I have had the very good fortune to spend five days over the past few weeks with Paula Boston, school
librarian at E. Rivers ElementarySchool in Atlanta. Paula’s library is vibrant and full of kids from the moment it opens until the end of the school day. These pre-K to fifth graders are BUSY and full of questions! So I thought it only appropriate to sit down with Paula to talk about AASL SharedFoundation I: Inquire.Foundation I is all about facilitating curiosity, questioning,
and research, and these activities are ongoing in the E. Rivers library. Even the set-up of the library – with a chalkboard
wall, centers for game play, Lego wall, and iPad table in addition to the
traditional storytime rug and bookshelves – encourages children to seek
information.
As an IB school, E. Rivers places emphasis on
research. Teachers spend time in their PLC
groups focusing on research, and fifth graders complete a capstone research
project. To support this instruction,
Paul loves using GALILEO, the Georgia Virtual Library, to help students
practice their inquiry skills. She pairs
the databases available in GALILEO with the WISER strategy:
- Wonder
- Information
- Synthesis
- Express
- Review/revise
She also recommends Facts4Me, a database created by
librarians that costs $50/year, for kindergarten to second grade students.
To get teachers on board with inquiry instruction, Paula uses organic networking with teachers, often stopping them in the hall to ask “What are you studying right now? What activities are you doing?” and then bringing teachers in to have their classes engage with choice boards that foster development of inquiry skills. She also offers a menu of choices for teachers!
While I was there, a class of second grade students were sharing Jamboard presentations they had created after asking lots of questions about extreme weather phenomena (tornadoes, hurricanes, floods, and more) and then digging in to books, GALILEO, and Facts4Me. It was so much fun to see the kids in action!