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8 - Advocacy, Marketing and Evaluating your Library

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 2022

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Summary

Introduction

This chapter looks at how school librarians can plan, market, evaluate and demonstrate their value and impact. It also considers how you can advocate for your role and why this is important.

Advocacy

Research shows that school librarians can make a difference to students’ educational standards:

Strong school libraries are linked to important indicators of student success, including graduation rates and mastery of academic standards. The most substantial and consistent finding is a positive relationship between full-time, qualified school librarians and scores on standards-based language arts, reading, and writing tests, regardless of student demographics and school characteristics.

(Lance and Kachel, 2018, 1–2)

However, there is little UK evidence-based research about the impact of school librarians, a situation that threatens jobs and contributes to negative public opinions about their necessity in the internet age.

The visibility of librarians in society presents a paradox … [There is] potential for the profession to drift and its value and recognition in the world to slowly dissipate.

(Lawton, 2016, Preface)

What is needed across the entire UK is a school library strategy as demonstrated by Scotland in its Vibrant Libraries, Thriving Schools report (Scottish Library and Information Council, 2018). It is not enough to know that the school librarian's work makes a difference and to assume that school stakeholders appreciate it. This knowledge must be demonstrated and communicated within and beyond the school, in fact to governmental level – a mission undertaken by the Great School Libraries campaign (www.greatschoollibraries.org.uk):

All children deserve a great school library because adequately funded, staffed school libraries deliver enhanced and independent learning as well as reading and curriculum support. School libraries contribute to building lifelong readers and support whole school initiatives promoting reading for pleasure. All of this evidence shows us that school libraries are a vital part

(Great School Libraries, 2019)

School staff may have little idea of what a librarian can achieve, their crosscurricula role and their specialist skills of improving the uptake of wider reading and teaching vital information and research skills.

Type
Chapter
Information
Creating a School Library with Impact
A Beginner's Guide
, pp. 113 - 130
Publisher: Facet
Print publication year: 2022

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