Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Genrefying Fiction, Part 1.2

OK, here we go! We received our colored transparent label protectors today and pulled a few books to see how they will work. I fear some of the colors are too dark....but in the full plan I need more than just a few colors. So, these will have to work. We're starting with Historical Fiction and working our way down the shelves labeling what looks obvious. We'll continue with each of our five genres (leaving Realistic Fiction with no colored label for now). More later as we make progress!




Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Today in MHS Library

Lit over Lunch (LOL) met today to discuss Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children. We all enjoyed Ranson Riggs first novel and some have already read Hollow City! We shared the scary moments and marveled at the vintage photographs (by the way, if you listen to the audiobook, be sure to grab a book and look at the pictures).  Joa LaVille brought pizza courtesy of the Friends of the Marshalltown Public Library (Yum)! We talked about genres and can't decide between Mystery, Horror, or Fantasy!

Our LOL for May 12 will be "Poetry as Change, Change as Poetry" and a chance to meet poet and anti-violence activist Purvi Shah, of Brooklyn, who is visiting Iowa with the Grin City Collective of Grinnell College. No preparation will be required to attend this LOL (but make sure to register with Mrs. Inhelder, Mrs. Fritzell, or me). Here is her website, if you want to learn more about her: www.purvipoets.net




Monday, April 20, 2015

School Library Month Contest Week 3

Yep, another week during School Library Month and another contest! 




Guess how many books our top reading 9th grader has checked out and read from MHS Library this school year?  (Hint: between 200-300 books).  

MHS Staff and Students: closest guess wins a prize! Ready-Go!


Friday, April 17, 2015

Genrefying Fiction, Part 1 (the prequel)!

Discussion on the Iowa School Librarian SLIK-12 Listserve I follow and conferences I attend continue to talk about setting up a school library like a bookstore....where books are categorized by genre or categories rather than Dewey Classification. Lots of opinions out there and the one that makes the most sense to me is to do what makes the best sense for my students. I know from my Library Science Master's Thesis long, long ago (longer than I am willing to admit to publicly) ANY "call to attention" for a book helps it be found by students and boosts circulation; and display that assists students in finding books helps them be successful  and independent in the library. Even just setting a book from the bottom shelf to display on the top of the shelves helps. Face-forward display helps. Labeling with a sticker helps. Most importantly, I hear from those that have made this change, students are more able to find books on their OWN!

I recently attended the IASL 2015 conference and hearing Jennifer LaGarde (Keynote Speaker) talk about Genre-fying sealed my decision. Anything that helps kids find books more easily is WINNING! Thanks Library Girl for the boost! Plus, the fiction section has historically been pulled out of Dewey's 813 (and no one seems bothered by that).

I know from experience and research that some students will use the OPAC (online public access catalog) readily to find books. This change won't affect they way they find books. All the books will still be in the catalog, the sublocation field will indicate where in the library the book is, and a color-coded label on the spine will help identify it. But some students prefer to walk along the shelves and look at titles, covers, and are the ones that often ask "where can I find a book with a sports theme?" Except for a few authors, students usually ask for books by genre. These are the students I hope to reach. They (for whatever reason) don't want to use OPAC even though we use it extensively for research and finding nonfiction books. I get that--I like to browse the shelves as well, it's fun to visit a large book store and just look at the covers. It's the browsers I hope to help better find the books they are looking for. I'll still teach classification; I'll still teach keyword searching in OPAC; I'll still teach kids that books are shelved in an order. Can't give that up--it's such a GREAT way to teach search skills that students will later use life-long: for databases, the Internet, college libraries, public libraries. I do agree with the literature: it's better to teach classification; just not the particular system.

What about nonfiction, you ask? Going to leave that in Dewey order. Lots of advice out there about "ditching Dewey" but that seems like a step back. I feel the categories in Dewey work just fine; the books are already in groupings. And when the Animal books are in two different Dewey locations, I exert local authority and classify them together (where my students will look for them).

Goals:
  1. Make fiction books easier for students to find independently by classifying them by genre. High school students are usually in a hurry to find a book, they don't have time to leisurely browse. More often, they end up just grabbing a book that doesn't interest them because they are out of time. And some (OK many) teens are reluctant to ask for help. I'll still offer help (it's my favorite part of my job) and it allows me to talk with students about books.
  2. More easily identify genres that are low in numbers. When the books are arranged alphabetically, I can't really see if we are heavy in one genre or lacking in another.
  3. Help spread out the browsing when entire classes visit the library. Lessen crowding in the shelves.
I've already started this process.  Graphic Novels and Foreign Language titles are already in their own section, labeled with a sticker, and designated as a sublocation in our library catalog. Looking at a collection of more than 6000 fiction titles I can honestly say it looks to be a daunting task. More daunting is the moving of all the titles in to sections.

