Domain 3:
Delivery of Service/Instruction
Collaborating with Teachers
As part of our effort to support the district's media literacy goals, Peter McKenna and I spent the month of January co-teaching collaborative lessons on digital and media literacy to students in grades 3-5. In order to prepare our collaborative unit, we dedicated December afternoons, when teachers were engaged in parent-teacher conferences, to developing our media literacy unit; this included meeting with the Edgewood technology/librarian team to learn from their collaboration strategies, reviewing existing media literacy curricula, and establishing our goals for each grade; we then followed up our initial planning sessions with additional meetings and emails to develop, alter, and refine the Common Sense and Be Internet Awesome curricula we used to best meet our students' educational needs and our teaching goals. Students discussed their responsibilities to their online communities and to themselves, developed strategies for handling hurtful online comments, analyzed altered images and videos, grappled with developing norms for chat groups, analyzed and created clickbait, and developed strategies for determining credible sources.
The artifact below includes an image carousel of the collaborative lessons Peter and I co-taught, the clickbait worksheet I created for the 5th graders, and a few examples of the finished clickbait examples created by 5th graders.
Clickbait created by a 5th grader
Clickbait created by a 5th grader
Clickbait created by a 5th grader
Clickbait created by a 5th grader
Another example of collaboration took place when I offered to help a 5th grade teacher with a new poetry project she wanted to do with her students. While, in the past, students wrapped up their immigration unit by writing a diary, this year she wanted to have them write poems instead and was looking for some additional support in implementing this new project. As a former English teacher, I have an extensive background teaching poetry to students, so I offered to use library class time to introduce students to a few foundational concepts in poetry and some simple poetry forms they could use as they completed their projects.
The materials below include the planning emails, the mini-lesson I gave the students about poetry, and the poem worksheets I had students use to begin experimenting with writing poetry.
Planning Emails
Teaching Students
Both my professional and student goal this year was to make the library more accessible to students; for students, this has meant ensuring that they were able to navigate the library at a developmentally-appropriate level, which has included teaching lessons on some of the fundamentals of library organization. It has also meant periodically providing lessons that connect literature with design thinking and extension activities as ways to provide students with different ways of thinking about and engaging with literature.
The artifacts below highlight students learning information literacy skills and engaging in design challenges inspired by picture book read alouds.
Information Fluency Skills
5th grade digital breakout room
5th graders worked in teams to apply a variety of information fluency skills--alphabetization, problem-solving, and library navigation--to escape the library in this digital breakout room activity.
4th grade catalog searches
Over the course of several classes 4th graders worked in pairs to develop their ability to search the library catalog and find titles in the nonfiction section.
2nd grade nonfiction features hunt
In collaboration with the 2nd grade teaching team, 2nd graders learned about nonfiction features, then explored and identified nonfiction features in books.
Design Challenges Inspired by Picture Books
5th Grade
After reading Creepy Pair of Underwear, 5th graders worked in teams, using the design process, to design a pair of creepy underwear for a stuffed bunny.
4th Grade
Fourth grade students worked in groups to create fences from popsicle sticks and clothespins to corral a garden of carrots after reading Creepy Carrots.
3rd Grade
To make sure their creepy crayons couldn't escape, 3rd graders constructed castles from paper cups and popsicle sticks we read Creepy Crayon in class.
2nd Grade
After reading Room on the Broom, 2nd graders worked together to balance paper cup versions of the characters on a broom made out of a pencil and ruler.
Women's History Month Biography Activities
To celebrate Women's History Month, I read biographies to students in kindergarten, 1st, and 2nd grade about women who were pioneers in their respective fields, and then students engaged in hands-on extension activities that brought the lives and work of the women they learned about to life. In kindergarten, students read Mae Among the Stars, and after spring break, will extend both their classroom learning and our library discussion about spaceships and forces, using pompoms and straws. In 1st grade, students read Dinosaur Lady: The Daring Discoveries of Mary Anning, the First Paleontologist and then worked in groups to dig for fossils and recreate their dinosaurs. In 2nd grade, students read The World Is Not a Rectangle: A Portrait of Architect Zaha Hadid and worked in teams, using rectangular index cards, to create their own organic structures. The images below highlight the 1st and 2nd grade extension activities.
1st Grade Paleontology
1st grade paleontologists excavating fossils.
A dinosaur skeleton assembled by 1st graders after careful excavation.
A sketch of what the dinosaur may have looked when it roamed the earth.
2nd Grade Architecture
2nd grade architects with their completed structure.
The non-rectangular structures created by 2nd grade architects.
The non-rectangular structures created by 2nd grade architects.