
Introduction
The Melting Pot; Practical
Collection Development and Programming for Diverse Populations is a training
course for librarians who purchase, program and promote their library’s
services. As a training course the Melting Pot is designed to help librarians
with existing knowledge perform a specific task (Morrison, 2007, pg.8); serve
an emerging diverse community. As such,
this course is theoretically constructivist in nature (Snyder, 2009). The
modules and their activities are designed to be;
constructive, sequential and interlinked (Meyers and Nulty, 2009) and
the motivation for students taking this course is predominately extrinsic, it
is for professional advancement (Reiser, pg. 87). The assigned projects
(analyses of policies, bibliographies, press releases) are authentic, real-world and relevant (Meyers, 2009).
This course will promote awareness of community demographics and its
inextricable tie to professional duty. As well as the actions required to
assure libraries meet community needs; continual monitoring of community
groups, creation of inclusive policies and inclusion of non- traditional
sources of materials and programming to meet the needs of diverse populations.
Course
overview
This
class is intended to demonstrate to those in public libraries tasked with
purchasing materials as well as creating, planning, implementing and promoting
programming; that the choices we make in regards to our collections and
programming affect on how libraries are viewed within a community. This class
will provide the tools to investigate, analyze, review and assess community
demographics as well as show the need to continually evaluate, rethink and
update library policies that may interfere with addressing current community
desires and needs.
Course Goals and Objectives
The following are the course objectives
for The Melting Pot; Practical Collection Development and Programming for
Diverse Populations.
1.
Increase
students’ understanding and recognition of the importance, duty and necessity
to continually review and analyze the library’s community.
2.
Demonstrate
the need for students to review, evaluate and update their library’s current
policies regarding material acquisition and programming.
3.
Create
and implement effective services for diverse groups served by libraries.
4.
Help
students identify online, local, cultural and social agencies as resources to
address their library’s diverse populations.
5.
The
need to create and collaborate with colleagues.
6.
To
provide librarians who purchase, program and promote a chance to hone existing
research and creative skills and apply them effectively and immediately to
their library.
Learning Objectives
o
Students
will develop an awareness of various racial, socioeconomic, religious,
cultural, and ethnic groups by analyzing online census data and comparing their
library’s collections and program offerings to determine if they are inclusive
and reflect the library’s community.
o
Students
will demonstrate knowledge of ethical considerations per the American Library
Association’s Bill of Rights so that they will be able to contrast their own
beliefs and attitudes with those of their culturally diverse community
populations in a nonjudgmental fashion.
o
Students will complete a SWOT analysis of
their library to determine if the collective culture (policies, collections,
programming and promotion) of their library is one that promotes serving a
diverse patronage.
o
Students
will develop the ability to integrate multicultural materials and programming
into their libraries by researching and evaluating online and print resources,
by recognizing the importance of partnerships with local agencies, institutions
and using available forums for sharing of information and ideas.
o
Students
will be able to promote library collections and programming by composing press
releases and articles targeted at local
multicultural and special interest (language, sexual orientation, culture)media
including; newspapers, cable stations and radio in their library’s community.
Course information
Modules are
made available to students on Mondays by 12 noon EDT. The current
Module runs for two weeks. Modules contain reading assignments,
activities, and additional course material relevant to the study topic.
Assigned readings, discussions, and other projects must be completed within the
module timeframe. Upon completion of the course and all
activities student will receive a continuing education certificate.
Participation
Every module requires participation in the
class discussion board. Students must post for each topic and comment on at
least one other classmate’s post.
Students
will be required to contribute to the class Wiki, adding favorite and useful resources
from each module as the course progresses.
Students
must open accounts on several free resource sites: Webjunction, Delicious and SlideShare
that will provide Web 2.0 tools to collaborate, promote interactivity and share
resources.
Feedback
The
course allows for constant feedback by way of discussion board, email and also
the private or group chat capabilities of WebTycho and similar course
management systems.
Grading
Project
|
Grade
|
Grade
|
Grade
|
Census
PowerPoint and upload to SlideShare
|
13-
15pts
Comparison
between 2000 and 2010 census
Underserved
population identified and uploaded to SlideShare
|
8-12pts
Had
most of the elements required;
uploaded
to SlideShare
|
0-7pts.
No Census comparisons.
Did
not identify underserved population.
|
Revised
Policies Assignment
|
8-10
pts
Provided
viable revisions for the policies
|
5-7
pts.
