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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dalbotten, Mary, Wallin, Joan
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1990
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED337128
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author Dalbotten, Mary
Wallin, Joan
author_facet Dalbotten, Mary
Wallin, Joan
Dalbotten, Mary
Wallin, Joan
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Classroom Instructional Design: Tools for Teacher/Media Specialist Interaction. Dalbotten, Mary Wallin, Joan Check Lists Cooperative Planning Elementary Secondary Education Guidelines Instructional Design Learning Resources Centers Library Role Library Services Media Specialists School Libraries "Information Power," the national guidelines for school library media programs, specify three roles for today's school library media specialist, i.e., information specialist, teacher, and instructional consultant. As school library media specialists plan with teachers, they are performing the instructional consultant role. The Media and Technology Unit of the Minnesota Department of Education believes that the instructional design consultant role is vital in giving school library media programs meaning and direction, and that it is the pivotal role upon which the other two are based. Classroom goals should be the focus of the library media specialist's teaching and library media services. As an information specialist planning resource-based teaching units with teachers, the library media specialist is purchasing resources that tie directly into unit outcomes, and the media specialist may team-teach part of the unit, thus performing the teacher role. This guide provides suggestions, helpful hints, useful strategies, checklists, and forms for use by the library media specialist in the role of instructional consultant. Three chapters cover: (1) Beginning Strategies for Working with Teachers (getting started, finding time, working through others); (2) Planning for Resource-Based Teaching (instructional planning guide, resource assessment); and (3) Refining Your Role in the Instructional Process (self-assessment and action plan). A 27-item annotated bibliography is provided and an article, "The Role of the School Librarian as a Professional Teacher: A Position Paper" (Ken Haycock) is appended. (DB)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED337128
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1990
record_format eric
spellingShingle Classroom Instructional Design: Tools for Teacher/Media Specialist Interaction.
Dalbotten, Mary
Wallin, Joan
Check Lists
Cooperative Planning
Elementary Secondary Education
Guidelines
Instructional Design
Learning Resources Centers
Library Role
Library Services
Media Specialists
School Libraries
Classroom Instructional Design: Tools for Teacher/Media Specialist Interaction. Dalbotten, Mary Wallin, Joan Check Lists Cooperative Planning Elementary Secondary Education Guidelines Instructional Design Learning Resources Centers Library Role Library Services Media Specialists School Libraries "Information Power," the national guidelines for school library media programs, specify three roles for today's school library media specialist, i.e., information specialist, teacher, and instructional consultant. As school library media specialists plan with teachers, they are performing the instructional consultant role. The Media and Technology Unit of the Minnesota Department of Education believes that the instructional design consultant role is vital in giving school library media programs meaning and direction, and that it is the pivotal role upon which the other two are based. Classroom goals should be the focus of the library media specialist's teaching and library media services. As an information specialist planning resource-based teaching units with teachers, the library media specialist is purchasing resources that tie directly into unit outcomes, and the media specialist may team-teach part of the unit, thus performing the teacher role. This guide provides suggestions, helpful hints, useful strategies, checklists, and forms for use by the library media specialist in the role of instructional consultant. Three chapters cover: (1) Beginning Strategies for Working with Teachers (getting started, finding time, working through others); (2) Planning for Resource-Based Teaching (instructional planning guide, resource assessment); and (3) Refining Your Role in the Instructional Process (self-assessment and action plan). A 27-item annotated bibliography is provided and an article, "The Role of the School Librarian as a Professional Teacher: A Position Paper" (Ken Haycock) is appended. (DB)
title Classroom Instructional Design: Tools for Teacher/Media Specialist Interaction.
topic Check Lists
Cooperative Planning
Elementary Secondary Education
Guidelines
Instructional Design
Learning Resources Centers
Library Role
Library Services
Media Specialists
School Libraries
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED337128