From August 2 -4, I was fortunate to attend the NYLA SLMS Leadership Retreat on the Cornell University campus in Ithaca with my friend and colleague Renee. Starting my third year as a library media specialist, I find this annual conference to be particularly useful. Kudos to the library media specialists who organize this event, always featuring a noted speaker from the information and education fields. I attended last year when the featured presenters were Barbara Stripling and Gail Dickinson, who helped us process the new AASL Learning Standards.
Photo: McGraw Clock Tower on flickr.com by rdesai
This year we worked with Carol Koechlin, who along with David Loertscher and Sandi Zwaan, has been a leader in instructing teachers and teacher-librarians about the inquiry process. She taught us the importance of getting our kids to learn how to learn by asking deep questions. We learned "questioning is cross-curricular." With curious, observant minds, our kids will soar. It's not a matter of some kids have it and some don't: we must teach this mindset. (A fascinating recommendation from Carol: read Mindset by Dweck. A quick read - I highly recommend it.) How do we as library media specialists do this? We need to start by building a community of learners, reinforcing observation skills, modeling effective questioning, and creating a desire to know. A strong reminder resonated with me: I need to model strong questioning more with my young students. Their natural curiosity and enthusiasm does not automatically transfer to deep thinking, though there's a natural progression there to be supported.Toward this end, Carol supported us in extending our own questioning skills, reviewing three levels of questioning which she attributed to Manzo (1969):
- on the line - it's clearly stated in the text
- between the line - inferring from multiple references in the text
- beyond the line - it's not there; students must do further study and connect to prior knowledge
Recommended Professional List:
Beyond Bird Units! Thinking & Understanding in Informaton-Rich and Technology-Rich Environments by David V. Loertscher, Carol Koechlin, and Sandi Zwaan
Brain Matters: Translating research into classroom practice by Patricia Wolfe
Guided Inquiry: Learning in the 21st Century by Carol Kuhlthau
Learning to Question to Wonder to Learn by Jamie McKenzie
Librarians as Learning Specialists: Meeting the learning imperative for the 21st Century by Allison Zmuda
Mindset: The new psychology of success by Carol Dweck
QTasks: How to empower students to ask questions and care about answers by Carol Koechlin
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