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Overview of Elementary Media Center Collection Development Stacy Darwin LSIS 5505-OL1 Dr. Cogdell October 22, 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Overview of Elementary Media Center Collection Development Stacy Darwin LSIS 5505-OL1 Dr. Cogdell October 22, 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Overview of Elementary Media Center Collection Development Stacy Darwin LSIS 5505-OL1 Dr. Cogdell October 22, 2010

2 “WITH A BROAD VIEW OF THE CURRICULUM, EXTENSIVE KNOWLEDGE OF BOTH TRADITIONAL AND ELECTRONIC RESOURCES, AND COMMITMENT TO SERVE THE FULL RANGE OF STUDENTS AND OTHER USERS OF THE LEARNING COMMUNITY, THE SCHOOL LIBRARY MEDIA SPECIALIST [COORDINATOR] CAN DIRECT THE DESIGN AND MAINTENANCE OF CURRENT, COMPREHENSIVE, HIGH-QUALITY COLLECTIONS” --Information Power, 1998, 90

3 Know Your Current Collection The first step to collection development is taking inventory and assessing what is present and how it is or is not meeting the needs of the school.  Is the collection responsive to changes in the school’s program?  Is the collection integral to curricular and instructional needs?  Does the collection meet the users’ needs?  Does the collection provide access to materials from outside the school?  Does the collection include formats that users prefer?  Does the collection hinder or facilitate the media and technology program? -- IMPACT: Guidelines for Media and Technology Programs January 2008

4 Know Your Students and School Community  What level are your readers?  What interests your students?  What do they do for entertainment?  What is their ethnic makeup?  What is their socioeconomic makeup?  What languages are spoken in the homes of your students?  Do you have students with special needs? Collecting information like this (via a survey/observations) is valuable in making future purchasing plans for the media center. --Library 101: A Handbook for the School Library Media Specialist

5 Know Your Curriculum  Become familiar with the MISSION, GOALS, and OBJECTIVES of the school.  Be familiar with state standards.  Know the benchmarks that teachers must meet.  Be aware of teachers’ passions and special interests in their lesson planning to support these goals.  Survey teachers for their individual and grade level needs.  Find both fiction and nonfiction resources to support curriculum.  Understand how technology integration supports curriculum.  Collaborate and plan with teachers. --Library 101: A Handbook for the School Library Media Specialist

6 Know Your Budget  It is helpful to have past budget numbers.  It is also important to know the current budget amount for the year and the projected amount for upcoming years if available.  Be aware of fundraiser funding (book fairs, PTA) that are available to the media center.  Inquire about possible shared funds in the school (perhaps with technology) that might be available in the near future.  Plan for the big picture keeping in mind expensive book sets, online resource subscriptions, audiovisual equipment, and other technology maintenance and upgrades. --Administering the School Library Media Center

7 Selection Considerations  Does the material have literary merit?  Will it add value to the collection?  Is it well made (sturdy binding, quality paper)?  Is the reading level age appropriate?  Does it treat the topic in a fair and balanced manner?  Does the material exhibit all viewpoints?  Is it in the best format for your population (paper, electronic, etc.)? From: Library 101: A Handbook for the School Library Media Specialist

8 Weeding CRITERIA FOR WEEDING/SELECTING SCHOOL LIBRARY MEDIA RESOURCES  Relevance to the curriculum  Copyright date  Condition of the material  Date last circulated  Enduring value (classics, rare books, etc.)  Reading/interest level  Authoritative writing  Bias/stereotypes  Recommended in current selection tool and/or other review sources  Local interest/community needs (Lowe, 2001) From IMPACT: Guidelines for Media and Technology Programs January 2008

9 IMPACT Collection Guidelines The following recommendations are intended to guide the development of high quality school library media collections in North Carolina schools. The average copyright age of the collection represents both fiction and non-fiction. Certain areas of the non-fiction collection should have even more recent average copyright dates than indicated below, such as Reference and Science.  OUTSTANDING GUIDELINES  Minimum Quantity Standard - 20 Books Per Student  Minimum Quality Standard - 10 Years from Current Calendar Date  DEVELOPING GUIDELINES  Minimum Quantity Standard - 15 Books Per Student  Minimum Quality Standard - 12 Years from Current Calendar Date  MINIMUM GUIDELINES  Minimum Quantity Standard - 10 Books Per Student  Minimum Quality Standard - 16 Years from Current Calendar Date  BELOW MINIMUM  Less than 10 Books Per Student  Average copyright greater than 16 years from Current Calendar Date See also IMPACT Guidelines for North Carolina Media and Technology Programs – Rubrics: http://www.ncwiseowl.org/Impact/Research&eval.htm#mediaandtech

10 Materials Selection Policy A written selection policy supports and outlines the collection development process by providing approaches for:  Developing a collection that supports teaching and learning.  Maintaining the collection.  Dealing with challenges to materials in the total instructional program. From IMPACT: Guidelines for Media and Technology Programs January 2008 p.220

11 Materials Selection Policy Selection Criteria  authority  format  potential use  price  scope  reputation of publisher  subject interest  readability  timeliness  treatment of subject From IMPACT: Guidelines for Media and Technology Programs January 2008 p.220 Photo by Stacy Darwin

12 “ALTHOUGH ANSWERS TO STUDENTS’ QUESTIONS WERE TRADITIONALLY FOUND IN THE COLLECTION HOUSED IN THE SCHOOL MEDIA CENTER, THE ANSWERS TODAY MAY OR MAY NOT BE FOUND WITHIN THE ITEMS ON THE SHELVES OF THE MEDIA CENTER. THE COLLECTION GOES BEYOND THE WALLS OF THE IMMEDIATE MEDIA CENTER AND CONTAINS MANY SOURCES THAT CAN BE ACCESSED THROUGH ONLINE SERVICES. THUS, THE MEDIA CENTER IS CONNECTED ELECTRONICALLY TO A FAR-REACHING WORLD OF SOURCES AND INFORMATION” (Van Orden and Bishop, 2001, 6) from IMPACT

13 References  Morris, B. (2004). Administering the school library media center. Westport, Connecticut: Libraries Unlimited.  North Carolina State Dept. of Public Instruction. (2009). IMPACT: Guidelines for Media and Technology Programs. Raleigh: Instructional Technologies Div.  Stephens, C. F. (2007). Library 101: A handbook for the school library media specialist. Westport, Connecticut: Libraries Unlimited.


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