Category Archives: School Media Specialist

How School Librarians Help Literacy

This article from Education Week Teacher delves into several ways school librarians can collaborate with teachers to enhance student learning. It also tackles the question of classroom libraries replacing school libraries, and the problems this can create.

The article also links to this research article explaining how having a school librarian leads to higher-achieving students and a better school community. It’s impressive research and really reinforces just how much school librarians have a positive impact on their schools.

From the article “Why School Librarians Are the Literacy Leaders We Need”:

“Making Connections: Our school librarian helped students connect to reading and digital literacies in a variety of ways.  She found out what students were learning about in history and science class and found interesting reading materials to connect to those topics. She helped us bring local authors to visit to talk to students about their work. She helped students and teachers access periodicals and other helpful programs online.

There is a cumulative benefit to students and teachers, both academic and cultural, when a school librarian becomes a literacy leader.”

Read the rest of the article here!

Report from Youth Services Librarian Meetup!

This is a Guest Post from Bethany Kauffman, CMLE Board Member and Media Specialist at Rogers High School

Greater Together: Expanding Partnerships

Librarians from across the center of MN gathered in Chaska for a rare opportunity for school librarians and public librarians to meet, talk to each other about library services and learn from each other about collaborations happening between libraries and community organizations. Librarians from Hennepin, Anoka, Scott and Dakota Counties discussed how they are improving services to patrons by working together and gave specific examples of the benefits youth in MN are receiving, as a result.

We met on Tuesday, April 16 at the lovely Minnesota Landscape Arboretum and started our day with spectacular goodies provided by North Lights Library Network and Central Minnesota Libraries Exchange.  We had updates on state library services, including information about the new eLibrary portal that will be replacing ELM. After the panel discussions, there was time for one-on-one networking.

Several of us took time to visit the absolutely phenomenal Andersen Horticultural Library which contains nearly 20,000 books specific to horticulture, botany, landscape architecture and local natural history.  I had no idea that the library was home to a commissioned set of furnishings designed and built by the famous architect and woodworker George Nakashima. Simply breathtaking.

If you didn’t get to attend this Meet-up, watch for one in the future.  As a school librarian, I had a wonderful time and would definitely attend again.

Report from Teen Lit Con 2019!

This is a guest post from Stephanie Schlangen, Instructional Coach – Technology Integration at Sauk Rapids – Rice High School. Need a Mini Grant to purchase materials or try an interesting new program at your library? Apply today!

Thanks to CMLE, Sauk Rapids-Rice, Upsala, and Rogers students were able to attend the Teen Lit Conference, an annual event held at Henry Sibley High School.  At this fantastic event, we were able to meet several different authors writing for young adults.  All of the authors talked about how they worked to bring new perspectives to the forefront of young adult literature. 

Lamar Giles talked about his #weneeddiversebooks movement.  A pivotal point for him was when he was a young adult and went to his local librarian to ask her for a book featuring an African-American protagonist, and the only books she could lead him to were Roots and the Autobiography of Malcolm X.  When he showed the following image, it became very clear that this sort of experience is common for many.

Tomi Adeyemi, the author of Children of Blood and Bone, also emphasized the need for literature to feature characters with diverse perspectives.  She said one of her main goals was to make people fall in love with a character that was different than them. 

Becky Albertalli, author of Simon vs. The Homosapien Agenda, and What If It’s Us? spoke about how she drew from life experience in her writing, including difficult situations with her father and with current political events.

Likewise, author of Hey Kiddo, Jarrett Krosoczka, in his graphic memoir, also drew from painful memories in order to write this book.  He likened the writing experience to Harry Potter writing with the blood quill, where it hurt a lot to go through the memories of growing up with a mother addicted to heroin. However, after he finished he felt a great burden was lifted off of him.  It was also very interesting to hear him speak about how the choices he made with the illustrations in his book were intentional down to the specific colors he chose, and the fact that he made them with ink rather than digitally.

All of these authors offered new perspectives to our students and reinforced the idea that, in a library, we need to provide windows and mirrors for all of our students.

Mary Berning CMLE Mini Grant Report: Author Visit

Tracy Nelson Maurer sharing her presentation with students.

This is a guest post from Mary Berning, District Library Media Specialist at Chisago Lakes Area Schools. Need a Mini Grant to purchase materials or try an interesting new program at your library? Apply today!

Who loves author visits? Students at Taylors Falls Elementary, that’s who!

Students participating in activities.

As part of this year’s I Love to Read month festivities, students met author Tracy Nelson Maurer. Tracy is the author of over a hundred books including Noah Webster’s Fighting Words and John Deere, That’s Who!, which won the 2018 American Farm Bureau Foundation for Agriculture Book of the Year. Tracy presented three sessions. She shared props and photos with the students; she talked about being a writer. Kindergarten and first graders enjoyed listening to her read and sang a song about John Deere with her. Second through fifth graders learned how she became a writer, how she conducts research, and about the revision process. At the end of each session, Tracy gave students time to ask questions.

It was a fun and valuable learning experience for all! Thanks to CMLE for funding part of Tracy’s visit.

Watch this very fast, very cute video of students singing along:

CMLE Mini Grant Report: Jenny McNew Digital Citizenship Books

This is a guest post from Jenny McNew, Media Specialist at Talahi Community School. Need a Mini Grant to purchase materials or try an interesting new program at your library? Apply today! 

As technology use begins at a younger age and the opportunity for kids to leave a permanent digital footprint while using technology increases, teaching students about digital citizenship is more important than it has ever been.  

As a Media Specialist, one of my many jobs is to help kids learn about digital citizenship. This important skill was difficult to teach in context as the exposure to some situations may not have presented itself to kids yet.

Enter the picture book.

Picture books present digital citizenship skills in an engaging manner. These skills cannot be taught in a single class and it is important to begin to teach students how to behave in a digital community since they spend much of their time online. This skill is as important as teaching students to behave face to face.

Through a CMLE mini grant I was able to purchase some wonderful picture books to help us teach the concepts of digital citizenship. Whether we were reading about spending time on technology in books like, Tek: The Modern Cave Boy by Patrick McDonnell, or Once Upon a Time Online: Happily Ever After is Only a Click Away by David Bedford, When Charlie McButton Lost Power by Suzanne Collins, or Unplugged by Steve Anthony, these books reinforce that kids need to find balance when using technology. Getting away from it is as powerful as using it.

Some of the books likeThe Technology Tail: A Digital Footprint Story by Julia Cook and The Internet is Like a Puddle by Shona Innes remind us how important it is to remember Internet safety and not share our personal information and how wrong cyberbullying is. These books brought much buzz and excitement to students as we shared and discussed this information.