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image modified from Particle trails - Acrylic on Canvas by flickr user starsandspirals, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 Librarianship for the 21st Century School/Library Collaboration & Media Mentorship Amy Koester | October 2015
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Hello! I’m Amy Koester Youth & Family Program Coordinator at Skokie (IL) Public Library The Show Me Librarian Co-author, “Media Mentorship in Libraries Serving Youth” white paper
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Our Agenda School/Library Collaboration Time for Questions Media Mentorship Time for Questions
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image modified from Get Hitched by flickr user Doug Geisler, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 School/Library Collaboration
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Level 3: Collective Impact Level 2: Parallel Tracks Level 1: Transporting Services Models of Collaboration
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Level 1: Transporting Services Individual goals, Individual pathways. image modified from School bus by flickr user b3d_, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0
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Level 2: Parallel Tracks Similar goals, Individual pathways. image modified from Parallel tracks, Union Pacific by flickr user Roy Luck, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0
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Level 3: Collective Impact Collaboration of goals & pathways. image modified from Shuttle Atlantis Flying by flickr user reynermedia, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0
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Cultivating Collaboration image modified from Blueprint by flickr user Will Scullin, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0
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Cultivating Collaboration image modified from Blueprint by flickr user Will Scullin, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 Gather the right team.
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Cultivating Collaboration image modified from Blueprint by flickr user Will Scullin, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 Gather the right team. Ask: “What are our shared goals?”
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Cultivating Collaboration image modified from Blueprint by flickr user Will Scullin, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 Gather the right team. Ask: “What are our shared goals?” Identify a common goal.
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Cultivating Collaboration image modified from Blueprint by flickr user Will Scullin, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 Gather the right team. Ask: “What are our shared goals?” Identify a common goal. Gather ideas to meet the goal.
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Cultivating Collaboration image modified from Blueprint by flickr user Will Scullin, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 Gather the right team. Ask: “What are our shared goals?” Identify a common goal. Gather ideas to meet the goal. Prioritize ideas & make a plan.
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Cultivating Collaboration image modified from Blueprint by flickr user Will Scullin, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 Gather the right team. Ask: “What are our shared goals?” Identify a common goal. Gather ideas to meet the goal. Prioritize ideas & make a plan. Implement!
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image modified from Wonder Lake - Denali National Park by flickr user Gregory “Slobirdr: Smith, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 The library is part of a larger ecosystem.
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image modified from Wonder Lake - Denali National Park by flickr user Gregory “Slobirdr: Smith, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 –Miguel Figueroa, Center for the Future of Libraries How do libraries serve as part of a solution, as opposed to serving as the sole problem-solver?
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image modified from Wonder Lake - Denali National Park by flickr user Gregory “Slobirdr: Smith, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 –Sharon Cox, Queens Library Discovery Center “Partnerships help us to develop more & more programs, & to bring those programs to the people we are targeting.”
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image modified from Wonder Lake - Denali National Park by flickr user Gregory “Slobirdr: Smith, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 –Marsha Semmel, formerly with IMLS “Progress moves at the speed of trust.”
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image modified from Wonder Lake - Denali National Park by flickr user Gregory “Slobirdr: Smith, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0 Build in time for reflection.
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So what does collective impact collaboration look like? image modified from Tower Optical binocular by flickr user Ellie, CC BY 2.0CC BY 2.0
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Design Thinking for Libraries - IDEO Turn Outward - Harwood Institute (Harwood in a Half Hour) A Collaboration Workbook - Heart of Brooklyn Tools for Thinking about Collaboration
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Questions so far?
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Media Mentorship
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Why media mentorship? Over 75% of households own digital media. Over 72% of youth 0-8 have used digital media. 71% of public libraries use new media in youth programs & services. 40% have tethered devices, 39% use in storytime. 22% offer device mentoring.
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ALSC’s White Paper Libraries serving youth need to have media mentors. Media mentors support kids & families (objectively). Library schools need to train for media mentorship. Professional development needs to include media mentorship.
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Media Mentor / ˈ mēdēə ˈ men ˌ tôr/ noun 1.a person who supports children & their families in their decisions & practice around media use 2.a person who has access to, and shares, recommendations for and research on children’s media use
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What does media mentorship look like? Digital media in storytime — with parental asides App play & appvisory in programs Technology as the skill & program topic Mounted & circulating devices Curated lists Training teens as media mentors
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The Media Mentor Toolbox Position Statements AAP, NAEYC/Fred Rogers Center, Joan Ganz Cooney Center, Zero to Three, Lisa Guernsey Evaluative Resources Review Sources Evaluation Rubrics (Claudia Haines’s are GREAT!) New & Developing Research
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Final questions? amy.e.koester@gmail.com @amyeileenk http://showmelibrarian.blogspot.com
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