Looking @ the ‘Giants’ Who Empowered This Teacher Librarian

Looking @ the 'Giants' Who Empowered This Teacher Librarian - On World Teachers Day it's fitting to reflect that great mentors empower us to make a difference in the lives of others. Sir Isaac Newton captured my thoughts perfectly: "If I have seen further it is by standing on ye sholders of Giants." Thank you to the 'giants' who have influenced my life. #NoSweatLibrary #inspirationWorld Teachers’ Day, celebrated every year on October 5th, is the anniversary of the adoption of the 1966 ILO/UNESCO Recommendation concerning the Status of Teachers. That document begins with the assertion that “the right to education is a fundamental human right” and then recognizes “the essential role of teachers in educational advancement and the importance of their contribution to the development of man and modern society.” The recommendation continues with a set of 146 standards outlining the rights and responsibilities for teachers throughout the world.

The theme for the year I write this article is “Teaching in Freedom, Empowering Teachers” and I reflect on why I became a teacher and who empowered me to pursue this noble profession?

Why did I become a teacher?

From my earliest years I heard my paternal grandmother talk about her teaching experiences, and my mother told me I talked of being a teacher even before I began school. Throughout my own schooling I admired all my teachers and worked hard to be a good student, even if my behavior taxed their patience. I loved learning, and I often helped other students understand complex concepts or work through assignments they struggled with. In college, students I didn’t know would approach me to help them, having heard from others of my willingness to tutor peers.

I spent my first 2 years of college in Science, a year in Business, then switched to Social Science, but inevitably I fulfilled my inner desire and earned my teaching certification—it took an extra year of studies, but I found my true purpose in life.

The joy from seeing someone finally “get it”
cannot be surpassed!

I later became a School Librarian to expand my teaching beyond a single classroom, and that’s another decision I know was right for me. Being a School Librarian has enlarged my vision of education to encompass every student, every teacher, every subject, and a myriad of effective teaching strategies for any need. When health issues made it necessary for me to retire, I continued sharing my expertise through LM_NET, through this Looking Backward blog, and through No Sweat Library, my Teachers Pay Teachers store.

Who Empowered Me?

During my writing journey for this blog I frequently think of those who have most influenced me as a writer, as a Teacher, and as a School Librarian. In a 1676 letter to Robert Hooke, Sir Isaac Newton wrote “If I have seen further it is by standing on ye sholders of Giants,” paraphrasing the words that John of Salisbury attributes to Bernard of Chartres, 500 years before Newton:

We [the Moderns] are like dwarves perched on the shoulders of giants [the Ancients], and thus we are able to see more and farther…because we are carried aloft and elevated by the magnitude of the giants.

My mentors gave me the power to make a difference in the lives of the students and teachers with whom I come in contact. Thus I share with you readers my paraphrase of Newton and a dedication to the incredible people who have most influenced my life path, who have helped me become the Teacher and School Librarian I wanted to be, and who continue to inspire me to share with others, so they, too, can realize their dreams.

Dedication to those who have helped me become what I am and to do what I do.

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3 Ways to Use Quotes in the School Library

3 Ways to Use Quotes in the School Library - Quotations inspire & motivate us, and a great quote can prompt student questioning and creative thinking. School Librarians can use quotes in 3 ways: as book teasers, to illuminate Library Lessons, and as promotional displays for the School Library. #NoSweatLibraryQuotes are very popular on blogs and social media because people find them inspiring and motivating. Quotes are also useful in the School Library—a great quote can prompt student questioning and creative thinking in ways that a mere statement, or even a good question, cannot.

As a School Librarian I use quotes 3 different ways:

  • A reading teaser to arouse interest in a book.
  • In Library Lessons to highlight a theme or enhance a concept.
  • As promotional displays on bulletin boards and library walls to advocate for the School Library.

QUOTES AS TEASERS

Many School Librarians use quotations during booktalks, especially the first line on the first page. We all know how enticing that first line can be:

  • “Call me Ishmael.”
  • “It was the best of times; it was the worst of times.”
  • “In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.”
  • “I considered saying no.” (from my daughter’s first published book)

Use a Quote to Entice Students to Read - Use a quote to show students why reading the first page of a book can help them decide whether to read the rest of it. Give them my IT IS FOR ME checklist to help them even more. #NoSweatLibraryI ‘tease’ the first line of a book to demonstrate to students why the first page is on the IT IS FOR ME! checklist that helps them choose a good book.

