1 / 30

Florida Power-Library Schools Program!

Florida Power-Library Schools Program!. Welcome!. Welcome and Introductions Ms. Miriam Needham FAME President. Program Rationale. Ms. Janeen Pelser. Collaboration with Colorado. Strong library media programs have a positive impact on student achievement in. Alaska Colorado Delaware

ferdinand
Télécharger la présentation

Florida Power-Library Schools Program!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Florida Power-Library Schools Program!

  2. Welcome! • Welcome and Introductions • Ms. Miriam Needham • FAME President

  3. Program Rationale • Ms. Janeen Pelser

  4. Collaboration with Colorado

  5. Strong library media programs have a positive impact on student achievement in • Alaska • Colorado • Delaware • Florida • Illinois • Indiana • Iowa • Massachusetts • Michigan • Minnesota • Missouri • New Jersey • New Mexico • North Carolina • Ohio • Oregon • Pennsylvania • Texas • Wisconsin

  6. Library Media Program Studies • Student Achievement Impact • Improved standardized test scores related to: • Higher circulation statistics of books and materials • Increased facility usage • Collaborative/integrated information skills program

  7. Program Rationale • Statewide program • Recognition for role of school library media programs and staff • Banner and pins • Highlighted on website • Mentoring school • Improved student achievement

  8. Program Awardees • Schools that • Support quality school library programs • Place focus on collaboration and student achievement • Agree to serve as visitation sites for teams of educators desiring to increase their own collaborative practices

  9. Program Awardees • Schools that • Meet the Outstanding criteria in the ExC3EL Evaluation Rubric • Promote high degree of administration/teacher/librarian collaboration • Provide flexible scheduling for students to utilize the library individually as needed

  10. Program Awardees • Schools that • Have library media specialist included in school administrative and staff functions • Provide computer networks that extend the library media program’s reach into classrooms and labs

  11. ExC3EL Evaluation Rubric

  12. EXC3EL – Evaluation Rubric • Why evaluate program? • Fulfill recommendations from Florida Study • To check your library media program against standards

  13. EXC3EL – Evaluation Rubric • Why evaluate program? • To measure your school’s program with other school library media programs • To plan for program improvement • To better meet the needs of your students in the goal to higher achievement

  14. EXC3EL – Evaluation Rubric • Based on continuum Outstanding Advancing Developing Entering

  15. EXC3EL – Evaluation Rubric • Development process • Rubric – Drafts (sent via email) • Focus Groups • District, school, university representatives • Supervisors and university educators suggestions • DOE Standards Commission recommendations

  16. EXC3EL – Evaluation Rubric • Rubric’s purpose • Program evaluation tool • Define statewide program standards • Instrument for sparking dialogue on library media program standards • Administrators • Teachers • Parents • Other Library Media Specialists • University educators

  17. Collaboration Strand Mr. Albert Pimienta

  18. Team Planning and Sharing Ms. Sharon Reynolds Ms. Jacqueline Rose

  19. Good School Libraries Boost Readers • Well-staffed, well-stocked libraries improve reading scores • Elementary reading scores by 9 percent • Middle school scores by 3 percent • High school scores by 22 percent • Orlando Sentinel, October 13, 2003

  20. Florida Power-Library Schools • Quality Indicators • Provides inviting and accessible facility • Provides a wide variety of print and electronic resources • Supports all facets of instructional program • Promotes critical thinking and active learning

  21. Florida Power-Library Schools Quality Indicators • Is well-staffed and well-funded • Provides a collaboratively planned instructional program • Is promoted throughout learning community

  22. Becoming a Florida Power-Library SchoolWhat YOU can do • As an administrator • Provide financial support • Promote flexible or open scheduling • Insist on continuous professional development • Actively promote library/classroom collaboration • Work with your library media specialist and faculty to reach Outstanding level of ExC3EL

  23. Becoming a Florida Power-Library SchoolWhat YOU can do • As a teacher • Communicate your curriculum resource needs to your library media specialist • Collaborate regularly with library media specialist to meet curriculum standards • Work with your library media specialist and faculty to reach Outstanding level of ExC3EL

  24. Becoming a Florida Power-Library SchoolWhat YOU can do • As a library media specialist • Communicate your curriculum resources to your faculty and take purchasing input from them • Collaborate regularly with the teachers in all subject areas • Work with stakeholders to reach Outstanding level of ExC3EL

  25. Think, Pair, Share • Based on what you have seen this afternoon, think about what specific things you will do next. • Share your plan with the others from your school. • Work together to write out the next steps of your action plan.

  26. “What a school thinks about its library is a measure of what it thinks about education.” ~ Harold Howe, former U.S. Commissioner of Education

  27. Application Overview • Application Elements and Timeline • Statement of Intent • October 15, 2008 – to District LM Supervisor • November 1, 2008 – to FASM president • Application Packet • April 30, 2008 – to FASM president • Regional Observer Visitations • November 2008 – May 2009

  28. Application Overview • Application Packet • Element 2 • Application Coversheet • Element 3 • Copy of Teaching Certificate • Element 4 • Narrative Statement • Element 5 • ExC3EL Rubric Scoring Sheet

  29. Application Overview • Application Packet • Element 6 • Survey Results • 70% School-base faculty • 10 Parents • 25 Students • 1 Administrator • Element 7 • DVD Documenting Outstanding library media components (5 minutes)

  30. Questions and Answers Ms. Nancy Case

More Related