Print

Print


*CALL FOR CHAPTER PROPOSALS - EXTENDED*



*Proposal Submission Deadline Extended: April 27th, 2012*

* *

*Collaborative Instructional Design in Library and Teacher Partnerships*

A book edited by Dr. Kathryn Kennedy and Dr. Lucy Santos Green

Georgia Southern University

College of Education

To be published by IGI Global:

http://bit.ly/xPKxcv

* *

*Introduction*

School library media specialists are more readily becoming integral parts
of P-12 schools. Once designated storytellers and information resource
providers, today’s library professionals are considered experts in
technology integration, information literacy and curriculum alignment,
essentially becoming co-teachers (Bishop & Larimer, 1999). This shift is
also evident in ALA/AASL Standards for Initial Preparation of School
Librarians (2010), which continue to promote the idea of librarian as
teacher, instructional partner, and leader within the school community and
beyond.



The importance of forming collaborative relationships with administrators
and classroom teachers has become an integral component in advocating for a
school library media specialist at every school (Lamb & Johnson, 2008).
These relationships have the potential to positively affect the learning
environment, while equally acknowledging both the teacher’s and media
specialist’s contributions to student learning.  (Muronago & Harada, 1999;
Naslund & Giustini, 2008).



While instructional collaborations have been well documented since the
1980s, highlighting these relationships is extremely important now,
especially when considering the push for student development of 21st
century skills. Even so, establishing instructional partnerships with
classroom teachers is challenging due to many constraints including,
personnel, budget limitations and time.  As evidenced by the field of
research and conference foci over the past decade, technology integration
specialists, administrators and library professionals continue to struggle
with the concept and implementation of collaboration. Despite the plethora
of robust collaborative digital tools, and the virtual collaborative
possibilities these present, many educators continue to fall back on the
comfort of face-to-face interactions. *Collaborative Instructional Design
in Library and Teacher Partnerships* will highlight best practices and
innovative technological approaches in the establishment and maintenance of
media specialist-teacher partnerships by providing examples that illuminate
and reflect on the quality relationships that exist.



*Objective of the Book*

Set up as a resource guide, this book acts as a how-to manual for fostering
collaboration between classroom teachers and school library media
specialists in the 21st century. The book will be divided into two
sections: the main book and the field guide. There will be 10-15 chapters
highlighting best practices in school library media specialist/teacher
collaborations using real world examples.



This publication, built on the theoretical concepts of case based learning,
knowledge repositories, collaborative coaching, professional learning
communities, teacher mentors and situated cognition, will use real-world
examples and stories collected from the field to demonstrate what
collaboration looks like in the 21st century school. It will build on the
ALA’s "Empowering Learners" by guiding teachers and school library media
specialists through the process of beginning, nurturing and maintaining
collaborative instructional partnerships using new and emerging digital
technologies.



*Target Audience*

This book explores current collaborative relationships between school
library media specialists and classroom teachers. It will be used as a
practical guide for professional development, higher education course
development, joint lesson planning, and the development of online
collaborative units. The target audience includes P-12 school library media
specialists, teachers, professional development specialists, and
administrators, as well as teacher educators, school library media
educators, and researchers.



Potential topics include, but are not limited to, the following:



Meeting NCATE-ALA/AASL standards

Content-focused Collaborations (Case Studies)

Information Literacy & Research Collaborations (Research/Inquiry Real-World
Cases)

Collaboration for Community Development

The Role of Technology in Collaboration

Virtual Collaboration

Collaboration for Professional Development

Best Practices

Fostering Administrative Support

Establishing procedures for collaborative planning

Collaboration and Advocacy



Contributors may also select to submit to the workbook section in the
following topics:



Universal Design for Learning Templates

Collaborative Lesson Plan Templates

Information Literacy Lesson Plan Templates

Online Module Templates

School Librarians as Online Course Designers

Student Needs Assessments

Teacher Survey Templates



*Submission Procedure*

Researchers and practitioners are invited to submit *on or before April
27th, 2012, *a 2-3 page chapter proposal clearly explaining the mission and
concerns of his or her proposed chapter. Authors of accepted proposals will
be notified by *May 19th, 2012,* about the status of their proposals and
sent chapter guidelines. Full chapters are expected to be submitted by *July
20th, 2012*. All submitted chapters will be reviewed on a double-blind peer
review basis. Chapters should be written in the 6th edition of APA format
and submitted via email to both [log in to unmask] and
[log in to unmask]



*Publisher*

This book is scheduled to be published by IGI Global (formerly Idea Group
Inc.), publisher of the “Information Science Reference” (formerly Idea
Group Reference), “Medical Information Science Reference,” “Business
Science Reference,” and “Engineering Science Reference” imprints. For
additional information regarding the publisher, please visit
www.igi-global.com. This publication is anticipated to be released in 2013.



*Important Dates*

*April 27th, 2012:            *Proposal Submission Deadline

*May 19th, 2012:             *Notification of Acceptance

*July 20th, 2012:             *Full Chapter Submission

*Sept 14th, 2012:            *Review Results Returned

*Dec 7th, 2012:               *Final Chapter Submission

-- 
Lucy Green, Ed.D.
Assistant Professor
Dept. of Leadership,
Technology, and Human
Development
Georgia Southern University
P.O. Box 8131
Statesboro, GA 30460-8131
[log in to unmask]
http://bradandlucygreen.com
Twitter: lucysantosgreen <http://twitter.com/#!/lucysantosgreen>