school media programs and student achievement

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School Media Programs and Student Achievement

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School Media Programs and Student Achievement. Attention Elementary School Principals. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

School Media Programs and StudentAchievement

Page 2: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

Attention Elementary

School Principals

Page 3: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

“Library media centers are critical to meet schools’ instructional goals and objectives. They promote literacy by developing and

encouraging reading. But how do you know whether your library media center program is effective? What is a realistic vision for the

library media center of the twenty-first century?” (Young, 2005)

Page 4: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

Because little research about school media programs is published in Educational

Administrators journals, administrators may ask, “(If) there is compelling evidence that libraries

can make a significant difference why hasn't this information been made widely available to

others in education, instead of appearing almost exclusively in librarian research journals, in

practitioner publications, or posted on library Internet sites” (Hartzell, 2012)?

Page 5: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

“Most of what administrators know about school library media specialists they learn from personal experience, not through any systematic education or exposure to the

literature”(Kaplan, 2008).

Page 6: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

The following information is research based and will provide

valid information on the effectiveness of an outstanding

media program.

Page 7: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

The following findings are based on the Baughman Study of the Massachusetts

Comprehensive Assessment System (MCAS) and apply to all grade levels:

MCAS were higher with the following factors: schools with library programs a higher per pupil book count increased student use of the media

center School libraries with more open hours

Page 8: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

The following (also based on MCAS) applies to the elementary level: 

Scores were higher when:

there is a library instruction program students are served by a full time school

librarian library staff assistance (nonprofessional help) is

available when the library is aligned with the state

curriculum frameworks. ○ This fact is especially true in schools that have a

high percentage of free school lunches.

Page 9: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

Achieving good (MCAS) scores depends on:

o good working combination of successful administrative leadership

o team building for the implementation of the curriculum frameworks

o excellence in teachingo strong school library resources in every

school.

Page 10: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

Based on the Lance study: fewer librarians translated to lower

performance—or a slower rise in scores—on standardized tests.”

“..states that gained librarians showed significantly greater improvements in fourth-grade reading scores than states that lost librarians”

“the increase in scores of states that gained librarians was two times that of states that lost librarians.”

Page 11: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

What does this mean for our Economically Disadvantaged students?

“the average reading scores for poor students in states that gained librarians increased by 2 percent—almost twice as much as the percentage change for that group in all states (1.2 percent) and four times the percent change for states that

lost librarians (0.5 percent).”

Page 12: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

What does this mean for high achievers?

“Schools that either maintained or gained an endorsed librarian between 2005 and 2011 tended to have more students scoring advanced in reading…”

“schools that either lost a librarian during that period or never had one tended to have fewer students scoring advanced in 2011 and to have seen lesser gains”

(Lance and Hofschire, 2012).

Page 13: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

Endorsed librarian vs. a non-endorsed librarian vs. a non-endorsed library clerk

“schools with at least one FTE endorsed librarian averaged significantly higher advanced CSAP reading scores and significantly lower unsatisfactory scores than schools with less than one FTE endorsed librarian.” (Lance and Hofschire, 2012)

Page 14: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

According to Scholastic’s School Libraries Work!, school library programs influence learning outcomes and student achievement when the LMS… collaborates with classroom teachers to

teach and integrates literature and information skills into the curriculum

partners with classroom teachers on projects that help students use a variety of resources, conduct research, and present their findings.

are supported fiscally and programmatically by the educational community to achieve the mission of the school.

Page 15: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

Scholastic also found that at the elementary level, schools averaged better test results when.. o library media specialists are seen as:

o school leaders o curriculum designerso fellow administratorso and fellow teachers

o teachers who reported collaborating with the library media specialist more frequently at their own initiative, and who believed that they teach to information literacy standards better when they engage in such collaboration

Page 16: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

A SMART library equals student achievement

Staff, stock, and fund your library to support your curriculum

Meet regularly with your librarian. Acknowledge your librarian as a school

leader and master teacher. Reward your librarian and teachers for

planning and teaching cooperatively. Take credit for making your library the

keystone of your school’s success and for empowering your librarian to do the job she was trained to do.

(Lance, 2000)

Page 17: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

“research indicates that these lower reading scores can’t be blamed on

cuts to other school staff. Regardless of whether there were fewer

classroom teachers schoolwide, students in states that lost librarians

tended to have lower reading scores—or had a slower rise on standardized

tests—than those in states that gained librarians” (Lance, 2011).

Page 18: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

In summation, research supports that when a media specialist follows the Guidelines for School Library Programs set by the American Association of School Libraries where collaboration, inquiry, instruction, and achievement are top priority, student achievement will show positive gains.

