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Entries from May 1, 2013 - May 31, 2013

Wednesday
May082013

The 3 AM worries

On a fairly regular basis I wake up at three in the morning and fret. But it's not often I can graphically depict the concern keeping me awake: a perplexing problem at work, an upcoming workshop, an article due, a relative with health issues. But for the past couple weeks the image that floats in my mind in the wee small hours looks exactly like this:

It's the subway map of Tokyo where I will spending next week - first playing tourist, then doing a couple days of workshops for an international school in the 'burbs.

I'm not quite sure why this map so intimidates me. I've conquered the transit systems of Rome, London, Paris, Amsterdam, Sydney, Rio, Bangkok, Mumbai, Istanbul, New York, Philadelphia, Washington DC. etc. Oh, and the single line in Minneapolis. (I am far too cheap to take taxis whenever can take public transportation.) Maybe it just the complexity of the whole thing...

According to Wikipedia, the Tokyo subway is the most used system in the world with 3.1 BILLION users in 2011 - about 6.5 million people each day (few who speak English?). Platform attendants push people into the cars. It has nine lines and 179 separate stations. It connects to another subway operator TOEI and a bunch of railways, a monorail, and probably Charon's ferry. Toyko is the largest metropolitan area in the world with about 32 million people and measures almost 60 miles east to west. 

I have been practicing my Japanese by watching the miniseries Shogun again. I can say

  • Koni-che-wa, Toranaga-sama.
  • Hai, Toranaga-sama
  • Dozo, Toranaga-sama.

Which will all come in very handy if I meet someone named Toranaga, I'm sure.

I've downloaded a Japanese language app that pronounces words at two speeds - regular and Minnesotan - Minnesota speed has a little turtle icon. I've downloaded off-line street maps and subway maps for the iPhone which I am confident will work fine so long as there are no tall buildings in Tokyo and I am never indoors or underground. 

I'm signed up for tours each of the four free days I am in Tokyo including a bike trip, a walking tour, and a bullet train trip to Mt. Fuji. If I can find the meeting point. I have two gracious hosts coming from the American School in Japan to show me around a couple evenings as well.

Keep me in your thoughts... But not at 3 AM. 

Wednesday
May082013

Prevent, don't cure

OGDEN, Utah – Twenty librarians in the Ogden School District could be out of a job.

The twenty Library Media Specialists were called to a mandatory meeting on Friday morning where they were told that their contracts won’t be renewed and their positions will no longer exist starting July 1.

According to the superintendent, Ogden School District entered the 2012-2013 school year with a $2.7 million deficit. He said they’ve avoided cutbacks in past years, but they finally have to do it this year.

“We’ve just come through the most severe economic downturn since the Great Depression. Our school district over the past 5 years, we’ve not reduced staff, we’ve not reduced personnel, we’ve not cut programs, we’ve not increased class sizes, we’ve not furloughed students or teachers and we’ve also not increased taxes,” said Brad Smith, superintendent.

But members of Utah’s chapter of the American Federation of Teachers say the cost-saving measure is only hurting children.

The school board still has to approve the cuts in June. If approved, the district plans to replace the positions with part-time staff working 3.5-hour shifts and have two licensed media specialists working at the district level. - Fox13 News, April 26, 2013.

This weekend I received a call from a very concerned former state library consultant who wanted some advice on how to reverse the decision the Ogden, Utah school district administration made to cut its professional librarians.

I didn't have much to offer or felt I could be very encouraging. Once a recommendation has been made to the board on any budget issue, it's nearly impossible to reverse such decision.

Back in 2004 when Minnesota was experiencing one of its regular round of educational austerity programs, I got involved in a couple efforts to convince school boards to keep a professional library position slated for termination. I didn't have much success.  

Yes, there are things we can do, including communicating the impact of cuts on students and staff (not on us) and building a coalition of parents and teachers willing to speak on our behalf. (And such efforts are underway already in Ogden.)

Nor does it seem many efforts like this have been successful according to a study by NCES showing school library positions nationwide declined by 8 percent from 2007-08 to 2010-11.

So perhaps another (yes, I do drone on about this) reminder is due. The best cure for this problem of job loss is to prevent it in the first place ....