Had
most of the elements required.
|
0-4pts
Did
not compose an inclusive policy
|
Film
review
|
8-
10pts
Chose
a film that represented underserved population.
|
5-7
pts
Chose
a film that represented underserved population.
|
0-4pts
No
relevant comments. Did not address an underserved population.
|
Bibliography
|
13-15pts
Composed
a well rounded bibliography with multimedia sources. resources
|
9-12pts
Composed
a good bibliography not as diverse as requested
|
0-8pts
Not
diverse; no multimedia selections.
|
Event
project (poster and press release)
|
17-20pts
Event
well chosen and represented.
Well
designed
Promoted
appropriately.
|
13-16pts.
Event
well chosen and represented.
Graphics
above average.
|
0-12pts.
Mediocre
event choice. Poor layout; poor choice of promotion
|
Wiki
participation
|
8-10pts
Wiki
resource after most modules
|
5-7pts
Frequent
but not consistent posts.
|
0-4pts
Few
or no posts.
|
Discussion
board postings
|
17-20pts
Posted
on time and relevant comments and responded to classmates
|
13-16
pts. Occasional late posting
Mostly
relevant comments
Responded
frequently to classmate postings.
|
0-12pts.
Infrequent
Poorly
written or off topic posts.
|
Creation
of Delicious, Webjunction, SlideShare accounts
|
5pts
Created
accounts for all and used them as resources
|
4pts
Created
and used somewhat
|
1pt.
Created
and didn’t use.
|
Modules
MODULE 1
WEEK 1&2
|
LEARNING
OBJECTIVE
|
COURSE RESOURCES
|
ASSESSMENT
|
Demographics and Diversity
This
module will discuss the use and analysis of government statistics
(www.Census.gov) of populations in the United States to identify various
groups that make up their library’s community.
|
Students
will develop an awareness of various racial, socioeconomic, religious,
cultural, and ethnic groups by analyzing online census data and comparing
their library’s collections and program offerings to determine if they are
inclusive and reflect the library’s community.
|
Websites:
American Factfinder(Census)
http://factfinder.census.gov/home/saff/main.html?_lang=en
American
Library Association (ALA) Underserved
Populations
http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=outreachresource
Students
must set up a free account On Slide Share
www.Slideshare.com
Students
can create a Delicious account to bookmark resources
www.delicious.com
Read
Finding the Underserved. Library
Journal: Library News, Reviews and Views.
http: www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6602835.html
|
Students
will compare and contrast Census numbers using the 2010 and the 2000 numbers.
Students
will prepare a PowerPoint presentation of their findings.
Students
will upload their presentation to SlideShare.
Discussion
board topics:
Do
Census numbers match who students observe using their library.
Who
is their library’s underserved populations.
Post
a resource to the wiki.
|
MODULE 2
WEEKS 3 & 4
|
LEARNING
OBJECTIVE
|
COURSE RESOURCES
|
ASSESSMENT
|
Diversity and Professional Due Diligence
Students
will analyze Library Bill of Rights and discuss bias and its impact on
library services.
|
Students
will demonstrate knowledge of ethical considerations per the American Library
Association’s Bill of Rights so that they will be able to contrast their own
beliefs and attitudes with those of their culturally diverse community
populations in a nonjudgmental fashion.
|
Websites
American
Library Association http://www.ala.org/ala/issuesadvocacy/intfreedom/librarybill/index.cfm
Webjunction
Students
must set up a free account Webjunction
http://www.webjunction.com
Public Libraries and
Effective Inclusion & Diversity Training by Kathryn Perkins
http://www.webjunction.org/create-deliver-training/-/articles/content/86091081
|
Students
will create a Webjunction account and read their resources on diversity and
inclusion.
Discussion board topics:
Students will post
their ideas and thoughts about the ALA Library Bill of Rights.
Students will
discuss materials or programs that have been excluded from their library due
to personal or community, etc. biases or concerns.
Post
a resource to the wiki.
|
MODULE 3
WEEKS 5 & 6
|
LEARNING
OBJECTIVE
|
COURSE
RESOURCES
|
ASSESSMENT
|
Diversity
and Library Culture
Using
the information garnered in modules 1 and 2 students will perform a SWOT
analysis of their library.
|
Students
will complete a SWOT analysis of their library to determine if the collective
culture (policies, collections, programming and promotion) of their library
is one that promotes serving a diverse patronage.
|
Websites
American
Library Association (ALA)
The
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and Transgender Round Table of the American Library
Association
http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/rts/glbtrt/index.cfm
American
Library Association (ALA)
Ethnic and Multicultural Information Exchange Round Table (EMIERT)
http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/rts/emiert/emiebulletin/emiertbulletin.cfm
ADA
Toolkit
NPR
Multicultural
Books Offer Diverse Reading Experience
Public
Libraries Help Grandparent Caregivers
|
Students
will review their library’s policies on collection development and
programming to evaluate if they promote inclusion of materials and services
that serve a diverse population.