A librarian colleague has a wall of windows facing into a hallway, and students can write a favorite book quote on the glass with brightly colored markers.

I don’t have large windows, but when students talk about a good book, I give them a color 3” x 5” index card to write a quote and staple it to their grade level bulletin board.

QUOTES FOR LIBRARY LESSONS

I learned the value of using a quotation to start a lesson while collaborating with a student teacher on a folktales lesson. She displayed a quote from John Lennon on a presentation slide as students entered the library:

Reality leaves a lot to the imagination.

You could see the anticipation on their faces as they read it and wondered what the lesson would be about. After that experience I began to use quotations to give students a taste of a forthcoming Library Lesson.

My favorite lesson starter is for Night of the Notables, our 8g culminating project. It’s such an inspirational way to introduce students to the significance of the 200+ Notables they can choose to embody. I also place this quote as a sign on their grade level bulletin board to excite them about the coming event.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow quote

We can also use quotes during Library Lessons to illuminate a concept outside a student’s normal understanding. My Renaissance Brown-Bag Biography Lesson is the year’s first research project for 6g Advanced Academics students. These middle school students cannot comprehend a time when there was no public education and few could read, so I begin my lesson by telling them that 1450 is an important date in history because invention of the printing press made reading a crucial skill. I then quote excerpts from the book Disappearance of Childhood by Neil Postman, including these:

So powerful—perhaps even magical—was the capacity to read that it could save a man from the gallows. “The said Paul reads, to be branded; the said William does not read, to be hanged.” (p.32)

Of 204 men sentenced to death for a first offense …, 95 of them pleaded “benefit of clergy,” which meant that they could meet the challenge of reading a sentence from the Bible, and therefore, would be spared from the gallows. (p.40)

Students are much more interested in researching this time period after learning that the ability to read could literally save your life!

QUOTES AS PROMOTIONAL DISPLAYS

At my first staff development as a new librarian, the principal shared a quote which I placed in large letters above the circulation desk and often use it to encourage students:

“Everything you need for your success is within you.”

Bulletin Board Quotes Can Promote the School Library - Learn how School Librarians can customize bulletin boards with quotes to promote reading and using the library. Join my email group & learn more with my FREE ebook "Purposeful Library Bulletin Boards." #NoSweatLibraryBulletin boards can promote our School Library Program to students, faculty, administration, and visitors. I customize 3 library bulletin boards near grade level hallways to coordinate the grade’s classroom content. Each bulletin board has a few rotating features that include a quotation or meme to promote reading and using the library:

  • An English Language Arts sign for each grading period’s theme:
    • Prejudice & hatred arise from seeing only differences. Tolerance comes from recognizing similarities.
    • Open books encourage open minds.
    • What we see depends mainly on what we look for. (John Lubbock, statesman)
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  • A sign promoting each grade’s Special Social Studies Collection:
    • Reading is a window to the world.
    • The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants. (Thomas Jefferson)
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  • Infographics of online services for subject area research projects:
    Get Better Grades! Use Library Online Services!

I use a 4th bulletin board—visible to everyone on their way to the cafeteria—for a monthly theme, often with a related quotation:

  • September, November, February, and May are Heritage Months: Hispanic, Native American/Indigenous Peoples, Black History, and Asian/Pacific American. For Black History Month we also make a timeline around the exterior walls of the library and each day we add a student-created sign with a quote about a significant event or person of note.
  • October includes National Red Ribbon Week, and through the years I’ve collected very creative advertisements & posters with quotes about alcohol, smoking, and drugs. Students help choose items and prepare the display, and they sure know how to draw attention to the bulletin board and this issue!

PERSONAL INSPIRATIONAL QUOTES

In another blog post I shared a few quotes that may be personally inspirational for school librarians, one of which I like to keep posted near my desk so I keep my Library Lessons succinct and relevant:

Kids have a long attention span, but a low tolerance for boredom.

My favorite quote, from Louis L’Amour’s The Walking Drum has been displayed in my classroom and then in my school library for 25 years. Many students have told me it helps them appreciate the importance of school. I now display it on my blog (top right, under my photo) to inspire those who visit me here.

Christa McAuliffe - NASA public domain photoMy final quote constantly reminds me how important our work is; it, too, is at the top of my blog. A former principal, who knew how meaningful it is to me, gave me a pin of the quote, which I wear on my coat. It’s all the more poignant for remembering whence it came:

I touch the future; I teach.
(Teacher-astronaut Christa McAuliffe)

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