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Explore the impact of libraries on student academic achievement and discover the various ways libraries and librarians provide significant help in improving student learning.
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How Helpful Is Your Library? Peter G. Mohn, LMS Snohomish Freshman Campus 2006 WLMA Conference October 13, 2006
Alaska, 1999 Colorado, 1993; 2000 Pennsylvania, 2000 Texas, 2001 Oregon, 2001 Florida, 2002 Iowa, 2002 Massachusetts, 2002 New Mexico, 2002 Michigan, 2003 Minnesota, 2003 Missouri, 2003 North Carolina, 2003 Indiana, 2004 Ohio, 2004 Illinois, 2005 State-wide Library Studies
Current Studies in Progress • New Jersey • Delaware
Numbers • Well over 3,000 schools • Well over 3,000,000 students
Variables Controlled • Ethnic background • Social Economic Status • Rural, suburban, and urban areas • Technology • Parents education
Collective Results • 10 - 15% percentage point rise in reading, and literacy scores on state-wide tests • Positive rises in student academic achievement over-all • Results tied to collection size, budget, staffing, collaborative planning, technology, and student use of libraries
How Do Libraries Help? We have the data of libraries impacting student academic achievement on state-wide tests, and student learning, but what “helps” do libraries and librarians provide to significantly improve student learning?
Ohio Study, 2004 • Student Learning Through Ohio School Libraries by Todd, Kuhlthau, and OELMA • 13,123 students and 879 faculty at 39 schools • Surveyed 48 “helps” • Libraries helped 99.44% of students • Libraries helped 25.54% of students on all 48 statements • Libraries helped 60.3% of students on 43 of the statements
What is an Effective Library Program? • Adequate & appropriate credentialed staff and support staff • Librarians involvement in collaborative planning • Developing print & digital collections • Motivating students to read • Administering a curriculum-centered library program • Facilitating access to the library & its technology
Non-Effective School Libraries What happens to the levels of help in a non-effective school library, and does this help explain why students with non-effective library programs score lower on standardized tests?
SFC Study, (in progress) • Doesn’t meet effective library levels • Two phase study • Were there any significant differences • What recommendations should be given to improve the “helps” in the SFC LMC
2004 SFC Study, part 1 • Student and faculty survey based on Ohio faculty survey • Compare SFC students & faculty responses • Compare SFC responses to the Ohio study • Recommend changes to the LMC program
2004 SFC Study Findings • 99.1% of the students indicated the LMC and its services help students • 50% of the students say LMC helps students on all 48 help statements • 63.4% of the students say LMC helps students on 43 of the 48 statements • Faculty & students agreed on rank priority • Faculty means significantly lower than the Ohio faculty
2004 SFC Study Conclusions • Same conclusions as Ohio Study • LMC is a dynamic agent of active learning • Understanding how to research effectively • Students understand how to identify key ideas • Students analyze, synthesize, evaluate, & apply information • Students develop personal conclusions
2004 SFC Study Recommendations • Formalize collaborative process with classroom teachers • Improve computer technology • Create LMC web page to enhance student access to information outside of school • Promote more reading opportunities • Survey the Class of 2008
2005 SFC Study (in progress) • Compare SFC & Ohio student percentages • Compare SFC & Ohio student means • Compare SFC & Ohio student Most Helpful percentages • Compare 04 & 05 SFC student block means • Compare SFC & Ohio student block means • Compare SFC & Ohio faculty block means
2005 SFC Study Findings • SFC student percentages lower • SFC student means lower • SFC student Most Helpful percentages are lower • 05 SFC student block means significantly lower • SFC & Ohio block means mixed • SFC & Ohio faculty block means significantly lower in every block
2005 SFC Study Conclusions • Fewer students perceive the LMC as helping them in their academic & personal pursuits • SFC students perceive the LMC as helpful as Ohio students do, except in reading • A large minority of SFC students do not perceive the LMC as helping them with their reading • A larger percentage of SFC students don’t perceive the LMC as helping them • SFC faculty has a lower perception of how the LMC help their students in all areas
2005 SFC Study Recommendations • Integrate information literacy K-12 • Develop K-12 curriculum • Work closely with principals • Shared collaborative planning times • Improve reading opportunities • Bring budget inline with standards • Collaborate with reading teacher • Improve library collection • Provide more reading activities • Continue technology improvements • Pass a technology bond
Recommendations cont. • Conduct state-wide library study • Effective & non-effective schools • Include schools with certified & non-certified librarians • Conduct district elementary, middle school, & upper campus study • Change scale from 0-4 to 1-5 • Use 57 help survey • Change N/A to No Help • Compare results to Delaware Study • Take results to legislature for support
Conducting Your Own Study http://sfc.sno.wednet.edu/LMC/Docs/Workshops.htm
Ohio Study http://www.oelma.org/StudentLearning/default.asp
Pre-Survey Planning • Who can help you with your study? • Find a good statistic book you can use • Use the KISS principal • Decide online, Excel or paper? • Random sampling • At least 30 students per grade • Time of the year to conduct survey • Use summer to write study
Likert Survey • Percentages & Means • Total • Grade • Gender • Most Helpful • Standard Deviation • Two-Way t Test for Two Means • Only if comparing Ohio or Delaware studies
Giving Survey - Paper • Get teacher buy-in • Randomly select students (blind) • Either have teacher give survey, or follow a script when you do (neutral voice) • Give faculty the survey yourself
Organizing Results • Sort survey by grade and gender • Mark one page at a time, less chance • Have people help with scoring • Throw out bad surveys • Create tables before writing • Type up written appendices • Use Todd’s survey as guideline • Don’t be afraid of your own conclusions • State statistical facts
Writing Paper • Parts of your study • Title • Table of Contents • 2 - Executive Summaries • Introduction • Literature Review • Methodology • Results • Conclusions • Recommendations • References • Appendices
Writing Hints • You don’t need a large literature section • Concentrate on major themes • Keep paper to around 30 pages • Not counting references & appendices • Combine results & conclusions • You don’t need a large reference section • Don’t write more than 2-3 hours a day • Try to complete a section each day
Questions? Peter.mohn@sno.wednet.edu