Students
will submit their library’s policy on either collections or programming; they
will then revise that library’s policies to maximize inclusiveness for their
library’s community.
Discussion board topic:
Students
will post what changes they made to their policies to make them more
sensitive and inclusive.
Post
a resource to the wiki.
|
\
MODULE 4
WEEKS 6 & 7
|
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
|
COURSE RESOURCES
|
ASSESSMENT
|
Resources
This
module concerns finding and providing library worthy resources to buy
materials and create programs for their library’s underserved populations.
|
Students
will develop the ability to integrate multicultural materials and programming
into their libraries by researching and evaluating online and print
resources, by recognizing the importance of partnerships with local agencies,
institutions and using available forums for sharing of information and ideas.
|
List
of multicultural films
List
of multicultural vendors
List
of types of local agencies
|
Students
will view a film from a provided list of movies and write a film review.
Students
will post their review on the wiki.
Using
an underserved group in their library’s community students will compose a
bibliographic list of resources including film, magazines, books (non-fiction
and fiction), local, agencies, and media.
|
MODULE 5
WEEKS 8 & 9
|
LEARNING OBJECTIVE
|
COURSE
RESOURCES
|
ASSESSMENT
|
PROMOTION &
COLLABORATION
This
module discusses how to use media to reach the diverse populations in
library’s community.
It
also encourages students to promote and share resources for the betterment of
library services to all people.
|
Students
will be able to promote library collections and programming by composing
press releases and articles targeted
at local multicultural and special interest (language, sexual
orientation, culture)media including; newspapers, cable stations and radio in
their library’s community.
|
Press
release examples
List
of free language translators
Watch
public library promotion video at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=
zPzJoQb9D4A
|
Students
will create an event (book club, computer class, film club, etc) targeted at
an underserved population. Students will create a poster for the event.
Students
will write a press release.
Students
will provide a list of local media outlets that serve a diverse population
Discussion
board topic:
Students
will post their experiences in reaching out to diverse media outlets.
Post
a resource to the wiki.
|
References
ALA
| EMIERT Bulletin. (n.d.). ALA | Home - American Library Association.
Retrieved from
http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/rts/emiert/emiebulletin/emiertbulletin.cfm
ALA
| GLBT Round Table. (n.d.). ALA | Home - American Library Association.
Retrieved from http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/rts/glbtrt/index.cfm
ALA
| Library Bill of Rights. (n.d.). ALA | Home - American Library Association.
Retrieved from
http://www.ala.org/ala/issuesadvocacy/intfreedom/librarybill/index.cfm
ALA
| Library Outreach Resources. (n.d.). ALA | Home - American Library
Association. Retrieved from http://www.ala.org/Template.cfm?Section=outreachresource
ALA
| The ADA Library Kit. (n.d.). ALA | Home - American Library Association.
Retrieved from
http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/ascla/asclaissues/adalibrarykit.cfm
American
Factfinder. (n.d.). Retrieved 2011, from
http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/SAFFIteratedFacts?_event=Search
Futterman,
M. (2008, October 15). Finding the Underserved. Library Journal: Library
News, Reviews and Views. Retrieved from http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6602835.html
Greenville
Library (Producer). (2009, May 20). Welcome to Your Public Library
[Video]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPzJoQb9D4A
Meyers, N. M., &
Nulty, D. D. (2009). How to use (five) curriculum design principles to align
authentic. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 34(5),
565–577.
Morrison, Morrison,
G.R., S. Ross, and J. E. Kemp. (2007). Designing
effective instruction (5th ed.). New York: John Wiley and Sons. ISBN:
0-470-07426-4.
Multicultural
Books Offer Diverse Reading Experience: NPR. (2007, July 19). NPR: National
Public Radio: News & Analysis, World, US, Music & Arts: NPR.
Retrieved from http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=12093236
Online
Training Resources for Librarians - Library Success: A Best Practices Wiki.
(n.d.). Library Success: A Best Practices Wiki - Library Success: A Best
Practices Wiki. Retrieved from
http://www.libsuccess.org/index.php?title=Online_Training_Resources_for_Librarians
Perkins,
K. (2009, March). WebJunction - Create and Deliver Training. Webjunction.
Retrieved from
http://www.webjunction.org/create-deliver-training/-/articles/content/86091081
Reiser,
R. A. (2002). A history of instructional design and technology. In R. A. Reiser
& J. V. Dempsey (Eds.), Trends and issues in instructional design and
technology (pp. 26-53).
Columbus, OH: Merrill/Prentice-Hall.
Upload
& Share PowerPoint Presentations and Documents.
(n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.Slideshare.com
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