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LIB 620 Library Management   1
                             Fall 2011




Evaluating School Media Services
2


Based in part on:

             Preemptive Action:
                   The busy librarian’s guide to
                       program evaluation




                     A workshop developed by the
       Pennsylvania School Librarians Association
         Professional Development Committee
                (No longer available online)

       indicates the slide was originally from the above presentation
3



  Evaluate?
 What do we mean by evaluate?
– verb (used with object), -at⋅ed, -at⋅ing.
1. to determine or set the value or amount of;
   appraise: to evaluate property.
2. to judge or determine the
   significance, worth, or quality of; assess: to
   evaluate the results of an experiment.
3. Mathematics. to ascertain the numerical value
   of (a function, relation, etc.).
  •   The American Heritage®
      Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin
      Company.
4




http://www.evaluationtrust.org/evaluation/evaluate
5


 What about school library evaluation?

  Evaluation of school library media
centers:
– When you examine something or
  someone, you examine the subject and
  make a judgment about the
  quality, significance, or condition of
  whatever is to be evaluated.
  • Emanuel T. Prostano and Joyce S. Prostano,
    The School Library Media Center 5th ed. (Englewood, CO:
    Libraries Unlimited, 1999), 44.
6


Purposes of evaluation

  To find out what is right



  To find out what is wrong
  • Summary of definition in Blanche Woolls, The School
    Library Media Manager 2nd ed. (Westport, CT: Libraries
    Unlimited, 1999).
7


What can you evaluate?
    Everything!
–   Collection             –   Reference
–   Personnel                  service/collection:
–   Library Layout              • Interview skills
–   Programs                    • Quality of the answers
                                  provided
–   Curriculum collaboration
                                • Satisfaction of your
                                  patrons
                                   – Students or teachers—or
                                     other school staff
8


What should you evaluate?
  That depends . . .
– On your priorities
– On your economic needs and situation
– On the policies and procedures established by
  your school, school district and/or state
– On how much time you have left over from
  your other duties to devote to planning and
  executing an evaluation project
9


  Why evaluate?
 Because you have to
– Continuous assessment of services can be an
  ongoing requirement for
  accreditation/funding, etc.
 Because you want to
– You want to find out how well you‟re doing
– You want to find out how well others think
  you‟re doing
– You want to find ways to improve your
  service
10


Why Evaluate?
       • Schools are being evaluated by student
         academic achievement in
         reading, writing and math.


      • Recent studies show student
        achievement correlates positively with
        effective school library programs.
11



Why Evaluate?
  Studies show the positive correlation
with student achievement occurs when
there is an effective school library
program [and]:
 – School librarians are full time and
 – Librarians collaborate with teachers on
   instructional planning.
12


Why Evaluate?
     Studies also show an effective
school library program includes
the following attributes:
– Quality collections;
– Increased hours of access beyond school day;
– Professional development for teachers and
  librarians;
– Student access to technology; and
– Collaboration with other types of libraries.
13



Why Evaluate? Because. . .
To improve, the librarian must have baseline
data about the program.
To be relevant, the librarian must know if the
library services and resources are aligned with
the school‟s goals for student achievement.
To build a case for better support, the
librarian needs data that demonstrates the
value of the program.
14



What Can an Evaluation Do?
 An evaluation enables you to:
– Determine success in attaining program
  goals.
– Determine students‟ and teachers‟ needs
  so they can be incorporated into the program.
– Provide a basis for resource allocation.
– Recognize strengths and accomplishments.
– Examine the impact of the program on
  student learning.
 • Nancy Everhart, Evaluating the School
   Library Media Center, 1998)
15


  It makes sense—

    Focus data collecting and
evaluation on those components of a
school library program that the
research shows correlate with student
achievement.
16


    Types of Evaluation
   Formal
   Informal
   External
   Internal
   Formative
       During a program

   Summative
       After the program is completed
17


  Evaluation requires standards
  How do you know if the media center is ―good‖/ ―not
good‖ or even ―good enough‖?
 – “Good enough” for what? For whom?

