1. AALS and ISTE Standards
People today like "new", especially
when it is shiny or convenient, but people typically begin to grumble when
"new" means confusion and misunderstanding. The latter is the
"new experience" many school librarians across the country felt when
the new AASL standards were released in 2018. After attending a conference,
Courtney Lewis and her fellow independent school librarians decided to ban
together to break down and understand the standards through the framework,
outside sources, and conversations. They demonstrated the importance of
collaboration in the role and success of school libraries and librarians (Lewis, 2019).
The same type of collaboration is a critical component that the AASL and
ISTE standards provide the framework for learners and librarians. Both sets of
standards place the students in the driver's seat during the inquiry phase and the
importance of recognizing students' interests. AASL and ISTE understand the
value of an environment that fosters and encourages learning and growth within
each learner. The significance of learners making real-world connections so
they can relate to the target skills of the learning standards is demonstrated
throughout both standard sets. Self-feedback is another area in which learners
are encouraged to evaluate and reflect on their learning and offer feedback
to others within the AASL and the ISTE standards.
While AASL standards encourage a broad range of learning with a
primary focus on information literacy, the ISTE emphasizes digital literacy.
The infographics below provide an example of how each standard is set up. AASL
standards use short phrases for their competencies, while the ISTE uses an
objective sentence approach, much like state education standards. Another
critical difference between the two standard sets involves inclusion and the
amount of emphasis each places on this shared foundation. When referring to the
lack of standards from the ISTE under the "Include" foundation on
the crosswalk (AASL, 2018) for the
standard sets, Lewis (2019) stated, "(it) demonstrates school librarians' emphasis
on issues of diversity and inclusivity in our work." The AASL standards show
that librarians play a significant role in the information skills and more of
learners. Still, it is also essential to understand that the way learners
gather, send, and receive information has changed drastically in the last
decades. This awareness creates a bridge between the AASL and ISTE standards that
every librarian should crossover and connect with daily. Using these two
standard sets as supporting documents for each other rather than competing is
the only way for librarians to truly provide learners with well-balanced
information literacy instruction.
(American Association of School Librarians, 2018) (International Society for Technology in Education, 2016)
References
AASL standards crosswalk future ready. American Association of School Librarians. (2018).
Retrieved June 21, 2022, from https://standards.aasl.org/wp-
content/uploads/2018/08/180828-aasl-standardscrosswalk-future-ready.pdf
American Association of School Librarians. (2018). Shared foundations: Engage.
[Infographic]. American Association of School Librarians.
https://standards.aasl.org/project/foundations/.
International Society for Technology in Education. (2016). I am a digital age learner.
[Infographic]. International Society for Technology in Education. https://info.iste.org/iste-
student-standards-transform-the-classroom-
poster_ga=2.104771720.987667400.1655769278-246135604.1655769278.
Lewis, C. (2019). “Collaborating to communicate.” Knowledge Quest. (47)5, 36-43.


I agree that these standards can be used together to reach learning goals. While there are some differences, there is also a lot of overlap, and the standards address many of the same areas and skills. Librarians can work with teachers to plan lessons and learning activities that address both sets of standards at the same time.
ReplyDeleteYou are right -- our world has changed. In a video by Chris Stanger (referenced on my blog), he notes the importance of teachers' understanding that education has changed. We no longer live in a book/note learning world. In today's modern world, students learn from digital media far more than printed text. Students should also be able to identify reliable information as well as disseminate unreliable details. I find the crosswalk document provided by the American Association of School Librarians a good starting point as we learn to navigate both the AASL and ISTE standards. Take a look at: https://standards.aasl.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/180828-aasl-standards-crosswalk-iste.pdf.
ReplyDeleteThis was very beautifully written. You make a great point when you highlight the fact that a change or shift in anything is scary, but especially to educators. What Courtney Lewis and her colleagues did was an excellent example of collaboration for a greater cause. I also believe that collaboration is key when attempting to understand and implement the AASL and ISTE standards. They are both great tools and building a thorough understanding of them and how they work together is essential to the implementation process. I also believe that both of the standards should be a daily aspect of every school librarian's instruction.
ReplyDeleteI also noticed that when faced with a learning opportunity (the new AASL standards being published), that Lewis formed a group of fellow librarians and they sat down to collaborate and learn together. They were highlighting the Foundation of Include seamlessly. They balanced each other's perspectives in their learning community. They also modeled quality gathering and organizing of new information, showing their mastery of the Curate Foundation.
ReplyDeleteNot being a current teacher myself, I don't have the perspective that you have laid out about how these standards may or may not mesh with your current state teaching standards. I think these differences highlight the value of the librarian and library in the learning life of the students.
I like the inclusion of self-feedback and real-world connections that is present in the AASL and ISTE standards, as you mentioned. I think that too often, students lose interest in learning because they do not see the relevance in the subject matter. I also think that the similarities as well as the differences between these two standards work well together, supporting similar sills and learning goals and highlighting different approaches to achieve them (in the case of the ISTE standards, using digital tools and related skill sets).
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