![]() Learning through Books, Media and Technology
1996 Administrative Leadership Award for Library Media Services
Editorial: Learning Comes in Many Languages
From Cave Writing to Computers
Primary Languages, Primary sources on the Internet
Update on a Model Library Media Program
1499 Old Bayshore Hwy. Burlingame California 94010
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| FALL 1996 | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Editorial Learning Comes in Many Languages | |||||||||||||||||||||
Choosing a theme for an issue of Good Ideas! is always a bit of a gamble. Will the theme seem relevant at the end of the long timeline from its inception to the circulation of the issue a year later? Will library media teachers recognize their connections to the theme? Will they submit applications? Will their applications highlight the theme? The theme for this 1996 issue of Good Ideas! seemed to select itself. The Curriculum Committee, sponsor of the Good Ideas! newsletter, had also authored the CSLA publication From Library Skills to Information Literacy. Soon after this work was published, Dr. Ann Lathrop, a former member of the Curriculum Committee, challenged us to prepare a supplement to focus on information literacy for English learners and the ways in which library media teachers could meet and were meeting those needs. Good Ideas! could spotlight LMTs and school teams who were making services to speakers of other languages integral to their instructional programs and could motivate others to do the same. This issue of Good Ideas! reflects what we had come to understand through the writing of Information Literate in Any Language: that students' learning needs are the same in any language that is comprehensible to them. When we validate our students' languages and their communities, we recognize that every student lives in a world that is rich with information and resources. Every student brings that world with him/her into the school; the library media center is a place for focusing, sharing, and expanding those individual worlds, and for blending them to enrich the culture of the school and the community. In Information Literate in Any Language, there is a chart that summarizes new approaches to information literacy. It identifies past and current emphases as follows:
It concludes, "The current emphasis, with its focus on the searcher, acknowledges and makes constructive use of the rich diversity of learners, learning styles, languages, and resources in our multicultural, multilingual society." continued on following page Throughout this issue of Good Ideas! the reader will find examples of this current emphasis; for example:
Good Ideas! presents good programs run by good people who make good things happen for and with students---all students. ARTICLES THIS ISSUE:
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