  Guidelines or rubrics or objectives for
collections, performance can be found in:
18


 Types of Data

Quantitative       Qualitative

 Number of OPAC    Students‟ success rate in
                   locating appropriate
 searches
                   resources in OPAC searches
  Size of          Collection supports the
 collection        curriculum
 Number of         Comprehensive and
 lessons planned   collaborative planning is in
 with teachers     place
19


  Standards require interpretation
  Quantitative: relatively easy
– Library Media Staffing
– The school library media program is staffed as follows:
      – Under 200: 1 full-time school media librarian (SML)
      – 200-500: 1 full-time SML; .5 clerk
      – 501-800: 1 full-time SML; 1 clerk
      – 801-1200: 1 full-time SML; 1.5 clerk
      – 1201-1600: 1.5 SML; 1.5 clerk
      – 1601-2000: 2 full-time SML; 2 clerks
      – 2001 and Up: 2.5 SML; 2 clerks
          » Library Media Program Rubric August 2010
20


 Standards require interpretation
 Qualitative: more difficult




What constitutes “sufficient funding”?
21

Interpretation means operationalization

 Operationalize:
– To define a concept in a way that can be
  measured. In evaluation research, to translate
  program inputs, outputs, objectives, and goals
  into specific measurable variables.
  • Program Evaluation Glossary
   http://www.epa.gov/evaluate/glossary/o-esd.htm
22

Interpretation means creating goals and objectives

   The purpose and study goals should determine
 the types of methods and measures you use to
 conduct the evaluation

   Objectives will define your standard of
 excellence--the minimum level of appropriate
 service for your particular clientele
  – Jo Bell Whitlach, Evaluating Reference Services
23


Methods of Evaluation
  Obtrusive
– People are aware of the evaluation
  • Self-evaluation
  • Surveys
  • Observation
  Unobtrusive
– People are unaware of the evaluation
  • Unobtrusive measures of physical facilities
  • Use of proxies—“mystery patrons”
24
Obtrusive reference evaluations in a school
library context
  Questionnaires or interviews of students or
teachers
  Numbers gathering:
 – Reference question counts
 – Numbers/types of reference books used
 – Circulation statistics
  Observation
 – By external observer
 – Self-observation: Journal
25


For example. . .
Research finding:
Students whose school librarian plays an
instructional role tend to achieve higher than
average test scores. This is also dependent on
collaboration between school librarians and
teachers and the inclusion of the library
materials in the curriculum.
26


 Evaluation Model

1. Define the question.
2. Collect data--determine needed data and
   method of collection.
3. Analyze the data.
4. Formulate recommendations.
5. Develop an action plan.
27


Evaluation Model Step 1.
Define the Question
Research Finding         The Question
Students whose school    What data are needed
librarian plays an       to determine whether
instructional role       or not the school
tend to achieve higher   librarian plays an
than average scores.     instructional role in
                         the school?
28


Look at the rubric
According to                                    29



Information Power (1998)--
 Instructional role is determined by:
Collaboration between school librarians
and teachers that results in the inclusion of
library materials in the curriculum.
According to                             30



Information Power--
 Instructional role is defined by:
  – Information literacy standards
  – Collaborative planning
  – Effective teaching
     • Differentiated learning options
     • Inquiry
     • Assessment
  – Student Engagement
31

According to Empowering Learners (2009)

  Guideline 1:
 – The school library media program promotes
   collaboration among members of the learning
   community and encourages learners to be
   independent, lifelong users and producers of
   information.
32

According to Empowering Learners
  Guideline 3:
– The school library media program provides
  instruction that addresses multiple
  literacies, including information
  literacy, media literacy, visual literacy, and
  technology literacy.
33

Evaluation Model Step 2.

Collect data
 Determine the type needed.
– Quantitative/Qualitative


 Determine the method of collection.
– Existing statistic
– Survey, questionnaire, focus
  group, observation
34


One method to collect data--
   Use Information Power‟s Teaching and
Learning Rubric as a questionnaire.
   Administer it to
 – School Library staff,
 – Administrative staff,
 – Teaching staff.
   Summarize each group; determine where
perceptions differ and agree.
35
Data collected from the Teaching and Learning Rubric
are qualitative--

  Example:
  Principal puts librarian on weekly faculty
  meeting agenda to encourage library use
  and promote curriculum-oriented library
  materials. Math teacher does not see an
  easy connect and tunes out.
    When completing the questionnaire--
    School librarian & principal:  EXEMPLARY!
    Math teacher:                 0    NOTHING!
36



  Evaluation Model Step 3.
  Analyze the data
  How can the data be analyzed to determine
whether or not the librarian plays an effective
instructional role in the school?
 – Identify areas of agreement and disagreement
   among groups.
 – Identify areas of strength and areas that need
   improvement.
 – Identify areas where more data is needed.
37


   Agreement Example--
Target Indicator: Information Literacy Standards
 are integrated into content learning.

