Thursday, August 7, 2014

Reflections on Library Service to Teachers


Summer has just flown by! School starts here at the end of this month, so I thought it was a great time to reflect on library service to teachers. In my experience, successful interactions with teachers (including school librarians) depends upon communication, simplification, flexibility, and collaboration. Here are some practical suggestions for each of these categories.

Communication

  • Contact individual teachers or your school’s library media specialist to find out about upcoming events, assignments, and research projects.
  • Offer to present about library services and register teachers for library cards at a staff development day. 
  • Provide an introductory packet to be distributed to teachers when they register for library cards.
  • Add a page for educators to your library’s website with information about what you can offer them and links to resources they will find most useful.

Simplification- Saving the Time of the Reader Teacher

  • Make it a policy that you will pull books from the shelves for teachers who give you advance notice of their needs.
  • Resolve scheduling problems by setting aside specific time slots that are available only for class visits.
  • Join teachers in the stacks to help them look for materials. (Don’t assume it’s enough just to point them in the right direction!)
  • Develop a streamlined process for issuing library cards to entire classes at once.

Flexibility

  • Provide special library cards for educators with extended loan periods and increased borrowing limits.
  • Allow for the possibility that students might lose or damage books and try to give teachers the benefit of the doubt when charging them for lost or damaged items. (My last library allowed educators to lose up to 10 items without charging which I think was wonderfully generous.)
  • Be willing to host class visits in your library, or to visit classes off-site depending on the needs of a particular teacher. (In my experience, preschools especially appreciate it when you can come to them during the winter months. It takes forever to get all those little bodies into coats and mittens!)
  • Consider allowing teachers to have several “dummy” cards to assist with in-class database instruction. (I was asked to do this once, and my manager forbade me from going through with it, which created some ill will with the requesting teacher.)

Collaboration

  • Work together to teach research skills in special instructional sessions (with the school librarian or an individual teacher).
  • Invite teachers and school librarians to evening and weekend events at the library, and encourage them to invite their students as well.
  • Partner with a teacher, school librarian, or even a whole school to host a literacy festival or other large-scale event. 
  • Be a presence at school events, such as book fairs, career days, sports events, fairs, and anything else where local businesses are invited to participate. 
How do you serve teachers at your library? Share your success stories in comments.

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Baby Story Time Planning Sheet


One of the most common Google searches that leads readers to my blog is a search for story time planning sheets. Up until now, I haven't had any to share, but after highlighting my best materials for baby story time over the past month, I thought it might be helpful to also provide an outline for planning a story time for babies.

The printable document linked below includes spaces to fill in each of the following: 

  • Hello Song
  • Opening Rhyme
  • Book #1
  • Song with Prop
  • Bounce/Tickle
  • Body Parts Song
  • Book #2
  • Song
  • Bounce/Tickle
  • Nursery Rhyme(s)
  • Body Parts Song
  • Closing Rhyme
  • Goodbye Song
  • Extra Songs/Rhymes

Download Baby Story Time Planning Sheet 

Browse outlines for all of my baby story times here. Read my lists of the best materials and activities for baby story time here.

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

12 Fantasy Series for Kids Who Aren't Ready for Harry Potter


It can be hard for a child to wait until he or she is old enough to read the Harry Potter series (or even just to read the later books.) Still, the stories are best enjoyed when a child is old enough to appreciate the subject matter. Luckily, there are plenty of wonderful fantasy series out there which focus on many of the same themes as the Harry Potter books, but which appeal to a slightly younger audience. Twelve of them are listed below and sorted into four main categories: Witches & Wizards, Supernatural Schools, Fantastical Creatures, and Magical Adventures.

Witches & Wizards

  • The Familiars
    by Adam Jay Epstein and Andrew Jacobson

    (Book 1: The Familiars)
    A supposedly ordinary alley cat is mistaken for a magical creature when a young wizard-in-training chooses him as his familiar.
  • The Worst Witch
    by Jill Murphy

    (Book 1: The Worst Witch)
    Mildred Hubble does her best to get by in witch school despite her constant mistakes and disasters.
  • Heidi Heckelbeck
    by Wanda Coven

    (Book 1: Heidi Heckelbeck Has a Secret)
    Heidi Heckelbeck is a lot like other kids her age - except that she is secretly a witch!

 

Supernatural Schools

  • Dragon Slayers' Academy
    by Kate McMullan

    (Book 1: The New Kid at School)
    Eleven-year-old medieval peasant Wiglaf of Pinwick enters school at the Dragonslayers Academy to become a hero, as foretold by a traveling minstrel.
  • Scary School
    by Derek the Ghost

    (Book 1: Scary School)
    Though Derek becomes a ghost after he is killed in a science experiment at Scary School, he continues to keep notes on everything strange or spooky that happens there, including events surrounding the arrival of Charles Nukid.
  • Vampire School
    by Peter Bently

    (Book 1: Casketball Capers)
    At St. Orlok's kids like Lee learn all the skills required to become successful vampires.

Fantastical Creatures

Magical Adventures

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