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Thursday, September 25, 2014

Collection Development Plan Part 1 For LIS S502 Fall 2014-The school is fictional.

Collection Development Plan: Mt. Zorro Elementary School 2014-2015

for LIS S502

Kristen S. Nicoson
Department of Library Science
School of Informatics and Computing
Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis
Author Note
This plan is designed as a class exercise and Mt. Zorro Elementary School is a fictitious location.  For more information about this mock plan, contact:XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX 

Table of Contents
The Mt. Zorro Elementary School Media Center................................................................. 3
Site Description................................................................................................................ 3
Demographics.................................................................................................................. 3
Funding............................................................................................................................ 4
Governance and Organization......................................................................................... 4
New Collection Subject Area: Hispanic/Latino Studies.................................................. 5
Mission Statement.............................................................................................................. 6
Intellectual Freedom Policy............................................................................................... 7
Request for Reconsideration............................................................................................ 7
References........................................................................................................................... 9
Appendix A....................................................................................................................... 10
Appendix B........................................................................................................................ 11





Collection Development Plan: Mt. Zorro Elementary School 2014-2015

The Mt. Zorro Elementary School Media Center

            When a media center needs a significant addition to the collection to better serve the student and faculty, it is important to choose materials with care, purpose and method.  The following plan will guide the selection of new materials for this school year.  The selection will be done in accordance with the ideals of good stewardship of public funds and providing for the education and recreation of our students and staff.

Site Description

The Media Center at Mt. Zorro Elementary School is a school library in the Metropolitan School District of Foxwoods Township, Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S.A.  Established in 1992, the Mt. Zorro Media Center contains approximately 18,100 resources designed to help students in grades K-5 with research, to promote curiosity and inquiry, and to encourage within the students a desire to read for pleasure.   

Demographics

The Media Center serves approximately 800 student patrons and 100 faculty, staff, and community patrons.  Most of the student patrons use the school’s media center as their sole outlet for borrowing reading and research materials because they are not afforded regular opportunities to use the public libraries in the community.  Additionally, about 25 percent of the student patrons and their families speak Spanish as their first language, hailing predominantly from Mexico, but sometime from other countries like Honduras or El Salvador, for example.  Therefore, the Media Center offers a wide array of materials in physical and electronic form for research and pleasurable reading pursuits in both English and Spanish. 

Funding

The acquisition of new materials is funded with money allocated by the school district from the district’s annual budget.  There is also an additional small allotment from the school’s Parent-Teacher Organization.  Some money is also received from patrons to pay for lost or damaged books.  Those funds are not used for new items unless the damaged or lost item is out of print and a comparable title must be acquired, instead.  Records of all purchases are kept in the office of the Media specialist. 

Governance and Organization

The governance of the library is performed by the school’s media specialist including programming and materials acquisition. The district’s director of curriculum may intervene in the event of a challenged material, which will be addressed in another section of this plan, however, the director doesn’t oversee programming or collection development. The scheduling of the classes in the special area subject rotation, of which the media center is a part, is planned by the scheduling committee and approved by the principal.  As with the other building staff, including the media center assistant the media specialist reports to the building’s principal.  The media center assistant also reports to and receives direction from the media specialist. 

The ultimate aim of this plan is to develop a collection of books to help our large and growing population of Latino students explore their own heritage.  However, the new materials will serve the entire school population as well because it will also give non-Latinos the opportunity to learn more about their classmates’ cultures and make connections with Latino students in terms of common goals, experiences and feelings.  This collection will include resources in English and Spanish, in book and electronic forms, and will cover Hispanic/ Latino history, geography, and culture.  Additionally, the new collection will include some critical literacy fiction that will showcase realistic Latino children in both English and Spanish.  

According to the American Association of School Librarians (2013), “The mission of the school library program is to ensure that students and staff are effective users of ideas and information” (Chapter 1, Section 1, para. 6).  Equally important, is the mission of fostering a lifetime love of reading within each student.  More than just a book depository, the media center is a place where research, learning, and collaboration takes place with the help of a qualified media specialist to guide the students and staff in their quest to become educated, globally-minded citizens.  Therefore, the mission of the Mt. Zorro Elementary School media center program is two-fold:  First, the media center, it’s staff and resources will transform the students and faculty into teams of skilled, enthusiastic, globally-minded, and technologically adept information users.  Second, the media center by nature of its arrangement and offerings will inspire students to read and consider themselves readers. 

The media center at Mt. Zorro Elementary School is dedicated to the free exchange of ideas and access to materials for all of its patrons.  While we maintain a collection aimed at elementary school students and their teachers, we subscribe to the intellectual freedom policies laid out by the American Library Association in the Library Bill of Rights (see Appendix B).  The bill states that, “Books and other library resources should be provided for the interest, information, and enlightenment of all people of the community the library serves” (pp. Page 1, paragraph 2).  To that end the media specialist strives to maintain an age appropriate, diverse, and balanced collection with a large variety of resources that inform through different perspective. 