Library Staff Response
____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary

Administrative Response
____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary

Teaching Staff Response
12% Basic 88% Proficient   ____ Exemplary
38


   Disagreement Example--
  Target Indicator: Curriculum development is
   modeled and promoted.
Library Staff Response
 100% Basic _____ Proficient ____ Exemplary
Administrative Response
____Basic        100% Proficient ____ Exemplary
Teaching Staff Response
 82%Basic 18% Proficient        ____ Exemplary
39


 Strength Area Example--
Target Indicator: Collaborative planning is
modeled and promoted.
Library Staff Response

 ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary
Administrative Response

 ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary
Teaching Staff Response

  ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary
40



Weakness Area Example--
Target Indicator: Students are engaged in
 reading, writing, speaking, viewing & listening
 for enjoyment, enrichment, & understanding.
Library Staff Response
 ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary
Administrative Response
100% Basic ____ Proficient ____ Exemplary
Teaching Staff Response
82% Basic 18% Proficient ____ Exemplary
41



Contradictory Data Example—
Target Indicator:Effective teaching modeled &
 promoted.
 Library        Basic ____ Prof. 100% Exemplary
 Admin.    ____ Basic ____ Prof. 100% Exemplary
 Teacher        Basic 60% Prof. 40% Exemplary

Target Indicator: Student achievement is
 assessed.
 Library   100% Basic      Prof.    Exemplary
 Admin.    100% Basic ____ Prof.    Exemplary
 Teacher    90% Basic 10% Prof.     Exemplary
42

 Back to Step 2
 Collecting More Data – Focus Groups

1. How are student products and performances assessed
   in units involving use of the library?
2. How do you determine the products and performances
   to demonstrate mastery of content in units involving
   use of the library?
3. What is the role of reflection in student work
   involving use of the library?
43



    Evaluation Model Step 4.
    Formulate recommendations
     Role of an Advisory Committee of
   stakeholders—
• Review the data, formulate recommendations.

• For example:
   – Because of the strong correlation between the school
     librarian‟s instructional role and student
     achievement, the Advisory Committee establishes a
     three year goal of reaching the Exemplary level in all
     target indicators in the Teaching and Learning
     Rubric
Example:                                              44



Recommendations for First Year
  Standards for the 21st Century Learner
– Review the Standards for the
  21st Century Learner to ensure they
  align with content standards and
  set student expectations for analysis,
  evaluation and inquiry.
– Meet with teaching teams to solicit recommended
  revisions.
– Convene a workshop for new teachers to review the
  standards.

  Adapted from
Example:                                            45



  Recommendations for First Year

  Collaborative Planning
– Establish regular common planning time for
  teachers with the library media staff.
  Curriculum Development
– Review school policies to remove any barriers that
  prevent librarians from participating in building and
  district curriculum sessions.
Example:                          46



 Recommendations for First Year
  Reading, Writing, Speaking, Viewing
– Provide a series of author workshops and develop
  plans with teachers for student
  reading, writing, speaking, and viewing responses to
  the author workshops.
– Involve Parents.
  Effective Teaching
– Clarify conflicting feedback through focus groups
  targeting use of assessment, differentiation, & inquiry
  in instruction.
– Develop recommendations based on new data.
47



 Evaluation Model Step 5.
 Develop an action plan
  Library staff develop an action plan for
each recommendation.