"Media programs are no longer measured by the number of books in the media center, but by the information literacy level of the

students. Student learning is achieved through the collaborative and proactive leadership roles of the school media specialist, not merely

by cataloging and organizing materials” (Anderson, 1999)

Page 19: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

ReferencesAmerican Association of School Librarians and Association for Educational Communications and Technology. (2009). Empowering learners; Guidelines for School Library Media Programs. Chicago: American Library Association.Anderson, M. (1999). Information Power: Because Student Achievement Is the Bottom Line. Multimedia Schools, 6(2), 22-23. Retrieved from https://ehis.ebscohost.com/eds/detail?vid=4&sid=044df9cb-ca57-446c-8870-c5a6447b27bf%40sessionmgr111&hid=8&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWRzLWxpdmUmc2NvcGU9c2l0ZQ%3d%3d#db=eric&AN=EJ586239Baughman, J. (2000, October) School Libraries and MCAS Scores. Retreived March 3, 2013 from http://web.simmons.edu/~baughman/mcas-school-libraries/Baughman%20Paper.pdfBoehm P. The New AASL Program Guidelines for School Library Programs. School Library Monthly [serial online]. September 2009;26(1):50-52. Available from: Professional Development Collection, Ipswich, MA. Accessed March 7, 2013. Retrieved from https://ehis.ebscohost.com/eds/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=3&sid=044df9cb-ca57-446c-8870-c5a6447b27bf%40sessionmgr111&hid=15Curry, K. (2000). How School Librarians Help Kids Achieve Standards The Second Colorado Study. Library Research Service. Retrieved March 8, 2013, from http://www.lrs.org/documents/lmcstudies/CO/execsumm.pdf Dickinson, G. K. (2009). What Do We Do with the Guidelines?. Library Media Connection, 28(1), 14-16. Retrieved from https://ehis.ebscohost.com/eds/detail?sid=044df9cb-ca57-446c-8870-c5a6447b27bf%40sessionmgr111&vid=3&hid=15&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWRzLWxpdmUmc2NvcGU9c2l0ZQ%3d%3d#db=lfh&AN=44316184Francis, B. (2011). The Impact of Library Media Specialists on Students and How It Is Valued by Administrators and Teachers: Findings from the Latest Studies in Colorado and Idaho. Techtrends: Linking Research & Practice To Improve Learning, 55(4), 63-70.

Page 20: School Media Programs       and Student Achievement

References continuedHartzell, G. (2012). WHY DOESN'T SCHOOL LIBRARY IMPACT RESEARCH HAVE MORE INFLUENCE ON SCHOOL LEADERS?. Library Media Connection,31(2), 18-19. https://ehis.ebscohost.com/eds/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=3&sid=016ecdc9-5a3e-4b75- 9ed1-74dea3d26430%40sessionmgr115&hid=102Kaplan, A. G. (2008). Is Your School Librarian 'Highly Qualified'?. Education Digest, 73(7), 17-20. https://ehis.ebscohost.com/eds/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=6&sid=016ecdc9-5a3e-4b75- 9ed1- 74dea3d26430%40sessionmgr115&hid=7Lance, K., & Hofschire, L. (2012). Change in School Librarian Staffing Linked with Change in CSAP Reading Performance, 2005 to 2011.Denver, CO: Colorado State Library, Library Research Service. Retrieved on March 4, 2013 from http://www.lrs.org/documents/closer_look/CO4_2012_Closer_Look_Report.pdfLance, K., & Hofschire, L. (2011, September 1). Something to Shout About: New research shows that more librarians mean higher reading scores. School Library Journal. Retrieved on March 4, 2013 from http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/slj/home/891612- 312/something_to_shout_about_new.html.cspMorris, B. J. (2005). The Emerging School Library Media Center From the Past into the Future. Knowledge Quest, 33(5), 22-26.Scholastic. (2007). School Libraries Work! Scholastic: Research and Results. Retrieved February 27, 2013 from http://www.scholastic.com/content/collateral_resources/pdf/s/slw3_2008.pdfTodd, R. J., Gordon, C. A., & Lu, Y. (2011, September). One Common Goal: Student Learning Executive Summary of Findings and Recommendations of the New Jersey School Library Survey Phase 2. New Jersey Association of School Librarians. Retrieved March 12, 2013, from http://www.njasl.info/wp-content/NJ_study/Phase2_ExecSum.pdf Young Jr., T.E. (2005). BETTER DATA…BETTER DECISIONS. Library Media Connections, 23(4), 14-19. https://ehis.ebscohost.com/eds/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?vid=8&sid=016ecdc9-5a3e-4b75-9ed1- 74dea3d26430%40sessionmgr115&hid=101

ALL images are from Clip Art, retrieved from http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/images/?CTT=97