Request for Reconsideration

The media specialist has carefully selected the resources and materials for use by the students taking in to account the patrons’ demographics including, but not limited, to reading abilities and also with an understanding of the various maturity levels of the students throughout the school.  However, sometimes the parent/guardian of a minor patron believes that a particular resource may not be appropriate for use by their in the classroom and/or at home.  There is a process in which that parent/guardian may participate to request that their student to be excused from using such a resource. Understand that the first and best way for a parent to ensure that a child is getting materials that they deem to be optimal for their student is to visit the library and help them make their selections.  It is a parent’s right to participate in their child’s school library selection time. However, if they are not able to participate in the student’s library time and would like to request that we restrict the student’s access to a specific material, the media center has a procedure, adopted in 1993 and approved each year since, by the superintendent of the Metropolitan School District of Foxwoods Township Schools, to consider such a request.  To begin the process, the parent/guardian must submit a “Request for Reconsideration” form (see Appendix A).  If the request is granted, this material will be restricted from use by that student only (Martin, 2007).  All requests for reconsideration will be taken seriously.  After the form has been submitted, the media specialist will have 5 school days to review the request and make contact with the child’s guardian.  The media specialist will then consider the request and work to find a solution that pleases all of the parties involved.  If no solution can be agreed upon after 10 school days from the date the request was submitted, it will be forwarded to the director of curriculum for the district for further consideration.  The director of curriculum will then have 10 school days to complete and investigation and make a final decision on the matter.   

References

American Association of School Librarians. (2013). Empowering learners : guidelines for school library programs (Kindle ed.). Chicago: American Association of School Librarians.
American Library Association. (1995, June 27). Sample Request for Reconsideration of Library Resources. (I. F. Committee, Ed.) Retrieved 09 21, 2014, from Missing: Find a Banned Book: http://www.ala.org/bbooks/challengedmaterials/support/samplereconsideration
Library Bill of Rights. (1996-2014). Retrieved from American Library Association: http://www.ala.org/advocacy/intfreedom/librarybill
Martin, A. (2007). Preparing for a Challenge. Knowledge Quest, 36(2), 54-56. Retrieved September 19, 2014, from http://search.proquest.com/docview/194727681?accountid=7398






Request for Reconsideration of Library Resources
The school board of Foxwoods Township, Indianapolis, Marion County, Indiana, U.S.A. has delegated the responsibility for selection and evaluation of the Mt. Zorro Elementary School media center resources to the school library media specialist, and has established reconsideration procedures to address concerns about those resources. Completion of this form is the first step in those procedures. If you wish to request reconsideration of media center resources, please return the completed form to the Library Media specialist at Mt. Zorro Elementary School, 1 Zorro Way, Indianapolis, Indiana 46220.

Name ___________________________
Date ___________________________
Address ___________________________
City ___________________________
State ___________________________
Zip ___________________________
Phone ___________________________
Do you represent self? ____ Organization? _____________________________________

  1. Resource on which you are commenting:
    ____ Book ____ Textbook ____ Video ____ Display ____ Magazine ____ Library Program
    ____ Audio Recording ____ Newspaper ____ Electronic information/network (please specify)
    ____ Other __________________________
    Title ___________________________
    Author/Producer ___________________________

  1. What brought this resource to your attention?
  2. Have you examined the entire resource?
  3. What concerns you about the resource? (use the other side or attach additional sheets)
  4. Are there resource(s) you suggest to provide additional information and/or other viewpoints on this topic? (use the other side or attach additional sheets)
For more information call: 317-259-5000 or find us at www.circ.mz.msdft.k12.in.us
Mt. Zorro Elementary School Media Center 1 Zorro Way, Indianapolis, Indiana 46220.
Template provided by the (American Library Association, 1995)


Library Bill of Rights
The American Library Association affirms that all libraries are forums for information and ideas, and that the following basic policies should guide their services.

I. Books and other library resources should be provided for the interest, information, and enlightenment of all people of the community the library serves. Materials should not be excluded because of the origin, background, or views of those contributing to their creation.
II. Libraries should provide materials and information presenting all points of view on current and historical issues. Materials should not be proscribed or removed because of partisan or doctrinal disapproval.
III. Libraries should challenge censorship in the fulfillment of their responsibility to provide information and enlightenment.
IV. Libraries should cooperate with all persons and groups concerned with resisting abridgment of free expression and free access to ideas.
V. A person’s right to use a library should not be denied or abridged because of origin, age, background, or views.
VI. Libraries which make exhibit spaces and meeting rooms available to the public they serve should make such facilities available on an equitable basis, regardless of the beliefs or affiliations of individuals or groups requesting their use.

Adopted June 19, 1939, by the ALA Council; amended October 14, 1944; June 18, 1948; February 2, 1961; June 27, 1967; January 23, 1980; inclusion of “age” reaffirmed January 23, 1996. 

(Library Bill of Rights, 1996-2014)