  The Advisory Committee of
Stakeholders reviews and approves the
action plans.
48

Action Plan Example:

Target Indicator: Curriculum development is modeled and promoted
Objective          Activity      Documentation     Participants   New         Completion
                                                                  Resources   Date

Review barriers    Review        School Council    School         None        Sept. 1
preventing         policies      minutes           Council &      projected
librarians from                                    admin.
participating in   Secure        Post schedule in Principal       None        Sept. 10
curriculum         schedule      lib. & faculty rm.
sessions.
                   Participate   Meeting minutes   Librarians     None        June 1
                   in mtgs.                                       projected
                   Report        Faculty mtg.      Librarians     None        Monthly
                   back          minutes
                   Written       In professional   Librarians     None        Within 5
                   material      library                                      days of mtg
49


This example of an evaluation was…

• Type (which one?) • Data collection methods:
  – Formal             – Research
  – Internal           – Rubric-based
  – Formative            questionnaire
                       – Focus Group
                    • Data type:
                       – Quantitative
                       – Qualitative
50


Unobtrusive evaluation in schools 1

  Unobtrusive measures of physical facilities
– “The basic premise . . . is that you can learn a great
  deal . . . by looking at how things wear
  („erosion‟), how things are left in the building
  („traces‟) and how things are rearranged
  („adaptations for use‟).”
   • Nancy Everhart, Evaluating the School Library
     Media Center: Analysis Techniques and
     Research Practices. Libraries Unlimited, 1998.
51


Unobtrusive evaluation in schools 2
  Use of proxies—―mystery patrons‖
– Technique used more often in academic libraries and
  government documents reference services
  • Half-right reference: the 55% rule
  • 5-minute rule
      – Peter Hernon and Charles R. McClure, “Unobtrusive
        Reference Testing: The 55 Percent Rule” Library
        Journal April 15, 1986, 37-41.
  • “It‟s not true, and now we know why . . . the so-called “55%
    rule” has never been tested against a truly representative
    field sample.”
      – John V. Richardson, Jr., “Reference Is Better Than We
        Thought,” Library Journal April 15, 2002, 41-42.
52

  Importance of a sophisticated model
  Richardson:
– “The reference service performance model [that led
  to the 55% rule] was overly simplistic, samples were
  way too small, and the test questions were not
  representative of real-world reference questions.”
– “Students of reference service should learn about the
  existence of multiple performance outcomes
  (i.e., accuracy, utility, and satisfaction) and to
  recognize that each outcome is driven by different
  factors.”
    • “Reference Is Better Than We Thought.”
53


   Characteristics of good models
 Measures of reference service must be
– Valid
   • They “accurately reflect the concept being studied.”
– Reliable
   • They “are stable and dependable, and provide consistent
     results with each repeated use.”
– Practical
   • They “require that data be relatively easy to collect.”
– Useful
   • They “provide information that can be used to
     improve reference services.”
      – Whitlach, Evaluating Reference Services.
54


Problems of Evaluation in School Context

  Often the school librarian is the only
one working in the library

  An evaluation project can be time-
consuming to plan and to put into action
55


 Solutions to evaluation problems
 Depends on your local situation
– Your resources:
  • Time, money, available warm bodies
– You and your creativity
 Make evaluation part of your routine
– As you plan/prepare your program(s), include
  an evaluation component
  • Appropriate, affordable, accessible, accountable

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Evaluate! Evaluation of school libraries

