Mulit-award winning New Zealand author Mandy Hager is best known as a writer for young adults, though her published work also includes novels for adults, non-fiction resources for youth, scripts and short stories. She has won numerous awards, including being awarded the Margaret Mahy Book of the Year award, and the Best Young Adult fiction Award from the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults for her novel Singing Home the Whale in 2015.
Listen to this wonderful story here. Mandy supports school libraries and librarians with this cool shelfie. We treasure her!
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October is International School Library Month (ISLM), an annual celebration of school libraries worldwide. Find ways you can lead the celebration, participate and advocate for the importance of school libraries, library professionals, and the students that make them great!
The 2020 theme for ISLM is “Finding Your Way to Good Health and Well Being”. It is based on one of the UNSDG goals i.e. UN Sustainable Development Goal #3 “Good Health and Well Being”. This year we are inviting participants to think about and celebrate the link between books, reading, school libraries, good health and well being. Reading changed my life Here is another amazing children's author who is supporting our campaign. Thank you Swapna Haddow. Gerald Rillstone interviewed librarians from Wainuiomata and Rāroa Intermediates about the School Libraries Transform campaign. Both librarians stressed the importance of having a well supported school library at their schools but that not all schools in Aotearoa New Zealand are as lucky.
"Long time Wainuiomata Intermediate school librarian Nanette Meadows knows only too well the importance of a well resourced library." "Rāroa Normal Intermediate School Library manager Clare Forrest is a passionate advocate for school libraries and says there is no mandate by the Ministry of Education for a school to have a library." Help fight for all schools in New Zealand by signing the campaign petition. As it is Mental Health Awareness Week we thought we would share with you some transformational stories. Not only are libraries great places for Reading Engagement, they are safe inclusive environments where the hauora and well being needs of all our students, especially our diverse, vulnerable and struggling students, are met. Here's a story about how a New Zealand school library supported a student . . . In our school we have a daily report system called "Check in-Check Out" or CICO. It is one of my jobs in the library. The students are referred to us through the Deans or Senior management. They come in the morning to pick up their form, I give a cherry morning greeting for them and send them on their way to class. In the afternoon they drop their form back off to me and we go through it together, and we chat about the day, what went well and what fell apart.
I get to know students that never would normally come into the library. I get to know our characters, our Year 10 boys who are pushing the boundaries and our students who just struggle even to be here. Is this on my job description? No! Do I love doing this? Yes. Meet Michael. A Year 10 student on CICO - sent because he was wagging, missing classes and completely disengaged. He did not come in for his CICO form so for the first few days I had to hunt him down - good for the daily step tally. Eventually he realised I cared about him and his story and he started to pick the forms up and drop them off. He started to feel safe in our space and then one day, he did something that surprised me - he issued a book out. I didn't say anything- incognito for a while I thought was best. The last thing a Year 10 needs is a nagging old lady librarian. Then he got another book out. He has taken out 5 this year, all nicely spaced out - so he is reading them. Not bad I think! Michael has issues with his hearing and once he knew I would listen to him talk and talk so he could listen, he spent more time in the office. He started to do well on CICO, teachers started to give really positive comments and get off his case about the wrong shoes. Finally they saw he mattered more and that Michael was a creative, artsy, deep thinker. When he started to reveal himself, we all could see the depth of his mind and the beauty locked in it. Michael started to flourish. He was no longer on CICO. He found new friends, safe ones, my library crew. And now he reads and we talk about it. His last book was "Frozen Charlotte" by Alex Bell. Michael has 30 Credits, and he will pass Level 1 NCEA. Last year we wondered if he would make it another week. Michael smiles as I walk past him and the library crew who clutter the office every morning. And I smile because I know school libraries transform. Two of the important services that school librarians provide for their students and school communities are readers advisory and collection management. What that means is that school librarians find and purchase the best books that will serve the needs of their users, and then they make sure they get into the hands of those that need them. All students in Aotearoa need books containing te reo and written by Māori. Here is a collection of some of them. Schools without libraries or librarians have more trouble making this happen. #schoollibrariestransform We would like to acknowledge and thank Te Rōpū Whakahau for the gift of our School Libraries Transform translations into te reo. Ka whakaihiihi te whare taonga a kura Ka whakaihiihi te whare pukapuka a kura Te Rōpū Whakahau is the leading national body that represents Māori engaged in Libraries, Culture, Knowledge, Information, Communication and Systems Technology in Aotearoa New Zealand. Te Rōpū Whakahau is a Māori association guided by the whakataukī waiho i te toipoto, kaua i te toiroa and is founded on four core values: Whanaungatanga, Manaakitanga, Kaitiakitanga and Te Reo Māori. Te Rōpū Whakahau supports practitioners and their organisations to empower whānau, hapū and iwi by providing development opportunities, indigenous and multicultural partnerships, and championing best practice around services, cultural responsiveness and accountability within the profession.
Check out their great resources: https://trw.org.nz/resources/ Mā te kimi ka kite, Mā te kite ka mōhio, Mā te mōhio ka mārama Seek and discover. Discover and know. Know and become enlightened. Learning is a journey. It starts with a conscious effort to seek knowledge. Upon seeking, you will surely discover a brand new thing or see a familiar object in a totally new light. Eventually, the things you know will lead you to become wise beyond your years. Seek. Discover. Know. Be enlightened. https://www.thetereomaoriclassroom.co.nz/ http://www.schoollibrariestransform.org.nz/ Students from Queenstown Primary School share their love of their school library. We think that Queenstown Primary School is lucky to be one of the 35% of schools in New Zealand Aotearoa that has a school librarian. Thank you school librarian Julia Morum for providing such a wonderful asset for her students. |
AuthorSLANZA - School Library Association of New Zealand Aotearoa Archives
November 2020
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