to the
water. She said that she talks to
the students about how she is intensely interested in sea turtles and therefore
would choose to do research on them because of this interest and her
experience. With this example, she
teaches students to inquire and display curiosity about topics that interest
them personally.
As
far as the resources that Mrs. Morrison said she uses to engage her students,
she said she pretty much uses Discus.
She said, “It’s safe and free.”
She also said that Epic eBooks is another source she uses. Currency was one of her main concerns
because she said her print collection was a bit dated.
As
far as collaboration goes, Mrs. Morrison said that she always asks teachers a
week ahead of their visit what they will be studying during the next week. (She has a fixed schedule and sees all of
her students weekly.) She said that she tries to fit her lessons into what the
classroom teachers are teaching, but they mostly rely on her to pull books that
she thinks the students may find interesting and that go along with some
classroom topic.
When
asked what some of the challenges are that she faces when trying to address
engagement with knowledge and creating a culture of inquiry she said with
emphasis, “Time!” She said it was
not just her. Teachers, too, have
little time to plan with each other or with her to create collaborative
lessons. Mrs. Morrison said that
there used to be a planning period where related arts teachers and she could
get together and discover what lessons teachers were teaching so that they could
support the curriculum. However, that
planning had been taken away.
Of
all the librarians that I observed and interviewed during my internship, Mrs.
Morrison was the one that spoke most clearly about the AASL standards in
general. She actually had her own
copy of the book and referred to it when we met. The other librarians knew that the standards exist and had a
general idea about the domains and competencies but were not that well versed
in discussing them. Mrs. Morrison
is part of a group of Lexington Two librarians that meets to do professional
development about maintaining library standards. (My group of librarians, in my district, mostly meets about
technology and maintaining equipment.)
It was a pleasure to be allowed to interview and visit Mrs. Morrison as
she provided a different, more academic, perspective to librarianship, maybe
more by-the-book, than the others.
Not better, just different.