  • 1. LIB 620 Library Management 1 Fall 2011 Evaluating School Media Services
  • 2. 2 Based in part on: Preemptive Action: The busy librarian’s guide to program evaluation A workshop developed by the Pennsylvania School Librarians Association Professional Development Committee (No longer available online) indicates the slide was originally from the above presentation
  • 3. 3 Evaluate? What do we mean by evaluate? – verb (used with object), -at⋅ed, -at⋅ing. 1. to determine or set the value or amount of; appraise: to evaluate property. 2. to judge or determine the significance, worth, or quality of; assess: to evaluate the results of an experiment. 3. Mathematics. to ascertain the numerical value of (a function, relation, etc.). • The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition © 2006 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
  • 5. 5 What about school library evaluation? Evaluation of school library media centers: – When you examine something or someone, you examine the subject and make a judgment about the quality, significance, or condition of whatever is to be evaluated. • Emanuel T. Prostano and Joyce S. Prostano, The School Library Media Center 5th ed. (Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited, 1999), 44.
  • 6. 6 Purposes of evaluation To find out what is right To find out what is wrong • Summary of definition in Blanche Woolls, The School Library Media Manager 2nd ed. (Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited, 1999).
  • 7. 7 What can you evaluate? Everything! – Collection – Reference – Personnel service/collection: – Library Layout • Interview skills – Programs • Quality of the answers provided – Curriculum collaboration • Satisfaction of your patrons – Students or teachers—or other school staff
  • 8. 8 What should you evaluate? That depends . . . – On your priorities – On your economic needs and situation – On the policies and procedures established by your school, school district and/or state – On how much time you have left over from your other duties to devote to planning and executing an evaluation project
  • 9. 9 Why evaluate? Because you have to – Continuous assessment of services can be an ongoing requirement for accreditation/funding, etc. Because you want to – You want to find out how well you‟re doing – You want to find out how well others think you‟re doing – You want to find ways to improve your service
  • 10. 10 Why Evaluate? • Schools are being evaluated by student academic achievement in reading, writing and math. • Recent studies show student achievement correlates positively with effective school library programs.
  • 11. 11 Why Evaluate? Studies show the positive correlation with student achievement occurs when there is an effective school library program [and]: – School librarians are full time and – Librarians collaborate with teachers on instructional planning.
  • 12. 12 Why Evaluate? Studies also show an effective school library program includes the following attributes: – Quality collections; – Increased hours of access beyond school day; – Professional development for teachers and librarians; – Student access to technology; and – Collaboration with other types of libraries.
  • 13. 13 Why Evaluate? Because. . . To improve, the librarian must have baseline data about the program. To be relevant, the librarian must know if the library services and resources are aligned with the school‟s goals for student achievement. To build a case for better support, the librarian needs data that demonstrates the value of the program.
  • 14. 14 What Can an Evaluation Do? An evaluation enables you to: – Determine success in attaining program goals. – Determine students‟ and teachers‟ needs so they can be incorporated into the program. – Provide a basis for resource allocation. – Recognize strengths and accomplishments. – Examine the impact of the program on student learning. • Nancy Everhart, Evaluating the School Library Media Center, 1998)
  • 15. 15 It makes sense—  Focus data collecting and evaluation on those components of a school library program that the research shows correlate with student achievement.
  • 16. 16 Types of Evaluation  Formal  Informal  External  Internal  Formative  During a program  Summative  After the program is completed
  • 17. 17 Evaluation requires standards How do you know if the media center is ―good‖/ ―not good‖ or even ―good enough‖? – “Good enough” for what? For whom? Guidelines or rubrics or objectives for collections, performance can be found in:
  • 18. 18 Types of Data Quantitative Qualitative Number of OPAC Students‟ success rate in locating appropriate searches resources in OPAC searches Size of Collection supports the collection curriculum Number of Comprehensive and lessons planned collaborative planning is in with teachers place
  • 19. 19 Standards require interpretation Quantitative: relatively easy – Library Media Staffing – The school library media program is staffed as follows: – Under 200: 1 full-time school media librarian (SML) – 200-500: 1 full-time SML; .5 clerk – 501-800: 1 full-time SML; 1 clerk – 801-1200: 1 full-time SML; 1.5 clerk – 1201-1600: 1.5 SML; 1.5 clerk – 1601-2000: 2 full-time SML; 2 clerks – 2001 and Up: 2.5 SML; 2 clerks » Library Media Program Rubric August 2010
  • 20. 20 Standards require interpretation Qualitative: more difficult What constitutes “sufficient funding”?
  • 21. 21 Interpretation means operationalization Operationalize: – To define a concept in a way that can be measured. In evaluation research, to translate program inputs, outputs, objectives, and goals into specific measurable variables. • Program Evaluation Glossary http://www.epa.gov/evaluate/glossary/o-esd.htm
