Archive for the ‘Advocacy’ Category

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NYCSLA Fellowship and Administrator Award Applications Due Friday!

March 15, 2011

This year, NYCSLA is proud to offer two awards for members and their schools: the NYCSLA Fellowship award for members and the NYCSLA Administrator Award for principals. The application deadline is this Friday, March 18.

NYCSLA Fellowship Award

This $300 Fellowship Award is awarded to a NYCSLA member to attend a national, state or regional conference. NYCSLA fellows are chosen on the basis of three criteria: (1) involvement and leadership in the field of school libraries, including professional accomplishments, (2) quality of your virtual library presence, and (3) willingness to share your conference experience with colleagues. NYCSLA board members are ineligible.

Apply online!

NYCSLA Administrator Award

The Award recognizes an administrator who has been responsible for the improvement of the School Library Media Program in a New York City school during the past two to five years. The winner receives a plaque and online recognition in the form of a press release and blog post acknowledging his/her support of the School Library Media Program. You must be a NYCSLA member to apply. NYCSLA board members are not eligible to apply.

Apply online!

All NYCSLA members are eligible, so apply today!

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NYCSLA supports NYLA Advocacy Day: Virtual Meeting on Feb. 28th

February 16, 2011

If you can’t go to Albany on March 1st, let’s help pave the way with lots of calls and messages to our legislators!

NYCSLA is asking you to write/call/email your legislator’s office on (or before) Feb. 28th: the day before NYLA’s ADVOCACY DAY. When you do, add a comment to this post, even paste your letter if you want to so others can use it, and let’s see how many members we can get to support NYLA Advocacy Day on March 1st. See you here on the 28th! And thank you.
Use NYLA’s advocacy tools to help craft your message:
What can I do now to support NYLA’s Advocacy Day?
  • Call your legislator’s office, either at his or her district office, or in Albany.
  • Tell him / her how important your library is to the community – and its voting citizens.
  • Tell him / her that increased funding for libraries is ESSENTIAL and CRITICAL.
  • Use NYLA’s helpful advocacy tools to help shape your personal message.
We have a great opportunity to speak out for additional funding for electronic resources, construction, and aid for all libraries. It’s not hard–and we all need to do our part in strengthening New York’s libraries, library systems, and special collections.
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NYC School Libraries: Participate in Library Snapshot Day!

February 15, 2011

NYCSLA invites all New York City school librarians to participate in Library Snapshot Week (February 13-19, 2011). Here’s the information from their web site:

What’s life like on a typical day at your library? Wouldn’t you like to document just how busy and essential your library is with statistics, pictures, videos and user comments?

Then join New York’s libraries and participate in SNAPSHOTNY: A Day in the Life of a Library by collecting statistics, comments, and photographs/videos from one day to provide tangible proof that libraries consistently provide invaluable services to our communities, in our schools and on our college campuses.

Ready to join? Then pick a day and collect statistics on:

  • How many patron visits?
  • How many people used your public computers?
  • How many reference questions did your staff answer?
  • How many children participated in programs (including school visits as well as library-sponsored programs)?
  • How many adults participated in programs?
  • What was the total circulation for the day?
  • How many hits did your website receive?

We’d also appreciate it if you ask your patrons why your library is essential to them.But just as important we need you to send us your photos and videos of A Day in the Life of your Library.

Submit your statistics and testimonials by Feb. 23rd so we can compile everything and showcase the information at Library Advocacy Day, Tuesday, March 1st in Albany. The libraries submitting the top three videos/photos/comments will receive a Flip Video Camera and one free registration to the NYLA Annual Conference in Saratoga Springs – Nov. 3-5, 2011.

It’s short notice, but please participate if you can! Let’s represent our NYC school libraries in this portrait of libraries across the state.

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Take action! Elimination of Middle School Library Mandates

February 5, 2011
IMMEDIATE ACTION NEEDED

The NYS Board of Regents is meeting this coming Monday(February 7, 2011)  to consider eliminating certain curriculum mandates.  One of the middle school mandates they are contemplating removing is library and information skills.

“Other draft mandate relief options reflect the areas of Curriculum and Instruction:
Eliminating some middle school mandates, including home and career skills, technology education, and library and information skills”

Review individual agenda items for the meeting: http://www.regents.nysed.gov/meetings/2011Meetings/February2011/211p12sad1.pdf

It is critical that you contact the Regent from your region and email them the letter below before they make a decision on Monday.

