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Campaign Shouts About school libraries
21.11.11 | Caroline Horn
A campaign to promote school libraries and school library services aims to make them statutory. The campaign, Shout About, is backed by the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP), the Association of Senior Children's and Educational Librarians (ASCEL) and the School Library Association.
The initiative aims to use lobbying and PR to halt the closure of school libraries and to prevent more qualified school librarians from losing their jobs. Shout About will also campaign for school libraries to be inspected by Ofsted.
Annie Mauger, chief executive of CILIP, said: "I have had positive discussions with schools minister Nick Gibb who is looking for answers on how to promote a culture of reading in schools. We believe that taking away pupils' libraries and librarians is not the best way to do it."
A libraries all-party parliamentary group will launch next month. "There will be parliamentary questions and future discussions on these issues with ministers," Mauger added.
The campaign will be closely involved in promoting school library services (SLS), a distinct facility that supports school libraries and provides book loans and guidance for teaching the curriculum.
Gill Harris, ASCEL chair, said as well as its promotional work to government and schools, the campaign will explore SLS' business models in order to develop a strategy or proposal for how SLSs should conduct their business. SLSs work within a number of different business models and are in danger of being used as a cash cow by local authorities.



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A school without a library - it's like a home without a kitchen. Surely books are still at the heart of learning? OK, computers have a vital place too, but if we don't nourish our children with books they are truly ill-fed.
Thank you for your support against the worsening situation here in Australia regarding school libraries and teacher librarians.
While, Peter Garrett, our federal education minister fiddles and doesn't respond to the report of last year's Inquiry into School Libraries and Teacher Librarians and its 11 recommendations (however inadequate - they leave out supporting training of TLs thru scholarships asap and development of much needed national guidelines for school library services and staffing, for example), "books are burning." (O/S readers may not know that Peter Garrett was a former rock star with a hit song, "Beds are Burning.")
VICTORIA
Less than 13% of Victorian primary libraries now have qualified teacher librarians in charge, including the 248 new federally funded BER libraries at $2-3 million dollars each. And that’s just the infrastructure. Now secondary schools are being battered. Three more qualified teacher librarians in large state high schools have been told they won’t be replaced on retirement or will be moved to other duties or into the classroom.
This leaves multi-million dollar resource centres in the hands of technicians and volunteers. Does the state see this practice as good management? Do they run their own “corporation” this way? Is such decision-making not accountable? And why do private schools continue to use well resourced and staffed school library resource centres as selling points?
WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Meanwhile campaigns are going on in Western Australia to save high school TLs being sacked under a new "Independent Government Schools" cost cutting strategy (few primary schools there have ever had TLs. In fact the number of teacher librarians employed by the Education Department has dropped from 174 in 2007 to 140 this year, and the number of library officers has risen from 900 in 2007 to 922). The WA education department has made the final push to complete its economic rationalist program first introduced in the late 1980s with under Brian Burke. All resourcing has now been devolved to schools. Library Officers, who are not teachers, are being pressured by principals to take on duty of care and teaching duties, as well as professional duties such as budgets and the selection of resources. Independent schools are looking at hiring non-professional staff under federal awards - to pay them less. Schools in the independent sector which have had TLs in the past, are also not replacing staff who retire or move to another school. The central Curriculum Materials Information Service is now focusing on the Australian curriculum but what exactly they are doing we don't know and have not been able to find out. We know that one of the TLs has quit because she is so disillusioned with what is happening. The website is not being maintained but will be decommissioned and moved into the Intranet. A world class teaching and learning resource disappears. One school parent group fought back and asked why a private school down the road had a grand library and their principal was proposing not to have one in their new school. The school subsequently included a library, although the TL is only 0.5.
SOUTH AUSTRALIA
In South Australia, under a new teaching award, TL positions, and other specialist staff, are no longer quarantined, so positions are being cashed in for cheaper options. At least seven high schools no longer have qualified teacher librarians in charge of their libraries. At least 5 primary schools have no teacher librarians and 5 more have had hours reduced. At least one school has removed non-fiction books and replaced them with computers, leaving English teachers to promote reading and information literacy, Henley High School. Marryatville High School is currently making similar plans, which includes re-allocation of library space. The decision by South Australia’s Labor government not to include teacher librarians and student counselors as essential members of staff in their latest Enterprise Bargaining Award (2010) has left the door open for the end of these positions.
ACT
In the ACT, almost 50% of primary schools in 2008 (latest available figures) did not have a qualified teacher librarian, although most had a teacher providing access to library resources for some of the time. A number of schools do not have any teacher employed to provide library services. The reasons given by principals for not having a qualified teacher librarian included the unavailability of qualified teacher librarians, insufficient staffing points to cover a librarian within current staffing arrangements/entitlements, and insufficient funding/unable to finance.
QUEENSLAND
In Queensland teacher-librarian numbers are dwindling. Probably 10-15% do not have teacher librarians in the library (they may be in classrooms instead).
Even where trained TLs are employed, up to 60% are teaching.classes in the library. The professional role of the teacher librarian remains too often unacknowledged. Now at least one director of schools is telling principals they don’t need libraries. Seven, soon to be eight, Gold Coast high schools do not have teacher librarians running their libraries. With no qualified central school library advisor, Education Queensland’s library services manager gives ill-informed advice such as getting rid of all books published before 2002.
NORTHERN TERRITORY
95% of schools in the Northern Territory do not have qualified staff (most of these are remote Aboriginal schools). 70% of primary schools have budgets under $500. Of the 62 new federally funded BER school libraries only three are thought to have fully qualified staff.
TASMANIA
Tasmania has lost 67% of their TLs since school based staffing came in, and TLs are still being shed as money is being withdrawn from education.. Only seven of Tasmania’s 527 new BER libraries are believed to have qualified teacher librarians.
NEW SOUTH WALES
NSW, where TLs are trained and staffed in all government schools, is now looking at bringing in school based management. The NSWTF see this as entirely a cost cutting measure, as it is, and will fight it .
LOCALLY EMPOWERED SCHOOLS/SCHOOL BASED MANAGEMENT
Global budgeting is sold to the community as a way for principals and schools to determine their own needs. In reality, they have become a means by which governments of all persuasions have been able to continually slash education budgets without having to wear the pain. "The school made that decision" is the constant refrain when a well loved program is axed. Our situation is part of a much larger issue of declining education funding. Over the past 20 years, education funding in Australia has declined, as funding in other OECD countries has increased. We are now among the lowest funding countries in the developed world, 28th after Lithuania and Greece.
Local control of local schools is fine for local projects. But without adequate funding and without transparency in decision-making and accountability, it will only send us further down the educational and economic ladder.
As Mark Moran wrote on Forbes.com recently, “Many absolutely clueless administrators still believe that a search engine is an adequate substitute for a trained research teacher.” (Moran, 2010)
The future divide in Australian education will not be digital, it will be between the schools which can afford one or more teacher librarians, and those where students have to rely on Google.
Georgia Phillips
co-founder
The Hub: Campaign for Quality School Libraries in Australia
http://hubinfo.wordpress.com/
A Qualified TL in Every School.
Sign our petition now. 3000 and climbing!:
My School Library site for parents at
Teachers, Principals and Teacher Educators Connecting with Teacher Librarians
Get Parliamentarians to Support our
School Library Service Declaration
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