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How to Write an LSTA Grant Applications for 2010 April 30, 2009 Pennsylvania School Librarians Association Presented by Debra E. Kachel, Mansfield University and Nancy L. Henry, Ephrata Middle School
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Workshop Objectives K-12 grant categories – 1. Info. Literacy/Laptops 2. Collection Development 3. Dual Enrollment Outcomes and Evaluation Practical Advice Q & A time with PDE officials
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Library Services & Technology Act Federal funds administered by Commonwealth Libraries Available for all types of libraries Competitive; one-year Specific criteria outlined for each type of grant & library Due Sept. 11, 2009 Awarded in Feb. 2010
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Pennsylvania LSTA Funding History K-12 Grants
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Two Major LSTA Grants That Apply to School Libraries Information Literacy – $30,000 for a single library to purchase a laptop lab to integrate info literacy with classroom instruction Collection Development – $5,000 per library in a district for print materials to support a PA Academic Standard area
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Eligibility for All K-12 LSTA Grants Any type of school library—public, private, parochial Must have an existing library and a certified library media specialist Must have a line item budget for the library collection Must participate in the ACCESS PA database project & POWER Library Must comply with CIPA/ Acceptable Internet Use Policy Must collaborate with teachers to integrate information literacy skills & instruction Library media specialist must be involved in the preparation of the grant Grant money may not supplant local funds
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Information Literacy Grant aka “The Laptop Lab Grant” Wireless laptop lab Wireless laptop lab Approx. 25 laptops, cart, LCD projector, & supplies up to $30,000 Purpose – To teach information literacy skills; part of the library program; under the direction of a school library media specialist New: Address AASL’s Standards for the 21 st Century Learner Instructional Role of the Librarian and Collaboration with Teachers 25 pts
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Wireless Laptop Lab Application Applies to one school in a district; may reapply after 5 yrs. Only one school per district may apply In collaboration with teachers Info literacy skills integrated with classroom content Address the AASL Standards for the 21 st Century Learner Documentation & student outcomes
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Laptop Application must include: Background info Budget, books per student, collection age Letter signed by Superintendent, Principal & Librarian Staffing & Hours FTE at that school If 4 days out of a 6-day cycle=.67 Or, total hours worked in that school in a week divided by the hours in the workweek Ratio of LMS: students (.5 LMS to 500 equals 1:1,000 ratio or.5:500)
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Laptop Application must include: Collaboration LMS & teacher must be present during activities Planning with teachers; % involved ACCESS PA & POWER Library Public Library cooperation Planned Activities Tie to info literacy & academic standards Evaluation plan Includes student outcomes Documents laptop use
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Kachel’s Examples for the Laptop Grant Abstract Activities Collaboration/ Integrated Units Charts Evaluation Plan Refer to Handout-”Tips for Writing LSTA Grants”
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Evaluation Criteria – Info Literacy Grant 1. Abstract = 3 pts. 2. State aid = 14 pts. 3. Financial support = 14 pts. 4. Hours = 5 pts. 5. Collection age = 5 pts. 6. Staffing = 14 pts. 7. Extended hours = 5 pts. 8. Instructional role = 20 pts. 9. Cooperation with public library = 5 pts. 10. Implementation & Activities = 10 pts. 11. Evaluation = 10 pts. (Refer to pages 15-17 of the grant guidelines) Based on 100 points
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Collection Development Grant Print Materials books, magazines, books-on -tape, some AV to support an identified PA Academic Standard $5,000 per school library Funds may not be spent for: Hardware or software AV equipment and projectors Classroom sets of books or textbooks
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Collection Development Application May apply to multiple schools in a district Each library must submit a separate grant application Collection development plan based on improving resources for one chosen PA Academic Standard
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Collection Development Plan 1. Identify an PA Academic Standard 2. Analyze collection fitting that Standard (age, size, strengths, weaknesses) 3. Predict resources and types needed Environment & Ecology, Health & Safety, Science & Technology Will show a sample later Teacher and/or student survey For Example:
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Collection Development Plan 4. Involve teachers in selection 5. Plan to evaluate effectiveness of new resources 6. Publicity plan Plan book review day on a staff development time Survey & circulation data Write press releases for local media and school publications For Example:
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Kachel’s Collection Analysis Primer A methodology that can be used to: Collect data about your library’s print collection Decide which PA Academic Standard to address Include teachers in the selection process Decide what resources will be added to improve teaching & learning within the selected Standard Evaluate the process and use of new resources Refer to Handout
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Evaluation Criteria – Collection Development Grant Abstract = 3 pts. State aid = 14 pts. Financial support = 14 pts. Collection age = 5 pts. Library staffing = 14 pts. Hours = 5 pts. Instructional role – (1) info literacy skills integrated with curriculum, (2) documentation of collaboration with teachers, & (3) Access PA & POWER databases taught = 20 pts. Cooperation with public library = 5 pts. Collection Development Plan = 10 pts. Student outcomes/Evaluation plan = 10 pts. (Refer to pages 15-18 of LSTA grant guidelines) Based on 100 points
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Additional Requirement for the Collection Development Grant When funded, the school district must supply a collection development policy that: Includes a weeding policy Includes procedures for handling a challenge Is officially approved by the Board or other similar agent
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Dual Enrollment Application Third category in which school libraries can participate A collaborative grant in which academic and high school librarians work together to improve library services to students participating in the dual enrollment program. Lead applicant must be the college library.
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Electronic Filing of Grant Applications http://egrants.ed.state.pa.us Click on Library Development Create a login and password Refer to “How to Apply” section of each grant application packet. Save frequently as there is a time-out period Help at 717-783-6686 or raegrantshelp@state.pa.us
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Issues with Electronic Filing No spell check No special formatting Fill-in blocks or limited text (no. of characters stated) No multiple copies needed 2 attachments allowed + Superintendent’s letter Letters must be sent US Mail Save-Save-Save while working Refer to e_Grants Handout
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Submitting the Grant LSTA Website
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Practical Advice on Grantwriting Begin with concise description (abstract) Explain your needs Show documentation of collaboration/ integration Discuss Info Literacy Curriculum Document use & instruction of ACCESS PA & POWER Library databases Goals must be student-centered; project must show student benefit
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Questions &Answers
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