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    Reassigned school librarians get attention beyond Bellevue

    Ohanian Comment: It strikes me as painfully typical that Bellevue borders on Medina, location of Bill Gates' mansion, assessed value $147.5 million. The Gates home features a ornate paneled library (2,100 sq. ft.). The library has a domed reading room with oculus (light well), fireplace, and two secret pivoting bookcases, one hiding a bar. It's the fitting home for Leonardo da Vinci's 16th-century notebook, the Codex Leicester, which Gates bought about for $30.8 million. (The formal dining room is 1,000 sq. ft. The reception hall, 2,300 sq. ft., can seat 150 people for a sit-down dinner or hold 200 for a cocktail party.) The underground garage, 6,300 sq. ft., is one of three garages. And so on. The lavish details pile up. And hey, he's the world's richest man--or close to.

    I guess, in all that space, one doesn't notice the disappearance of librarians nearby. None of his many education projects indicate any knowledge of or respect for what librarians do. Take a look at the school his outfit designed in Philadelphia. They brag that the school has no library. Craig Mundie, chief research and strategy officer at Microsoft says this school is designed to train students to "compete globally." That venture has been labeled a failure.

    Kudos to the reporter for linking a school's excellence to the presence of professional librarians.


    By Katherine Long

    To some Bellevue parents, it's hard to believe that all five of the city's high schools made it ontoNewsweek's list of 100 best schools in the U.S. — and all five are about to lose their school librarians.

    The issue has gained national attention in library circles. The dean of the University of Washington's library department has spoken out against the move. And about 100 Bellevue parents have decried the loss of the librarians at board meetings, and started a Web site, to try to push for a change.

    For parents in this literate, well-educated community, a good librarian seems so fundamental to a top-performing school that axing the positions is unthinkable.

    "You're not going to have a librarian? I can't fathom it," said Michelle Robertson, the parent of a student at Tillicum Middle School.

    But the School Board has been equally adamant that moving librarians into the classroom is the best way to keep high-school class sizes from mushrooming.

    The decision was made by each one of the school principals, said School Board President Chris Marks, and the board does not intend to overrule them because "principals really ought to know what the actual needs are, and serve them the best," she said.

    Like all public-school districts throughout the state, Bellevue is scrambling to make up a cut in state money after the Washington Legislature trimmed $800 million from K-12 funding for the 2009-10 school year. Bellevue will lose $5.5 million next year, which is about a 3.4 percent reduction in its general-fund budget.

    Librarians at four of the district's middle schools, four high schools and one school that spans grades 6-12 are being reassigned to classrooms for the next school year. The move saves about $500,000 and helps keep class sizes smaller. Even with the change, some core-subject classes may have well over 30 students next year, Marks said.

    Not suited, some say

    Bellevue appears to be one of the few districts in the state that is eliminating secondary-school librarian jobs to save money. (The libraries won't close, but they probably will be staffed by an employee with lesser training, such as a library assistant.)

    The situation has drawn attention from both the American Library Association and the School Library Journal Web sites, which have posted stories on the issue.

    And Michael Eisenberg, dean emeritus and professor of the University of Washington's Information School, questioned the decision at a School Board meeting.

    Some of the librarians say they're not suited for the positions they're being asked to fill. Sandy Livingston, who has been in the Sammamish High School library for nine years, was asked to teach a video-production class. Instead, Livingston, who is 65, plans to take a leave of absence and then most likely retire a year earlier than she had intended.

    "The district keeps saying they're sending us to the classroom," she said. "We don't necessarily fit in the classroom."

    Debbie McLeod, who runs the libraries at Highland and Odle middle schools, says she's been asked to teach language arts at Chinook Middle School. McLeod says she's been a librarian for 32 years and has never taught in a classroom. "It's a misuse of my ability, knowledge and training," she said.

    Parents say the situation also raises several broader issues: why budget information isn't readily available on the district's Web site; why the district can't come up with an alternative to cutting all of the librarian positions; and why it can't explain the decision-making process that led to the librarian cuts.

    Board President Marks defended the public process, and said the district Web site contains a PowerPoint slide show about the budget cuts.

    A common criticism of the Bellevue district, Marks said, is that it is too top-down in its administration of schools. But in this case, the opposite is true; by allowing principals to decide how to use their staff dollars next year, the district is allowing each school to tailor its staffing to that school's needs. "Building administrators are in touch with their student population, and know what the needs are," she said.

    She noted that one middle school, Chinook, has done without a librarian for 10 years.

    'No public process'

    Jeani Littrell-Kwik, a parent and substitute King County librarian who is leading the battle to get the librarians reinstated, said she and others wanted a chance to have input on the decision. "There was no public process, and there still isn't," she said.

    Littrell-Kwik and others say they wish Bellevue had used a process like neighboring Lake Washington School District, which held several large public meetings and conducted an online survey, to help decide where the cuts would be made. Marks says it's difficult to compare districts, though, because "none of these districts line up exactly the same way."

    Livingston, the Sammamish librarian, echoed UW professor Eisenberg's analysis: that a library without a librarian is just a depository of books. Among other things, school librarians help guide students to credible sources of information on the Internet, and teach them how to decide if a source they've found online is legitimate or not.

    They're also in tune with students' reading habits, and know which books resonate with kids at every age and ability. For example, Livingston said, she's built a collection of short graphic books, called manga, that appeal to many high-school students who are too busy to sit down and read a novel.

    For Marks, the bottom line is that the principals are in the best position to decide how to deploy their staff. "We really expect that principals are much better at making these kinds of decisions," she said.

    — Katherine Long
    Seattle Times Eastside
    2009-06-24
    http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/education/2009375844_bellevuelibrarians24m0.html


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