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Your voice needed: Participate in building our guidelines
March 10, 2008


We need your quotes, your call outs, your soundbites!

Please help the AASL Guidelines Taskforce by adding your own voices from the field. Our new document (the one planned to follow Information Power and incorporate our new standards) will include quotes from library practitioners.  We are looking for both practical and visionary ideas on a wide range of topics from instruction to collaboration to technology to management and beyond.

What do you want our field, and the rest of the universe to know about our work, our mission?

Here's a little description of what we are looking for from Cassie Mayer, our team writer: 

AASL has gathered a committee of dedicated practitioners to create the new guidelines for the school library media program. In an effort to ensure that the document reflects voices from the field, we are asking for responses to the question, What’s it like to be a school librarian in the 21st century? Responses could be one-sentence statements or stories on any subject that addresses an aspect of this question, such as the effects of Web 2.0 (and beyond) on your students and your program, outstanding examples of collaborative projects, or challenges faced by budget restrictions in a time of need for expanding library services. We’d greatly appreciate your thoughts as we work to put together this vital document!

Please send your quotes to Cassie.  You are also welcome to respond here in the comments!


Posted by Joyce Valenza on March 10, 2008 | Comments (3)


March 11, 2008
In response to: Your voice needed: Participate in building our guidelines
ESTHER L MCRAE commented:

I think one of the most important ideas we can promote is simply the need to combine the skills of reading, writing and computing with the information literacy skills of examining, selecting, comprehending and assessing. To be able contribute to the expansion of the globally rich world-wide store of information, we must be able to work with information. How can we make simple and clear that being able to locate, understand, interpret, and use information appropriately is the work of the 21st century? Anyone not able to work with information in this manner, will be marginalized and limited in what kind of work is available to those who cannot do 21st century work.




March 29, 2008
In response to: Your voice needed: Participate in building our guidelines
Tom Kaun commented:

On LM_NET Toni Buzzeo recently asked the following: "Now that we have our new AASL Standards for the 21st Century Learner, when I am writing, I'm not simply using the outdated term "information literacy skills." The first time I mention the five literacies, I say "digital, visual, textual, technological, and information literacy." Thereafter, I use the term "multiple literacies" as the Standards document itself does. My editor has asked me to think of a synonym for "multiple literacies." I'm stumped. Any ideas?" I gave the following as a response: "I see digital, visual and textual literacies as "media" literacies. That is, they are about how we access and use different media. Of course, digital is also visual and textual! (What about audio?) Technology literacy is a misnomer since the use of technology doesn't necessarily involve literacy (i.e., interpreting through letters/language) and technology is a huge area that covers practically anything people do. Information literacy is a different baby all together. It involves using all the above "literacies" to access, evaluate and use information in creative and useful ways. That's why it's hard to clump them all together with one term. Frankly, I still think information literacy is what we, as professionals, are primarily responsible for. The media we use to access and use information are just part of the big picture of info lit." I think this little exchange is a parable about how we complicate issues at our peril. We try and anticipate any and all possibilities (we even claim these are 21st century literacies, even though we update or change our standards on average about every 10 years or so--what are we going to call our next set of standards? Standards for the Second Tenth of the 21st Century?). My point is that what we call literacies really aren't. They are skills and knowledge of a certain kind and we will have to keep up with and even try to anticipate what new skills will be required by our students and colleagues in the (not-too-distant) future. But to claim these other literacies are equal our now "outdated" information seeking and use skills, called in shorthand "information literacy" is to make a grave mistake. One of the beliefs which preface our new standards is: "The definition of information literacy has become more complex as resources and technologies have changed." Actually if we look at the definition of information literacy from the Information Power standards (1998) we read: The student who is information literate accesses information efficiently and effectively, evaluates information critically and competently, and uses information accurately and creatively. The standards go on say that the student should be able to use information independently and in a socially responsible way. None of this language refers to specific media with good reason. There is no reason that these standards can't work with any kind of media or technology. It's not the definition of information literacy which has become more complicated it's merely the tools which have become more complex. Whether using today's cutting-edge technologies like the ReadWrite Web or older technologies like the printed book, students still need to learn how to access, evaluate and use information independently and responsibly. This is the heart of information literacy and it will not change with changing technologies or changing modes of access or retrieval. I don't mean my remarks to be contentious, I merely want us to remember that information literacy is not a 21st century skill, it's an on-going human skill which retains a certain "classic" quality which neither new media, nor new technologies, will change or extinguish. It is still the raison d'etre of my professional practice in a way that digital, visual, textual, technological "literacies" will never be.




April 1, 2008
In response to: Your voice needed: Participate in building our guidelines
Edi Campbell commented:

I wrote this line for a recent presentation because I think it is so true: In our working with information, libraries are the bulldozers that flatten the world. We provide the physical and mental access to that which will make us all equal.





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