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Hauptverfasser: Emerson, Lisa, Kilpin, Ken, White, Senga, Greenhow, Anna, Macaskill, Anne, Feekery, Angela, Lamond, Heather, Doughty, Catherine, O'Connor, Rose
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2018
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1245505
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author Emerson, Lisa
Kilpin, Ken
White, Senga
Greenhow, Anna
Macaskill, Anne
Feekery, Angela
Lamond, Heather
Doughty, Catherine
O'Connor, Rose
author_facet Emerson, Lisa
Kilpin, Ken
White, Senga
Greenhow, Anna
Macaskill, Anne
Feekery, Angela
Lamond, Heather
Doughty, Catherine
O'Connor, Rose
Emerson, Lisa
Kilpin, Ken
White, Senga
Greenhow, Anna
Macaskill, Anne
Feekery, Angela
Lamond, Heather
Doughty, Catherine
O'Connor, Rose
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Under-Recognised, Underused, and Undervalued: School Libraries and Librarians in New Zealand Secondary School Curriculum Planning and Delivery Emerson, Lisa Kilpin, Ken White, Senga Greenhow, Anna Macaskill, Anne Feekery, Angela Lamond, Heather Doughty, Catherine O'Connor, Rose Foreign Countries Secondary Schools School Libraries Librarians Teacher Attitudes Librarian Attitudes Library Services National Curriculum Library Role Librarian Teacher Cooperation Curriculum Implementation Barriers Professionalism Information Literacy Multiple international studies have confirmed the positive impact of library services and teacher--librarian partnerships on delivering curriculum outcomes and quality student learning in secondary schools. Despite this, there are indications internationally that school libraries are in decline. This article uses qualitative data from a national survey of teachers and librarians in New Zealand secondary schools to investigate teacher and librarian attitudes and beliefs about the role of library services as a space to help develop "The New Zealand Curriculum's" (Ministry of Education, 2007) ("NZC") future-focused vision of knowledgeable, critically and creatively engaged citizens, and the teaching of its attendant competencies. Our findings suggest that teachers' and librarians' beliefs and attitudes towards the library and to each other differ significantly, leading to an underutilisation of library services as a central resource for effective curriculum implementation. We conclude by arguing for a systemic revision of how libraries are positioned, staffed, and resourced in schools, that will change teacher and management beliefs to more closely align with the espoused pedagogical position of "NZC" and, ultimately, and most importantly, to engender sustained gains in student learning.
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ1245505
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2018
record_format eric
spellingShingle Under-Recognised, Underused, and Undervalued: School Libraries and Librarians in New Zealand Secondary School Curriculum Planning and Delivery
Emerson, Lisa
Kilpin, Ken
White, Senga
Greenhow, Anna
Macaskill, Anne
Feekery, Angela
Lamond, Heather
Doughty, Catherine
O'Connor, Rose
Foreign Countries
Secondary Schools
School Libraries
Librarians
Teacher Attitudes
Librarian Attitudes
Library Services
National Curriculum
Library Role
Librarian Teacher Cooperation
Curriculum Implementation
Barriers
Professionalism
Information Literacy
Under-Recognised, Underused, and Undervalued: School Libraries and Librarians in New Zealand Secondary School Curriculum Planning and Delivery Emerson, Lisa Kilpin, Ken White, Senga Greenhow, Anna Macaskill, Anne Feekery, Angela Lamond, Heather Doughty, Catherine O'Connor, Rose Foreign Countries Secondary Schools School Libraries Librarians Teacher Attitudes Librarian Attitudes Library Services National Curriculum Library Role Librarian Teacher Cooperation Curriculum Implementation Barriers Professionalism Information Literacy Multiple international studies have confirmed the positive impact of library services and teacher--librarian partnerships on delivering curriculum outcomes and quality student learning in secondary schools. Despite this, there are indications internationally that school libraries are in decline. This article uses qualitative data from a national survey of teachers and librarians in New Zealand secondary schools to investigate teacher and librarian attitudes and beliefs about the role of library services as a space to help develop "The New Zealand Curriculum's" (Ministry of Education, 2007) ("NZC") future-focused vision of knowledgeable, critically and creatively engaged citizens, and the teaching of its attendant competencies. Our findings suggest that teachers' and librarians' beliefs and attitudes towards the library and to each other differ significantly, leading to an underutilisation of library services as a central resource for effective curriculum implementation. We conclude by arguing for a systemic revision of how libraries are positioned, staffed, and resourced in schools, that will change teacher and management beliefs to more closely align with the espoused pedagogical position of "NZC" and, ultimately, and most importantly, to engender sustained gains in student learning.
title Under-Recognised, Underused, and Undervalued: School Libraries and Librarians in New Zealand Secondary School Curriculum Planning and Delivery
topic Foreign Countries
Secondary Schools
School Libraries
Librarians
Teacher Attitudes
Librarian Attitudes
Library Services
National Curriculum
Library Role
Librarian Teacher Cooperation
Curriculum Implementation
Barriers
Professionalism
Information Literacy
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1245505