  • 22. 22 Interpretation means creating goals and objectives The purpose and study goals should determine the types of methods and measures you use to conduct the evaluation Objectives will define your standard of excellence--the minimum level of appropriate service for your particular clientele – Jo Bell Whitlach, Evaluating Reference Services
  • 23. 23 Methods of Evaluation Obtrusive – People are aware of the evaluation • Self-evaluation • Surveys • Observation Unobtrusive – People are unaware of the evaluation • Unobtrusive measures of physical facilities • Use of proxies—“mystery patrons”
  • 24. 24 Obtrusive reference evaluations in a school library context Questionnaires or interviews of students or teachers Numbers gathering: – Reference question counts – Numbers/types of reference books used – Circulation statistics Observation – By external observer – Self-observation: Journal
  • 25. 25 For example. . . Research finding: Students whose school librarian plays an instructional role tend to achieve higher than average test scores. This is also dependent on collaboration between school librarians and teachers and the inclusion of the library materials in the curriculum.
  • 26. 26 Evaluation Model 1. Define the question. 2. Collect data--determine needed data and method of collection. 3. Analyze the data. 4. Formulate recommendations. 5. Develop an action plan.
  • 27. 27 Evaluation Model Step 1. Define the Question Research Finding The Question Students whose school What data are needed librarian plays an to determine whether instructional role or not the school tend to achieve higher librarian plays an than average scores. instructional role in the school?
  • 28. 28 Look at the rubric
  • 29. According to 29 Information Power (1998)-- Instructional role is determined by: Collaboration between school librarians and teachers that results in the inclusion of library materials in the curriculum.
  • 30. According to 30 Information Power-- Instructional role is defined by: – Information literacy standards – Collaborative planning – Effective teaching • Differentiated learning options • Inquiry • Assessment – Student Engagement
  • 31. 31 According to Empowering Learners (2009) Guideline 1: – The school library media program promotes collaboration among members of the learning community and encourages learners to be independent, lifelong users and producers of information.
  • 32. 32 According to Empowering Learners Guideline 3: – The school library media program provides instruction that addresses multiple literacies, including information literacy, media literacy, visual literacy, and technology literacy.
  • 33. 33 Evaluation Model Step 2. Collect data Determine the type needed. – Quantitative/Qualitative Determine the method of collection. – Existing statistic – Survey, questionnaire, focus group, observation
  • 34. 34 One method to collect data-- Use Information Power‟s Teaching and Learning Rubric as a questionnaire. Administer it to – School Library staff, – Administrative staff, – Teaching staff. Summarize each group; determine where perceptions differ and agree.
  • 35. 35 Data collected from the Teaching and Learning Rubric are qualitative-- Example: Principal puts librarian on weekly faculty meeting agenda to encourage library use and promote curriculum-oriented library materials. Math teacher does not see an easy connect and tunes out. When completing the questionnaire-- School librarian & principal:  EXEMPLARY! Math teacher: 0 NOTHING!
  • 36. 36 Evaluation Model Step 3. Analyze the data How can the data be analyzed to determine whether or not the librarian plays an effective instructional role in the school? – Identify areas of agreement and disagreement among groups. – Identify areas of strength and areas that need improvement. – Identify areas where more data is needed.
  • 37. 37 Agreement Example-- Target Indicator: Information Literacy Standards are integrated into content learning. Library Staff Response ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary Administrative Response ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary Teaching Staff Response 12% Basic 88% Proficient ____ Exemplary
  • 38. 38 Disagreement Example-- Target Indicator: Curriculum development is modeled and promoted. Library Staff Response 100% Basic _____ Proficient ____ Exemplary Administrative Response ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary Teaching Staff Response 82%Basic 18% Proficient ____ Exemplary
  • 39. 39 Strength Area Example-- Target Indicator: Collaborative planning is modeled and promoted. Library Staff Response ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary Administrative Response ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary Teaching Staff Response ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary
  • 40. 40 Weakness Area Example-- Target Indicator: Students are engaged in reading, writing, speaking, viewing & listening for enjoyment, enrichment, & understanding. Library Staff Response ____Basic 100% Proficient ____ Exemplary Administrative Response 100% Basic ____ Proficient ____ Exemplary Teaching Staff Response 82% Basic 18% Proficient ____ Exemplary
  • 41. 41 Contradictory Data Example— Target Indicator:Effective teaching modeled & promoted. Library Basic ____ Prof. 100% Exemplary Admin. ____ Basic ____ Prof. 100% Exemplary Teacher Basic 60% Prof. 40% Exemplary Target Indicator: Student achievement is assessed. Library 100% Basic Prof. Exemplary Admin. 100% Basic ____ Prof. Exemplary Teacher 90% Basic 10% Prof. Exemplary