Listing of Board of Regents by region : http://www.regents.nysed.gov/members/findrep.html

Click on the region where you live and then click on their email address.
Copy, cut and paste the letter below and address it to your Regent (i.e. Dear Regent Cohen).
Please circulate this as widely as possible!
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Dear Regent  _______________:

I am writing to urge you to reject the proposal to eliminate requirements for middle school library and information skills in the curriculum. State-by-state research repeatedly shows that a well-funded, fully-staffed school library program with a state-licensed school librarian is an integral component of a successful student’s education. Studies demonstrate that students in schools with strong school library programs achieve better grades and score higher on standardized tests than their peers without such programs.

As you prepare to discuss the draft mandate relief proposals, we ask you to consider the imperative role of the school library program in the preparation of students for college and career readiness. There is a genuine need to keep library skills a requirement in middle level education. Only at the middle school level is curriculum-specific in inquiry and information skills, a requirement for students. Removing these skills at the middle school level removes them from the curriculum completely and only increases the likelihood that students will graduate without the skills in place that they need to be successful beyond their K-12 career.

Colleges throughout New York State have struggled to meet the needs of incoming students who are deficient in information fluency skills. These are the same skills that allow them to work independently and successfully manage diverse sources of information and media for research, writing and study. Regions of the state have formed committees composed of college and school librarians working to bridge curricular gaps in library skills. Eliminating the mandate of middle school level library skills creates a gap that is not able to be filled.

I ask you to continue to require library skills as part of the curriculum in middle school level education.

 

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Act by 3/12 to Support Federal funding of school libraries

March 9, 2010

School Libraries

In his FY2011 budget, President Obama consolidated Improving Literacy Through School Libraries with five other literacy programs.  This would mean that school libraries will have to directly compete with other programs to receive federal dollars under the President’s plan.

However, Congress is busy drafting up their own budget for FY2011 right now, and there is no word yet if they will go along with President Obama’s recommendation of consolidation.  Congress needs to hear from their constituents NOW about the important role that school libraries play in today’s schools.

Right now there is a letter circulating around the House of Representatives urging the Appropriations Committee to specifically appropriate $100 million for Improving Literacy Through School Libraries.  This amount means that this program will be available to every state, rather than the current competitive grant program.

HOW CAN I HELP?

Please click here to send a quick email. It took me three minutes!

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Letter to Obama

February 20, 2010

Here is a copy of the short letter I drafted to Obama. Feel free to use it or edit it for your own email response to the cut of Federal funding to school libraries.

On the link above is a form email that reaches the White House administration.

Please act and show the feds that NYC school librarians care about our students and how they will be affected by this decision!!

Dear Mr. President:

I am currently president of the NYC School Librarians’ Association. We are deeply perplexed by your decision to cut all funding for school libraries.

We applauded and honored your decision to make October Information Literacy Day and are transforming our library programs to make information literacy the cornerstone of our instruction. School libraries are computer labs embedded in an array of accessible and high-interest materials of all the media types that appeal to our students. More than ever, we need funding, to keep our computers and instruction up-to-date and our in this rapidly changing online teaching environment.

Within the context of reading and constructing knowledge, school librarians do more to unravel the Internet and its myriad resources than a computer lab teacher. Information is our expertise. We teach both narrative and hypertext. We also provide instruction on creative programs such as Hyperstudio and Adobe Creative Suite that integrate highly motivating video, audio, and animation elements into student work.

I agree that school libraries must transform into arenas of creativity and information-turned-knowledge, not just access, and librarians must become guides in creating new knowledge by concentrating on ways to process information and cut through media. Cutting funding will only thwart that transformation.

We need federal support to transform school libraries to ones that acquaint our students, of whom a hard 30% do not have Internet access at home, with tools for information, creativity, and with books that are accessible, motivating, and targeted for our populations. No two libraries are alike: all need a 21st century model of a learning commons and we are anxious to get on board with the swift changes taking place.

We hope that you can reinstate that grant to include new computers in libraries, increased broadband, creative software products, online automation, ELL materials, high-interest reading materials, and increased online resources.

We have confidence that you will hear our cry and understand the higher call to fund school libraries more than ever, but with new, higher expectations that we all are ready to achieve.

Yours sincerely,

Sara Lissa Paulson

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