Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Shared Foundations


I readily admit to being one of those people who instantly rolls my eyes when I hear people complain about change. I get it, change is not always fun or welcome and sometimes it is just downright scary, but there is no person, place or thing on this planet that is not affected by some sort of change on a daily basis. My approach to adapting to change is that is seems easier to be ready to respond rather than attach myself to some permanent idea of how things should be. Adapting is easier if you have a strong foundation.  As an outsider entering into the public education world, I have often observed that many teacher frustrations are centered around the constant state of change of standards in the workplace. As my graduate studies take me closer to becoming a teacher, I am beginning to understand how frustrating it must be to always have to rebuild and remake the curriculum according to shifting trends and mandates. It must begin to feel like an endless loop of Donkey Kong, as you attempt to level up only to find more fireballs and barrels rolling at you at every ladder. One of the reasons I find studying the standards and frameworks for students and learners from AASL and ISTE so refreshing, is that is appears to give new teachers a solid place from which to build a curriculum that can readily adapt to change without a need to constantly reconstruct from the beginning.

With an eye to change, I wanted to dig a little deeper in how the teachers are adapting to use the AASL National School Library Standards and ISTE Standards in action. In the journal feature from Knowledge Quest, I was impressed with the learning opportunities shared by middle school teacher Calypso Gilstrap in the article, “The Start of Something New” (2019). Gilstrap explored her experience of creating meaningful connections between ASSL standards and the curriculum offered in her International Baccalaureate program focused on offering personal development and challenging coursework to students (2019). One of the main tenets of the growth domain from the AASL framework is engaged inquiry and continuous pursuit of knowledge through information and reflection (2018). The idea that students must be active participants in the learning process is not new, but it does require a shift in how we share information. Designing curriculum with a basic understanding that demands of career and life will require students to be critical information contributors and consumers. Gilstrap used different approaches from the various AASL Create and Collaborate domains and competencies to develop new lessons (2018).  One example cited was a note taking technique which offered students a practical tool for identifying how to select and organize information and another example utilized silent team work to build alternative communication methods (2018). These examples take a simple principle based on encouraging critical thinking and transforms it into a practical application with real life implications. We all know that students should be critical thinkers but how can we address these concepts in ways that will positively impact students learning environment. 

The framework standards from AASL provides the guidance on how to help build those first steps to elevate and evaluate lessons to properly meet the challenge of our ever-changing informational needs. The ISTE for Educators growth competency outlines even more explicit directives for facilitators to foster learning environments that create learning opportunities that challenge students to innovate ways to problem solve and adapt to new settings (2018). There is a shift away from the goal of merely sharing content knowledge as educators but instead offers room for librarians to create practices that integrate interactive lessons to engage students. These new methods of teaching that embrace a national standard framework to set curriculum goals will require being wiling to adapt and innovate to align goals with practical lessons. The ASSL framework and ISTE standards share foundations aimed at supporting teachers, librarians, and students to expand into new possibilities.


                             


American Association of School Librarians. (2018). National School Library Standards for Learners, School Librarians, and School Libraries. Chicago: ALA.

Gilstrap, C. (2019). The Start of Something New: A Relationship between the AASL Standards Framework for Learners and IB Approaches to Learning. Knowledge Quest47(5), 30–35.

 

Link to Crosswalks for AASL AND ISTE

https://standards.aasl.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/180828-aasl-standards-crosswalk-iste.pdf

180822-aasl-standards-crosswalk-iste.indd




 

6 comments:

  1. Sussanne,
    I enjoyed reading your blog post, as I can totally relate to looking into the public education field as an outsider on this journey to become a certified teacher. You wrote about hearing the experience of teachers feeling frustration with ever changing standards. I wrote about something similar in that I have learned from my school librarian peers and professors that the school community, including administration, may not realize how to utilize the school librarian best, other than just being in charge of laptops and giving teachers a planning period. I saw an idea in Knowledge Quest that using the standards could help explain what our jobs as school librarians should be to the rest of the school. I am enjoying having the outsiders perspective while learning from my peers how they feel as insiders. I agree with your sentiment that building a strong foundation for understanding the standards will help us if/when they change in the future, and keep us on our toes! Thank you for your post!
    -K. DeAnne Anderson

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    1. Sorry for the misspelling of your name!

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    2. Thanks DeAnne. Yes, I have heard many similar issues in regards to how librarians are being utilized and seen in the school setting. As I study theses topics, I try and find balance of the MLIS ideals we learn about with my more pragmatic approach to understanding really what happens at the school level. I can see how important it is to be an advocate for setting standards and clear in your role expectations. Sometimes I grateful to be an outsider so I don't have years of preconceived ideas to color my just enthusiasm yet!

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  2. Wonderful Blog post, Suzanne. I must admit that I do not like change! However, I rarely make my complaints known because no one wants to hear it. It does seem like just when teachers figure out one system, another is implemented. We are dealing with that this year in our school district. I am only seeing it from the parent side and that is hard enough.
    I think your adaptation method is a great one! I feel like teaching standards need to be viewed like Legos instead of a steal ball. Each piece can fit together just right to form a working curriculum. You can add and take way pieces as they change instead of throwing out the whole thing and starting new. I think it is refreshing to see that there are different sets of standards that librarians can pull from to build something that works for the students.

    Crystal Smoak

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  3. Susanne,
    I truly enjoyed reading your post. I have been an elementary teacher for the past six years and your comparison of the constant change in education and and endless loop of Donkey Kong is spot on! I personally do not mind change if it is made because it will benefit students. The education world, in South Carolina specifically, is slowly making its way towards a personalized learning approach that focuses on the development of students as a whole and gives them more power and say over their education. I feel like the AASL and ISTE standards are already aligned with that goal and will benefit our students greatly as they encourage inquiry based learning rather than the "sit and get" model. I am looking forward to learning how to implement those standards in my lessons! Thank you for sharing your thoughts.

    Josie Price

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  4. I enjoyed reading your blog post! I am definitely one of those people that rolls my eyes every time the standards change and it was nice to get someone else's perspective. I even discussed this in my blog post, how one of the things I appreciate about the AASL standards is the longevity I feel they have. This gives educators enough time to really unpack them and become experts with the standards and continue to find creative ways to implement them.

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