  • 42. 42 Back to Step 2 Collecting More Data – Focus Groups 1. How are student products and performances assessed in units involving use of the library? 2. How do you determine the products and performances to demonstrate mastery of content in units involving use of the library? 3. What is the role of reflection in student work involving use of the library?
  • 43. 43 Evaluation Model Step 4. Formulate recommendations Role of an Advisory Committee of stakeholders— • Review the data, formulate recommendations. • For example: – Because of the strong correlation between the school librarian‟s instructional role and student achievement, the Advisory Committee establishes a three year goal of reaching the Exemplary level in all target indicators in the Teaching and Learning Rubric
  • 44. Example: 44 Recommendations for First Year Standards for the 21st Century Learner – Review the Standards for the 21st Century Learner to ensure they align with content standards and set student expectations for analysis, evaluation and inquiry. – Meet with teaching teams to solicit recommended revisions. – Convene a workshop for new teachers to review the standards. Adapted from
  • 45. Example: 45 Recommendations for First Year Collaborative Planning – Establish regular common planning time for teachers with the library media staff. Curriculum Development – Review school policies to remove any barriers that prevent librarians from participating in building and district curriculum sessions.
  • 46. Example: 46 Recommendations for First Year Reading, Writing, Speaking, Viewing – Provide a series of author workshops and develop plans with teachers for student reading, writing, speaking, and viewing responses to the author workshops. – Involve Parents. Effective Teaching – Clarify conflicting feedback through focus groups targeting use of assessment, differentiation, & inquiry in instruction. – Develop recommendations based on new data.
  • 47. 47 Evaluation Model Step 5. Develop an action plan Library staff develop an action plan for each recommendation. The Advisory Committee of Stakeholders reviews and approves the action plans.
  • 48. 48 Action Plan Example: Target Indicator: Curriculum development is modeled and promoted Objective Activity Documentation Participants New Completion Resources Date Review barriers Review School Council School None Sept. 1 preventing policies minutes Council & projected librarians from admin. participating in Secure Post schedule in Principal None Sept. 10 curriculum schedule lib. & faculty rm. sessions. Participate Meeting minutes Librarians None June 1 in mtgs. projected Report Faculty mtg. Librarians None Monthly back minutes Written In professional Librarians None Within 5 material library days of mtg
  • 49. 49 This example of an evaluation was… • Type (which one?) • Data collection methods: – Formal – Research – Internal – Rubric-based – Formative questionnaire – Focus Group • Data type: – Quantitative – Qualitative
  • 50. 50 Unobtrusive evaluation in schools 1 Unobtrusive measures of physical facilities – “The basic premise . . . is that you can learn a great deal . . . by looking at how things wear („erosion‟), how things are left in the building („traces‟) and how things are rearranged („adaptations for use‟).” • Nancy Everhart, Evaluating the School Library Media Center: Analysis Techniques and Research Practices. Libraries Unlimited, 1998.
  • 51. 51 Unobtrusive evaluation in schools 2 Use of proxies—―mystery patrons‖ – Technique used more often in academic libraries and government documents reference services • Half-right reference: the 55% rule • 5-minute rule – Peter Hernon and Charles R. McClure, “Unobtrusive Reference Testing: The 55 Percent Rule” Library Journal April 15, 1986, 37-41. • “It‟s not true, and now we know why . . . the so-called “55% rule” has never been tested against a truly representative field sample.” – John V. Richardson, Jr., “Reference Is Better Than We Thought,” Library Journal April 15, 2002, 41-42.
  • 52. 52 Importance of a sophisticated model Richardson: – “The reference service performance model [that led to the 55% rule] was overly simplistic, samples were way too small, and the test questions were not representative of real-world reference questions.” – “Students of reference service should learn about the existence of multiple performance outcomes (i.e., accuracy, utility, and satisfaction) and to recognize that each outcome is driven by different factors.” • “Reference Is Better Than We Thought.”
  • 53. 53 Characteristics of good models Measures of reference service must be – Valid • They “accurately reflect the concept being studied.” – Reliable • They “are stable and dependable, and provide consistent results with each repeated use.” – Practical • They “require that data be relatively easy to collect.” – Useful • They “provide information that can be used to improve reference services.” – Whitlach, Evaluating Reference Services.
  • 54. 54 Problems of Evaluation in School Context Often the school librarian is the only one working in the library An evaluation project can be time- consuming to plan and to put into action
  • 55. 55 Solutions to evaluation problems Depends on your local situation – Your resources: • Time, money, available warm bodies – You and your creativity Make evaluation part of your routine – As you plan/prepare your program(s), include an evaluation component • Appropriate, affordable, accessible, accountable