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Focus on Fiction: Your Online Companion to K-12 Literature

Context
Focus on Fiction: Your Online Companion to K-12 Literature is a paper presented by Jill Midolo, CMIS Department of Education and Training (WA) at the combined conference of the International Association of School Librarianship and the School Library Association, held in Dublin, Republic of Ireland, 17-20 June 2004.

Titled From Aesop to E-book: the Story Goes On ... the conference theme centred on the power of story. 
 
Focus on Fiction: Your Online Companion to K-12 Literature

Focus on Fiction
, the Curriculum Materials Information Services website is widely respected throughout Australia as a comprehensive online gateway to children’s literature. It aims to help teachers to utilise the power of stories to develop engaged readers within Western Australia.

Our focus encompasses teachers across all learning areas and teacher librarians in K-12 schools.

This
SLA/IASL conference theme centres on ‘the power of story to change lives, to empower, to unite, to explore the internal and external world, and how school libraries can play a crucial role in developing readers’.

This workshop session will investigate the content of Focus on Fiction and the ways it can be used to create class or library programs that integrate the latest online technologies into literature-based programs.





Why a website? Why fiction?

The Eric Clearinghouse on Reading, English and Communication reported in ERIC Digest D149, December 1999 that teachers were looking for four main types of online materials to support their lessons:
  1. literature-based lesson plans
  2. aids to materials selection
  3. online publications for and by K-12 students, and
  4. professional development resources.
A major revamp of the CMIS website at the end of 1998 divided Focus on Fiction into six sections:
  • Authors and Illustrators
  • Children’s Book Week
  • Book Awards
  • In the Classroom
  • Which Book?
  • Keeping Informed
Content in these sections focuses on providing support for literature programs: books to read; background about authors; classroom applications of online resources suitable for literature programs; and professional development, which covers the areas reported in the ERIC Digest.

Since 1998, a number of Australian and international reports on children’s reading continue to shape the support service we offer for teachers.

Research Evidence 2000 - 2004

Five pieces of research from this period have influenced our conviction that lifelong reading for pleasure is critical to improving students’ reading competence and the continued enhancement of the Focus on Fiction website.

  1. Young Australians Reading: From keen to reluctant readers (2001) Key findings included:

    · 74% of all 10-18 year olds claim to like reading to some extent
    · 76% of primary and 46% of secondary students read 'every few days'
    · 64% would like to read more
    · 56% of primary and 78% of secondary students found required reading at school 'boring'
    · girls are more likely to say they enjoy reading than boys (86% vs 70%)
    · fewer than 20% of the target group consider their school or public libraries inviting or able to meet their recreational reading needs

  2. Reading for Change - Performance and Engagement Across Countries. Executive Summary (2002)
    The 2000 OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) survey of 15-year-olds’ reading literacy performance brought out some interesting points about student reading, particularly in relation to engagement in reading.

    "These results show unequivocally that improvement in reading literacy performance relies not just on improving student cognitive skills but also on increasing their engagement in reading ... not all of engaged readers come from privileged homes, and those from more modest backgrounds who read regularly and feel positive about it are better readers than people with home advantages but weaker reading engagement. This strongly suggests that there is much that schools can do to bring students into this virtuous circle [of reading engagement], regardless of their home background. Since cognitive skills and reading motivation are mutually reinforcing in this process, rather than being alternatives, schools need to address both simultaneously." p. 19


    The Australian PISA Report noted that:

    "Students in the Australian Capital Territory achieved the highest Australian result on the reading engagement index, significantly higher than the OECD average, while students in Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia achieved the lowest Australian results on this index, significantly lower than the OECD average." p. 130


  3. Student Learning through Ohio School Libraries: The Ohio Research Study (2003)
    This study, undertaken by Dr. Ross Todd and Dr. Carol Kuhlthau for the Ohio Educational Library Media Association (OELMA), has thrown up some interesting findings on the role of the school library in relation to developing reading, especially for secondary students.

