children's librarians: becoming a media mentor

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Children’s Librarians: Becoming a Media Mentor Amy Koester

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Children’s Librarians:

Becoming a Media Mentor

Amy Koester

Hello! I’m Amy Koester.

Youth & Family Program

Coordinator, Skokie

Public Library

The Show Me Librarian

Editor & manager,

LittleeLit.com

White paper on Media

Mentorship

On Our Agenda

The landscape of children & media

What libraries are doing

Recommendations & position statements

Media mentorship

The Current Public Landscape

According to Common Sense Media (2013):

75% of

households

own digital

media

(up from 52%

in 2011)

40% of

families with

kids age ≤8

own a tablet

(up from around

8% in 2011)

72% of

kids ages 0-8

have used

digital media

of some kind

The Current Public Landscape

But these are the images families see:

Developmentally appropriate much?

The Current Library Landscape

Competencies for serving youth include (ALSC

2009):

responding to patron needs

creating enjoyable spaces with access

continually developing tech skills

The Current Public Landscape

According to the Young Children, New Media, &

Libraries Survey (2014) of 415 libraries/library

systems:

71% of

libraries use

new media in

programs &

services for

kids

40% offer

tethered

devices

39% use

devices in

storytime

22% of

libraries

provide device

mentoring

services in

some capacity

What the Experts Say

AAP (2013):

limit kids’ screen time to

<1-2 hours daily

no screen media

exposure for kids < 2

caregivers should create

family media plans

Christakis’s (2014) op-ed &

the definition of “screen”

What the Experts Say

NAEYC/Fred Rogers (2012):

digital media are tools

that can support learning

use must be intentional

use must be

developmentally

appropriate

use must support

learning goals

What the Experts Say

Lisa Guernsey (2012):

Content - what is the

specific technology?

Context - how is it

being used?

Child - what are the

individual needs of the

child using it?

What the Experts Say

Joan Ganz Cooney

Center (2011):

joint media

engagement

spontaneous &

designed experiences

of people using media

together

What the Experts Say

Zero to Three (2014)

caregivers must

participate in screen

time

screen time should be

interactive

caregivers should

extend learning

beyond the screen

Media Mentor/ˈmēdēə ˈmenˌtôr/

noun

1. a person who supports children & their

families in their decisions & practice around

media use

2. a person who has access to, and shares,

recommendations for and research on

children’s media use

Your Media Mentor Toolbox

Position statements

Evaluative resources

New & developing research

Support from administrators

Position Statements

Know what your key position statements say

AAP

NAEYC/Fred Rogers

Zero to Three

Joan Ganz Cooney

Position Statements

Thoughtfully apply these positions to the programs

& services you offer

media is used jointly with an adult caregiver

media is used to further explore a topic

media is a supplement, not a replacement

media use is accompanied by information

consider caregiver appvisory workshops

Position Statements

When caregivers ask questions about digital media

use

objectively reference position statements

let families make their own decisions

Evaluative Resources

Locate your go-to recommendation sources

Children’s Technology Review

Common Sense Media

Digital Storytime

Horn Book

School Library Journal

Smart Apps for Kids

Evaluative Resources

Be critical in evaluating media you are considering

for your library

Find or create a rubric (I like Claudia Haines’s at

nevershushed.com)

Always defer to developmental appropriateness

Remember Guernsey’s 3 Cs

Evaluative Resources

Give caregivers tools to be critical in choosing

media for their families

“Is the technology intuitive for your child, or is it

frustrating?”

“Does the technology reinforce learning or

experiences your child acquires off-screen?”

“Can you stand the technology enough to use it

with your child?”

New & Developing Research

Keep abreast of new and developing research

Look to institutions

ALSC

Fred Rogers Center blog

Joan Ganz Cooney Center blog

TEC Center at the Erikson Institute

New & Developing Research

Be flexible

Be responsive

Be objective

Administrative Support

Effective media mentorship takes time

Learning the resources

Thoughtful integration

One-on-one with families

Administrative Support

Get supervisors on board

Market media mentorship

Keep learning

Implications for the Field

Library programs & services for kids & families may

start to look a bit different as the habits and

lifestyles of kids & families change

State libraries, professional associations, & library

schools all need to respond to a need for training

Libraries continue to be a major community partner

in supporting families

Questions?

Thanks for being here!

My contact info for further questions:

[email protected]

@amyeileenk

showmelibrarian.blogspot.com

References

Association for Library Service to Children. (2009). Competencies for

librarians serving children in public libraries (3rd ed.). Chicago, IL: ALSC

Education Committee.

American Academy of Pediatrics Council on Communications and Media.

(2013). Policy statement: Children, adolescents, and the media. Pediatrics,

132(5), 958-961.

Christakis, D.A. (2014). Interactive media use at younger than the age of 2

years: Time to rethink the American Academy of Pediatrics guideline?

JAMA Pediatrics, 168(5), 399-400.

Common Sense Media. (2013). Zero to eight: Children’s media use in

America 2013. Washington, DC: Victoria Rideout.

Guernsey, L. (2012). Screen time: How electronic media--from baby videos to education software--affects your young child. Philadelphia, PA: Basic Books.

Mills, J.E., Romeijn-Stout, E., Campbell, C., & Koester, A. (Forthcoming). Results from the young children, new media, & libraries survey: What did we learn? Children and Libraries.

National Association for the Education of Young Children & Fred Rogers Center for Early Learning and Children’s Media. (2012). Technology and interactive media as tools in early childhood programs serving children from birth through age 8. Washington, DC: Roberta Schomburg & Chip Donohue.

Takeuchi, L., & Stevens, R. (2011). The new coviewing: Designing for learning through joint media engagement. New York: The Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop.

Zero to Three. (2014). Screen sense: Setting the record straight: Research-based guidelines for screen use for children under 3 years old. Washington, DC: Claire Lerner & Rachel Barr.