I've researched BISAC classifications, asked my Iowa colleagues that have already Genre-fied their libraries, attended break-out sessions at conferences, dug out that Master's Thesis I wrote so long ago, etc. for over two years. I'm finally ready to take the plunge. Here's my plan:
  1. Weed! We currently have about 6000 fiction books. I'll pull for condition first, then age (avoiding classics). I'll ignore circulation statistics for now because I fear one reason they aren't circulating is because students can't find them!
  2. Start identifying fiction books in these categories (these are the most asked for by students) and label them with a tinted label protector. No books will be moved at this stage, just starting to identify genres.  New orders will be labeled before they even hit the shelves, and I'll slowly go through books on the shelves to categorize them. I'll make sure the genre is in the MARC record.
    • Science Fiction (dystopia, futuristic, robots, space)
    • Fantasy (dragons, witches, fairies, Middle Earth)
    • Horror/Thrillers (Zombies, Vampires, Werewolves)
    • Sports
    • Historical Fiction (Westerns)
    • Realistic Fiction (no sticker for now)
  3. Connect with my teachers to determine "common" genres in their teaching (consistency).
  4. Create signage to help students know what the colored labels mean.
  5. I'll come in over the summer to rearrange the sections above, and I plan to keep similar genres close. All books will be scanned into our cataloging system with a sublocation, I won't change spine labels (that will save time and the expense of printing new labels).
  6. Because I'm not sure how far to categorize Realistic Fiction....that's going to be last.  I fear this is going to be a huge section, but I am not sure how far to go. These subcategories might include:
    • Action & Adventure (Crime)
    • Romance/Relationships
    • Urban
    • LGBT
    • Mystery/Suspense
    • Humor
    • War & Military
    • and more?
  7. Not looking forward to those books that hit multiple sections....but as my colleagues have indicated, pick the one that makes the most sense for my students. In fact, I think I'll ask my students!
  8. Maybe one day all the books will be boxed up for some reason, then we can shelve according to the stickers!  Voila, Genre-fyied!
I'll post our progress. Colored label protectors were ordered TODAY! Here we go!

Some of the advice I've followed....
http://www.librarygirl.net/2013/12/five-more-conversations-about-school.html
http://liberrygurl.blogspot.com/2012_11_01_archive.html
http://www.readerpants.net/2011/09/genre-fication-project.html
https://christyminton.wordpress.com/2014/05/04/genrefying-a-high-school-library-a-detailed-planning-document/
https://www.bisg.org/complete-bisac-subject-headings-2014-edition


    Thursday, April 16, 2015

    Today in MHS Library

    MHS Hyperstream Cyberdefense team preparing for IT-Olympics!


    Wednesday, April 15, 2015

    Peeling the Discards

    Yes, books do have a life-span! And when they are no longer accurate or readable, they are sent for recycling. MHS student volunteers have been busy "peeling" the hardcovers off our old books. Who knows, they may end up as a furnace filter or an egg carton!


    Today in MHS Library

    Mrs. Willman's 10th graders continue to research in prep for their Shakespeare Unit. Today students are exploring print books and eBooks then creating citations SUPER quick in NoodleTools with WorldCat records!



    Tuesday, April 14, 2015

    Today in MHS Library

    Mrs. Willman's English classes are in the library this week - English 10 students are learning about researching in prep for Shakespeare Unit. Students are finding resources with Destiny and using NoodleTools to write an Annotated Bibliography with the Big 6 Research Process!


    Monday, April 13, 2015

    Iowa Association of School Librairans

    This weekend I had the pleasure of attending the Iowa Association of School Librarians' Spring Conference. I always find this event refreshing and energizing....I come home with so many great ideas and appreciate networking with other school librarians. I'm honored to be a part of this organization and profession that so passionately wants to help our students!

    Highlights

    Attending with my principal! Aiddy Phomvisay was one of 4 administrators to come to the conference! So appreciative of his support of MHS Library! We heard great ideas about setting up a makerspace at the secondary level, sharing with administrators, and making our library program EPIC.

    Be the Superhero Librarian for your students....result will be an Outstanding Library Program! Tell the story about what's going on in our school, our library ("our" is intentional)!


    Be the change, lead the change! Instead of challenging students, help them challenge themselves! Loved hearing from Junior Ian Coon about #studentvoice!




    Have fun, be crazy, provide services, be indispensable, be kind, be courageous, be helpful, be flexible, be willing, be a leader, be EPIC for our #1 clientele: students!



    HUGE thanks to the organizers and presenters at this year's conference. It. Was. Epic.