    In the article
    13,000 Kids Can't Be Wrong, February 2004, Ross was asked whether there were any surprises in the study. His reply was:

    "Students ranked general reading interests as sixth [in order of importance in a school library]. This raises some interesting questions, because for decades we've said that the school library is the place for reading enrichment and encouragement and for helping kids become better writers. It's clear that libraries still do so, but it's a challenge for school librarians to do that better. It's obvious that school libraries help kids with general reading interests, but kids perceive help in other areas, such as computer technology, as more important."

    More specifically, in his PowerPoint presentation,
    Be still and listen to the voices, March 2004, Ross told participants that research tells us that an effective school library is one that: "has a vibrant literature / reading program for academic achievement and personal enjoyment and enrichment".

    However, he also noted that only 76.71% of students agreed that "The school library has helped me enjoy reading more" (Question 54 in the OELMA Study) and 74.42% agreed that "The school library has helped me get better at reading" (Question 53 in the OELMA Study).

    These percentages are very low when compared with the 96.84% of students who agreed that "The school library has helped me know the different steps in finding and using information" (Question 11 in the OELMA Study).

  4. Zero to Six: Electronic Media in the Lives of Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers (2003) This report published online in the US by the widely respected Kaiser Foundation found that:

    "Children six and under spend an average of two hours a day using screen media (1 hour 58 minutes), about the same amount of time they spend playing outside (2 hours 01 minutes), double the amount of time they listen to music (59 minutes) and well over the amount they spend reading or being read to (39 minutes)."

  5. Children's Participation in Cultural and Leisure Activities, Australia (2004) This recent Australian Bureau of Statistics report shows that:

    "Watching television or videos was the most popular of all the selected activities and children spent an average 22 hours over a school fortnight watching television or videos. Reading for pleasure, and playing electronic or computer games were also popular leisure activities for children. Participants in these activities spent an average of 8 hours over a school fortnight involved in each of these activities."

At CMIS, we have used findings from these reports to amend and expand what we offer for teachers on our Focus on Fiction website. We include a range of Information and Communication Technologies (Audio, video, multimedia, Internet) because these are formats that appeal to students and can enrich their understanding and enjoyment of literature.

Most recently, as a result of reading Ray Doiron’s 2003 article
Motivating the Lifelong Reading Habit Through a Balanced Use of Children’s Information Books, we are considering establishing a major section on developing extended leisure reading using nonfiction.

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What is in Focus on Fiction – and – how can it help you in your school/library/classroom?

  • Authors and Illustrators
    Contains information about authors and illustrators of children's and young adult literature and links to those that have their own homepages. Preference is given to Australians but notable international authors and illustrators are continually being added.

  • Children’s Book Week
    This section changes each year to support the Children’s Book Council of Australia’s annual Book Week and Awards. This year, the Book Week theme is ‘Doorways’ and one of our staff has prepared ideas and resources for the theme for each of the WA Phases of Development. Teachers can also access the complete CBCA Shortlist and follow links to teaching notes, activities, author and illustrator information, reviews, bibliographic details and book covers.

  • Book Awards
    Contains information about the major Australian and international book awards for children's and young adult literature. The awards are all designed to promote an interest in reading and to encourage quality writing, illustration and publishing in the field. Included are both literary awards judged by adults, and children's choice awards, in which children vote for their favourite title. There are also links to major literary awards for adults, which may interest senior literature students and teachers.

  • In the Classroom
    This section is aimed at teachers planning literature-based units for their students. It contains suggested strategies for utilising fiction to help students achieve learning outcomes; ideas for motivating students to read more widely; and links to general fiction-related resources, which are useful starting points for curriculum planning.

  • Which Book?
    Searching for a book to recommend to an avid or reluctant reader? Compiling a list of fiction to support curriculum themes? Wondering what to read next? Looking for outstanding books not to be missed? Which Book? contains reviews and bibliographic details of books taken from the CMIS publications, Primary Focus Fiction and Fiction Focus: New Titles For Teenagers. Teachers, teacher librarians or other professionals in the field of children's literature have written the appraisals listed in these publications. Novels, early chapter books, picture books and audio books relevant to children and adolescents are included.

