Messages from SLMS
SLMS Testimony
School Library Systems of New York CONNECT:
- Students and teachers to shared, quality information
resources
- Students and teachers to online databases and encyclopedias
- School Library Media Specialists across a region for
professional awareness and development
- School library media specialists with teachers optimizing
collaborative curriculum design
- Regional school libraries with each other and public,
academic and special libraries
- Resource based learning activities with ACCESS beyond
the single school library
- New York State's learners with information literacy
standards
- Learners with SUCCESS
Four fundamental BIG IDEAS about SLS:
Educational reform and technological innovation CONNECT
through the services of School Library Systems.
Equity and success for every child are enhanced every
day by access to information resources made possible by School Library
Systems.
New York's Learning Standards embrace resource based learning,
information problem solving, real world connections, life long learning
tied to accessing, using, synthesizing, evaluating and communicating information.
Public funding expended for SLS services is optimized
through:
- Sharing of regional and statewide resources
- Cost effective access to databases and technology
- Training and support that enhances curriculum and instruction
- Unique connections to inaccessible resources.
The educational standards reform in New York State has
redirected teaching and learning to encompass active learning environments,
relevance, connections beyond the real world, technology, and authentic
process and products. The new learning standards embrace a framework for
student achievement emphasizing information literacy and technology. The
reason: engaging students in learning activities based on information
problem solving correlates with enhanced student achievement. Eight recent
studies in states across the country have demonstrated the degree to which
information literacy and problem solving, based in the school library,
is the number one indicator of student success.
INVESTING in School Library Systems is investing in learners,
achievement, real world connections, thinking and ACCESS for all.
ACCESS to quality information resources and technology
is the foundation for this success, in conjunction with the instructional
role of professional school library media specialists. The role of the
school library media specialist includes teaching students to select and
access the BEST information tools for any information problem. Evaluating
and synthesizing the best resources results in quality products and student
achievement.
Two primary tools for access to information in the school
library are also supported by School Library Systems:
- Databases and other online information resources
- Online public access catalogs which connect students
to local and shared regional library holdings
The School Library System -
- Expands exponentially the opportunities of learners
and teachers to access quality resources
- Maximizes public funds by facilitating sharing,
a premise underlying the creation of library systems
- Supports collaboration that leads to student success.
PLUS - THE LEARNING CONNECTION!
Learners build understanding from inflexible knowledge
by seeing connections, by relating, questioning, exploring, expanding,
synthesizing, evaluating, sharing and producing. The stage for so much
of this passage is the school library. The tools for so much of this passage
are quality information resources. Information Power, Building Partnerships
for Learning by ALA and AECT emphasizes three core principles for increasing
student success in the greater learning community:
- constructivist method in which the student posits questions
and finds individual meaning,
- disciplined inquiry in which the learner solves problems
with information resources of the highest quality,
- connections beyond the classroom where real world links,
processes, authentic products and the greater learning community are
an integral framework for learning.
Simply engaging learners in the information problem solving process, in
a safe and respectful environment, results in greater achievement. Information
literacy results in enhanced ability to learn, to read, to think. Learners
will achieve at a higher level in reading, local assessments and state
assessments in an information rich environment, with a professional media
specialist who teaches and collaborates, with technological resources
that support instruction."