Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Baker, Sheila F., Alexander, Bonnie
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1182647
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867181049134448640
author Baker, Sheila F.
Alexander, Bonnie
author_facet Baker, Sheila F.
Alexander, Bonnie
Baker, Sheila F.
Alexander, Bonnie
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents A Major Making Undertaking: A New Librarian Transforms A Middle School Library into a Makerspace Aligned to High School Career Endorsements Baker, Sheila F. Alexander, Bonnie School Libraries Librarians Middle Schools Library Services Shared Resources and Services Alignment (Education) STEM Education Educational Change High Schools Program Implementation Academic Achievement Academic Standards Learning in makerspaces involves doing, playing, thinking, experimenting, creating, collaborating, mentoring, inquiring, problem-solving, producing, inventing, designing, building, and sharing (Loertscher, Preddy, and Derry 2013). Whatever the character of a makerspace, all makerspaces have the same goal: to actively engage students in open-ended exploration and learning. To encompass this learning, makerspaces have taken on many different personas in school libraries. Some librarians have begun their makerspaces in a small area of the library that consists of a table or two with shoeboxes of Legos, electrical circuitry, and play dough. Other makerspaces are embedded throughout the library and focus on STEM activities including coding, gaming, power tools, laser-cutting, and 3-D printers. Still others include makerspaces that spill beyond the library into the school's classrooms and include STEM, art, music, crafts, and, yes, those shoeboxes full of Legos and modeling clay and dough. One makerspace is not necessarily better than the other--they are just different. This article provides insight into the transformation of a traditional middle school library into a makerspace that focuses on high school endorsements. This particular makerspace was created from the perspective of--and is the brainchild of--a new librarian in her first year of practice.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1182647
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2018
record_format eric
spellingShingle A Major Making Undertaking: A New Librarian Transforms A Middle School Library into a Makerspace Aligned to High School Career Endorsements
Baker, Sheila F.
Alexander, Bonnie
School Libraries
Librarians
Middle Schools
Library Services
Shared Resources and Services
Alignment (Education)
STEM Education
Educational Change
High Schools
Program Implementation
Academic Achievement
Academic Standards
A Major Making Undertaking: A New Librarian Transforms A Middle School Library into a Makerspace Aligned to High School Career Endorsements Baker, Sheila F. Alexander, Bonnie School Libraries Librarians Middle Schools Library Services Shared Resources and Services Alignment (Education) STEM Education Educational Change High Schools Program Implementation Academic Achievement Academic Standards Learning in makerspaces involves doing, playing, thinking, experimenting, creating, collaborating, mentoring, inquiring, problem-solving, producing, inventing, designing, building, and sharing (Loertscher, Preddy, and Derry 2013). Whatever the character of a makerspace, all makerspaces have the same goal: to actively engage students in open-ended exploration and learning. To encompass this learning, makerspaces have taken on many different personas in school libraries. Some librarians have begun their makerspaces in a small area of the library that consists of a table or two with shoeboxes of Legos, electrical circuitry, and play dough. Other makerspaces are embedded throughout the library and focus on STEM activities including coding, gaming, power tools, laser-cutting, and 3-D printers. Still others include makerspaces that spill beyond the library into the school's classrooms and include STEM, art, music, crafts, and, yes, those shoeboxes full of Legos and modeling clay and dough. One makerspace is not necessarily better than the other--they are just different. This article provides insight into the transformation of a traditional middle school library into a makerspace that focuses on high school endorsements. This particular makerspace was created from the perspective of--and is the brainchild of--a new librarian in her first year of practice.
title A Major Making Undertaking: A New Librarian Transforms A Middle School Library into a Makerspace Aligned to High School Career Endorsements
topic School Libraries
Librarians
Middle Schools
Library Services
Shared Resources and Services
Alignment (Education)
STEM Education
Educational Change
High Schools
Program Implementation
Academic Achievement
Academic Standards
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1182647