  • Keeping Informed
    Here you will find reading to keep you up-to-date with children's and young adult fiction, current research into reading and literacy, plus information about conferences and literature courses.
    NB. The page from which this presentation is run is in this section.

Final Comments

When enriching your literature program in this online world, look at what can you do now that is better and/or different from what you could do pre-Internet [WWW and email]. Some of this will relate to speed and effectiveness rather than what you do - others will be things you could never have done without these new tools. For example:

  • contact/correspond with authors by email and get almost instantaneous responses
  • find out about books, authors, awards … as they are published
  • lesson plans from teachers throughout the world
  • children talk to others about books in real time in widely different locations – clubs, literature circles, book raps, blogs
  • talk to other teachers and share ideas in email lists, bulletin boards, chat rooms …

You could Google to search for all of these things – but a better way - is to use the resources we have already searched out for you on the CMIS Focus on Fiction website.


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Reading List

Australian Bureau of Statistics 2004
Children's Participation in Cultural and Leisure Activities, Australia, Commonwealth of Australia, Belconnen, ACT
<
www.abs.gov.au/ausstats/
abs@.nsf/0/0b14d86e14a1215eca2569d70080031c?OpenDocument
>

Australian Centre for Youth Literature 2001
Young Australians Reading: From keen to reluctant readers, Prepared by Woolcott Research Pty Ltd for the Australian Centre for Youth Literature and the Audience and Market Division of the Australia Council, Australian Centre for Youth Literature, Melbourne.


Doiron, Ray 2003
‘Motivating the Lifelong Reading Habit Through a Balanced Use of Children’s Information Books’, School Libraries Worldwide, IASL vol. 9, no. 1 2003, pp. 39-49


Lu, Mei-Yu 1999
Online Resources for K-12 Teachers: Children's and Adolescent Literature. ERIC Digest D149, Eric Clearinghouse on Reading, English and Communication, Bloomington, Indiana
<
www.ericdigests.org/2000-3/online.htm>

Mullis, I.V.S., Martin, M.O., Gonzalez, E.J., & Kennedy, A.M. 2003
PIRLS 2001 International Report: IEA’s Study of Reading Literacy Achievement in Primary Schools, A report of the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS), Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts
<
timss.bc.edu/pirls2001i/PIRLS2001_Pubs_IR.html>

Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development 2002
Reading for Change - Performance and Engagement Across Countries, 2000 OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), Paris, France
Full Paper
<
www.pisa.oecd.org/dataoecd/43/54/33690904.pdf>
Executive Summary
<
www.pisa.oecd.org/dataoecd/43/34/33690986.pdf>
Australian paper
<
www.oecd.org/dataoecd/29/35/33683381.pdf>

Rideout, Victoria J, Vandewater, Elizabeth A, Wartella, Ellen A. 2003
Zero to Six: Electronic Media in the Lives of Infants, Toddlers and Preschoolers, Kaiser Family Foundation, Menlo Park, California
<
www.kff.org/entmedia/3378.cfm>

Todd, Ross 2003
Student Learning through Ohio School Libraries: The Ohio Research Study, Undertaken by Dr. Ross Todd and Dr. Carol Kuhlthau for the Ohio Educational Library Media Association (OELMA), available online at
<
http://www.oelma.org/StudentLearning/SLFindings.asp>

Todd, Ross 2004
Be still and listen to the voices, PowerPoint presentation at the School Library Association of Victoria conference From Research to Practice March 2004, available online at
<
www.slav.schools.net.au/downloads/08pastpapers/03researchtopractice/Todd_1_2004.ppt#1>

Whelan, Debra Lau 2004
‘13,000 Kids Can't Be Wrong’, School Library Journal, Issue 2, February 2004
<
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA377858>

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