Here is my visual reflection on collaboration for PK12-LIB1-022. My reflection includes 5 sections:
• My experiences & learnings from the readings.
• Successes
• Challenges?
• How Guided Inquiry supports collaboration (and how collaboration supports guided inquiry)
• How technology and innovation are critical for advancing collaboration, particularly during the pandemic.
Please let me know what you think!
3. Quote: Teachers do not
need to teach "on an island"
with little support when there
is such a rich resource in the
library–not just for us, but for
our students as well.
(“How Your Teacher-Librarian Can Be
an Ally When Teaching with Inquiry |
KQED”)
8. Quote: I have discovered rich support
and learning in my own backyard when I
have collaborated with my teacher-
librarian.
(“How Your Teacher-Librarian Can Be an Ally When
Teaching with Inquiry | KQED”)
11. Peter Milbury's Top 10 Reasons to Collaborate:
1. Increases student achievement.
2. Allows you to model successful and desirable practices.
3. Reinforces your important and pivotal role as an educational leader.
4. Allows you to work in a non-clerical, non-stereotypical role.
5. Contributes to the quality of teacher training experience through working
with student teachers, demonstrating the power of the SLMS.
6. Guarantees that ethical use of information is integrated into instruction.
7. Allows you to practice and hone important skills related to collaboration.
8. Allows you to showcase your important collaboration skills to other teachers.
9. Provides you with opportunities to search for, discover and make use of
online information resources in context.
10.Allows you to expand and organize your online collections.
(“Module 5.4: Resources Focus on Collaboration: Teacher Librarian Part 1”)
12. (PRODUCED by the SURREY CHAPTER of the
BCTLA and the SURREY TEACHERS’ASSOCIATION)
13. According to the interviewees, good collaborations
include but are not limited to these 11 characteristics:
1.Respectful communication
2.Goal setting
3.Timely and regular planning
4.Open and flexible mind‐sets
5.Student‐centered approaches with student benefit as the shared goal
6.Valuing of the expertise and perspectives of others
7.Advocacy for what each member can offer the collaboration
8.Generosity
9.Commitment to meeting both the group and individual needs of students
10.Willingness to evaluate the collaborative and provide supportive critical feedback
11.Safety to articulate concerns and issues without irrevocably damaging the collaborative
Quote: Oh, good
communication, number one.
I think an acceptance that
people are coming from
different experience and have
different ideas. It looks like
it's well planned. There's
nothing ad hoc about it, and
it looks like you're trying to
move towards an end goal
and having an awareness of
what that is. (Merga)
15. Success: Opportunity to embrace diversity, equity and inclusion
Quote: We must see our students for who they are,
embracing their gifts, their cultures, and differences….We
need stories with people of color going about their lives, not
just stories of overcoming struggles that are so prevalent in
our collections.
(Sturge)
16. Example: We’ve
expanded our French book
collection to make sure it
embraces diversity. We
used this book for a
French Storywalk for the
community.
17. Success: Use of online
networks (I use Facebook
frequently to collaborate)
http://www.ala.org/aasl/sites/ala.
org.aasl/files/content/advocacy/r
esearch/docs/NCLE_AASLinfog
raphic_FINAL-download.pdf
18. Success: Modelling collaboration & helping students learn to collaborate
Quote: Student collaboration is an important aspect of learning as students
acquire skills in social learning. “We cannot provide robust, engaged, and
differentiated learning unless kids can break into a variety of groups and work
together. Learning is far too weak if we limit students’ actions, conversations, and
thinking to what the one adult in the room can monitor.” Harvey and Daniels, (2009,
p. 37). - (“Collaboration and Inquiry”)
20. Challenge: Little to no
structured collaboration time
http://www.ala.org/aasl/sites/ala.
org.aasl/files/content/advocacy/r
esearch/docs/NCLE_AASLinfogr
aphic_FINAL-download.pdf
21. (FEATURE 24 Knowledge Quest |
Evaluation and Assessment for
Learning)
Challenge: Hard to do without training
Challenge: Time and lack of common planning time
Challenge: Marketing – do
teachers know we exist?
22. H O W C A N Y O U U S E
G U I D E D I N Q U I R Y
T O S U P P O R T
C O L L A B O R A T I O N
W I T H C L A S S R O O M
T E A C H E R S ?
Beaglelearning.com/blog
23. (“Collaboration and Inquiry”)
Quote: “Collaborative partnerships between the
teacher-librarian and teacher(s) are of value in
designing instruction, co-teaching lessons, and
assessing student learning"
(Connections : Policy and Guidelines for School
Libraries in Saskatchewan, 2008. p. 21)
24. Inquiry-Based Learning must be collaborative
“Sharing Learning” is one of the 4 phases of inquiry.
QUOTE: [Teachers that focus on inquiry-based learning] "encourage collaborative learning and create
intellectual spaces for students to engage in rich talk about their thinking and learning. They create a
classroom ethos that fosters respect for others’ ideas and opinions and encourages risk-taking.“
(Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat)
When students are engaged in this phase of the inquiry process, they:
25. No matter what the topic or direction of inquiry,
it is important to bring the class together to
“check in” and share and discuss the big ideas
of the subject/investigation/inquiry at hand. By
doing so, everyone benefits. On an individual
level, students benefit by hearing perspectives
different from their own, potentially revealing
important insight into a particular problem or
learning obstacle they may have. In Vygotskian
tradition, it is through the social practice of
learning and thinking that students learn to
think for themselves: “Through association with
others the community of inquiry will lead to a
richer, more varied ‘internal’ dialogue, and as a
result a better, more reasonable thinking,
through ‘self-correction’” (Burgh & Nichols,
2011).