Prevention (from the Indispensable Librarian, 2nd edition)


Of course, an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure. Ongoing efforts can make your library media program less likely to be the target of budget reductions. Make sure you are already doing the things below, many which have already been discussed in greater detail in other chapters of this book:

  1. Build and maintain a library media program that teaches critical information and technology literacy skills, improves student literacy rates, and supports all classrooms and curricular areas.
  2. Serve the needs of your teaching and administrative staff through instructional collaboration, technology training and support, and filling requests for professional materials.
  3. Establish a school library media program advisory board comprised of a wide range of stakeholders, especially parents, that meets on a regular basis to discuss goals, policies, and budgets.
  4. Create long-term goals and annual objectives that are supported by the principal and teachers and are tied directly to your building’s goals. Enacting long-range plans and multi-year strategies or projects makes it difficult to change horses in midstream.
  5. Build a mutually supportive relationship with your principal.
  6. Track and report to your administrator the use of your library media program, especially units of teaching, collaborations, and specific skills you, yourself, teach.
  7. Communicate regularly and formally with administrators, teachers, students, parents and the community about what happens in your library program, through newsletters, websites, and e-mail. Communicate to individuals on "I thought you'd like to know about this..." topics. Present to your school board whenever you get the chance.
  8. Have an ongoing involvement with your parent-teacher organizations.
  9. Serve on leadership, curriculum, technology and staff development teams in your building and district.
  10. Be active in your professional teacher organization and remind officers that as a dues-paying member, you deserve as much support as the classroom teacher.
  11. Be involved in the extra-curricular life of the school, attending school plays, sporting events, award ceremonies etc. Be visible! (I think it helps to be an active member of the community belonging to a church or other religious organization, community service group, and/or volunteer groups. It’s harder to fire a friend and neighbor than a stranger.)
  12. Be active in your state school library association by attending conferences and regional events, reading its publications, volunteering for positions in the organization, and attending its legislative functions.

You, as a school library media specialist, are too important to too many children to let budget reductions that affect your program just “happen.” Get active and heed the words of Dylan Thomas – “Do not go gentle into that good night.

 

Expecting a "deus ex machina" salvation by outside powers to recind a proposed budget cut is wishful thinking. Until every school librarian owns the job of creating an invaluable program, jobs will be at risk. 

I hope the Ogden administration will come to understand how harmful cutting professional librarians will be to its students and staff. Good school library programs are more important than ever in the "information age" when no one can be successful without both good information literacy, reading, and technology skills. 

If not... Well, perhaps such a move will serve as (another) wake-up call to the rest of us.

Tuesday
May072013

National Teacher Day - say thanks and spell it right

I can count on one hand the number of times I have posted a direct request that's come to me via e-mail on the Blue Skunk. But I found Mr. Welder's comments and study compelling enough to share here. I'm not endorsing Kars4Kids since I know nothing about it, but the study is interesting and National Teacher Day is worth a shout out.

Hey Doug,

My name is Steven Weldler and I work for the Kars4Kids car donation charity (of radio jingle fame/infamy :) )

May 7th, this Tuesday, is National Teacher Day.

As you used to teach and now write about teaching and education, I thought you'd be interested in this fascinating survey we've just completed.

We discovered that among other things: 

  • Even though around 75% say that a past teacher had a direct impact on their future success, only 25% of respondents have ever sent a gift or thank you card to a teacher
  • A stunning 70.7% say that they would want their children to have the same teachers they had.
  • An overwhelming 61.5% of respondents say that their high school teachers had more impact on them than their elementary or middle school teachers

The full survey can be found here http://www.kars4kids.org/blog/national-teacher-day-survey/.... 

I can be reached at steven@kars4kids.org.

It's a bit late for me to thank my teachers, having graduated from high school over 40 years ago. If not dead, I suspect most of them are senile or in protective custody from former students. I do know my mother shared many of my articles and books with one my former HS English teachers, Mary Farmer, from Sac City, Iowa. I don't think exposing a teacher to such shocks is very kind, personally.

I am blessed to have spent my career working with teachers. In perhaps no other profession is one's personality so closely aligned with one's success - or lack there of. While architects, lawyers, pediatricians, firefighters, and sales managers certainly might benefit from being patient, caring, humble, and funny (combined with a great appreciation for the ironic), I don't know that their vocational success depends on these attributes. And how hard it is on everyone - students, fellow teachers and administrators - when any of these dispositions start to go missing.

While belated, thank you teachers. I've learned because of you, both as a student and as a co-worker.

Image source: You Can't Scare Me, I'm a Teacher