Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 1st January 2002
Paperback
Published: 1st January 2007
Paperback, 2nd Revised edition
Published: 15th August 2007
Collaborating to Meet Standards: Teacher/Librarian Partnerships for K-2
By (Author) Toni Buzzeo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Linworth Publishing, Incorporated
1st January 2007
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
372.4
Paperback
296
These standards-based, easy-to-follow collaborative lessons will not only build a strong bridge between the school library and the classroom, but will help educators help students improve their skills and scores. Written for elementary school library media specialists and their K-2 teaching partners, this book coaches readers on methods to meet student literacy standards. In this balanced literacy age, collaboration is a perfect means to address national, state, and local literacy standards.
Collaborating to Meet Literacy Standards is an essential book that models cooperative relationships between library media specialists and teachers in establishing and reaching classroom literacy goals. The specific age group targeted in this volume is K-2; however, the philosophical principles articulated in the introductory chapters extend way beyond particular grade parameters. Toni Buzzeo carefully addresses literacy legislation in today's elementary school curriculum, gives an overview of collaboration efforts between librarians and teachers during the past ten years and suggests successful practices in introducing literacy programs in the classroom. Collaboration is key in any classroom literacy program and the cooperation of administrators, parents, students and school staff is essential. The majority of Collaborating to Meet Literacy Standards consists of fifteen sample literacy-based units actually implemented by teachers and librarians. The creative units can be easily incorporated as written or adapted to fit most literacy programs. The text is praiseworthy for its theoretical context and practical application. Collaborating to Meet Literacy Standards is essential for schools implementing a collaborative literacy-based program. * Catholic Library World *
This subtitle is a more accurate description of the information within. The book opens with a refreshing reality check: No Child Left Behind purports to focus on reading, but envisions reading as little more than decoding and comprehending text. What library professionals consider real readingreading for meaning, reading as a life skill, reading as an integral piece of the more inclusive concept of information literacyis sacrificed, as are many libraries and librarians, for this limited and limiting goal. After acknowledging the constraints now imposed upon library media specialists, Buzzeo makes lemonade by taking these limitations and refocusing what librarians do at the primary level through a different lens: becoming literacy cheerleaders and cultivating collaboration with teachers. The author proposes specific strategies for collaboration to overcome imposed roadblocks and presents a template for unit and lesson development that addresses national standards and satisfies NCLB requirements while still dealing constructively with the nine information literacy standards developed by AASL. The 15 units, complete with black-line masters and written by several different library media professionals, make up most of the book and can help struggling school librarians in their attempts to integrate their philosophy with the difficult currency of present reality. * School Library Journal *
Toni Buzzeo is an author and library media specialist from Buxton, ME.