(Student Achievement Division and Ministry of
Education)
(“What Is Inquiry-Based Learning: 7 Benefits &
Strategies You Need to Know”)
33. “Best Student-Collaboration Tools.” Common Sense Education, Common Sense Education, 30 Sept. 2015,
www.commonsense.org/education/top-picks/best-student-collaboration-tools. Accessed 11 May 2021.
Capacity Building Series.
http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/literacynumeracy/inspire/research/CBS_CollaborativeInquiry.pdf
“Collaboration and Inquiry.” Saskatchewan School Library Association, 2016, www.ssla.ca/collaboration-and-
inquiry.html. Accessed 11 May 2021.
Davenport, Mary. “Socratic Seminars: Building a Culture of Student-Led Discussion.” Edutopia, George Lucas
Educational Foundation, 22 Sept. 2016, www.edutopia.org/blog/socratic-seminars-culture-student-led-discussion-
mary-davenport. Accessed 11 May 2021.
Gassenheimer, Cathy. “Spider Web Discussions Help Students Take Ownership of Learning.” A+ Alabama Best
Practices Center, 11 Jan. 2018, aplusala.org/best-practices-center/2018/01/11/spider-web-discussions-help-
students-take-ownership-of-learning/. Accessed 11 May 2021.
http://www.ala.org/aasl/sites/ala.org.aasl/files/content/advocacy/research/docs/NCLE_AASLinfographic_FINAL-
download.pdf
“How Your Teacher-Librarian Can Be an Ally When Teaching with Inquiry | KQED.” KQED, 22 Apr. 2019,
www.kqed.org/mindshift/53417/how-your-teacher-librarian-can-be-an-ally-when-teaching-with-
inquiry?fbclid=IwAR0zPYsIY31qLExQ9_OFaxlHeOm4hgxpD4TanbJjyzi3QRRFZ-urrJlIgpo. Accessed 11 May 2021.
Jackson, Sarah. “How Technology Can Encourage Student Collaboration.” Common Sense Education, Common
Sense Education, 16 Dec. 2013, www.commonsense.org/education/articles/how-technology-can-encourage-
student-collaboration. Accessed 11 May 2021.
Literacy and Numeracy Secretariat. Student Achievement Division. 2011.
http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/eng/literacynumeracy/inspire/research/CBS_StudentInquiry.pdf
Works Cited:
34. Loertscher, David, and Carol Koechlin. Coteaching and the Learning Commons: Building a Participatory School Culture.
Merga, Margaret Kristin. “Collaborating with Teacher Librarians to Support Adolescents’ Literacy and Literature Learning.” Journal of
Adolescent & Adult Literacy, vol. 63, no. 1, 21 Feb. 2019, pp. 65–72, ila.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/jaal.958,
10.1002/jaal.958. Accessed 11 May 2021.
“Merriam-Webster Dictionary.” Merriam-Webster.com, 2021, www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/collaborate. Accessed 11 May 2021.
“Module 5.4: Resources Focus on Collaboration: Teacher Librarian Part 1.” Utoronto.ca, 2021,
q.utoronto.ca/courses/222191/pages/module-5-dot-4-resources-focus-on-collaboration?module_item_id=2411500. Accessed 11 May
2021.
PRODUCED by the SURREY CHAPTER of the BCTLA and the SURREY TEACHERS’ ASSOCIATION.
“Raising and Teaching Anti-Racist Kids |.” Utoronto.ca, 2020, wordpress.oise.utoronto.ca/librarynews/2020/06/04/raising-and-teaching-
anti-racist-kids/. Accessed 11 May 2021.
Slidesharecdn.com, 2021, image.slidesharecdn.com/21stcenturylearner-1234068979334230-2/95/the-21st-century-learner-2-
728.jpg?cb=1270349113. Accessed 11 May 2021.
Student Achievement Division, and Ministry of Education. Capacity Building Series. 2015.
Sturge, Jennifer. “School Libraries and Antiracism | Knowledge Quest.” Aasl.org, 3 June 2020, knowledgequest.aasl.org/school-
libraries-and-antiracism/. Accessed 11 May 2021.
Title, Cassie. “Guided Inquiry Learning - Definition, Teaching Process, and Tools.” The Beagle Blog, The Beagle Blog, 27 Aug. 2020,
www.beaglelearning.com/blog/inquiry/guided/#:~:text=Guided%20inquiry%20is%20a%20type,the%20goal%20and%20the%20process..
Accessed 11 May 2021.
Wagner, Danny. “We All Teach SEL: Teamwork Activities and Tools for Students.” Common Sense Education, Common Sense
Education, 25 Apr. 2019, www.commonsense.org/education/articles/we-all-teach-sel-teamwork-activities-and-tools-for-students.
Accessed 11 May 2021.
“What Is Inquiry-Based Learning: 7 Benefits & Strategies You Need to Know.” Prodigygame.com, 2017, www.prodigygame.com/main-
en/blog/inquiry-based-learning-definition-benefits-strategies/. Accessed 11 May 2021.