Monday, September 26, 2016

School Library Journal 2016 School Librarian of the Year; What I've learned so Far!

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Dear readers,
I remember it like it happened yesterday.  It was June 30th, and I had slept in a bit enjoying one of the first official summer days.  The windows were open and I could smell the fresh-cut grass and hear the zip, zip, zip of the sprinklers across the street.  After pouring a cup of coffee and turning on NPR, I was in full 'summer mode.'  I opened up my laptop, scanned the messages to see if anything urgent had happened, and noticed something a tiny bit off.
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School Library Journal.  
Executive Editor Kathy Ishizuka.
Wait.  What?
Oh my goodness.  
I suddenly remembered that a group of parents in our PTO nominated me for the School Library Journal School Librarian of the Year Award.  The nominations were due in May.  I had been working pretty hard all summer on professional development and all the typical summer projects teachers do to get ready for the school year.  Whoever thinks teachers spend eight weeks of summer lounging around has never met a real teacher!  We're lucky if we get a week on a beach somewhere, or on a trail, or wherever it is that gives you peace.  Most of our summer is spent planning for the next year.  I digress.
I immediately responded to the email.  Then I waited.  I drank two more cups of coffee very quickly.  I needed my brain to catch up with my imagination.  
I was about to speak with the Executive Editor of The School Library Journal!
Fairly soon afterward, my phone rang and it was a New York number!
"Hello Todd, this is Kathy Ishizuka from School Library Journal.  I'm so excited to speak with you.  You have been named The School Library Journal's 2016 School Librarian of the Year!"
I don't remember ANYTHING else that she said other than, "...this news in under embargo until the official release sometime in late August."
A little later in the day I got another email from her:
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Holy Cow!  I had totally and honestly forgotten about the nomination.  I presumed that like most things I had about as much chance being chosen as I did winning the lottery.  Well, I was wrong.  I wasn't completely truthful about not remembering anything from the conversation.  I do remember a little bit about the conversation.  I remember sharing with Kathy that  I was first, happy to be the first male Librarian of the Year!  Woot! Woot! But what I truly remember was discussing the fact that I thought I had no chance because of WHERE I work.  I work in Winnetka.  Folks, I'm not going to lie.  It is an amazing place.  It has a history of over one hundred years of progressive education.  It is on the north shore of Lake Michigan and is a northern suburb of Chicago.  It's a pretty affluent community.  
One word about affluence:  Just because a community CAN put money into their educational systems doesn't mean that the WAY it is inserted is necessarily conducive to the most effective learning.  Also, just because my library is well-funded doesn't mean that I don't have students who have amazingly diverse and profound needs: social, emotional, academic, even financial.  It's not all rainbows and unicorns.  Sometimes folks write progressive education off as in, '...it can only happen in wealthy communities...'  Let me direct you to a post I wrote recently in which I highlighted a book by my very own professor George Wood, then of Ohio University. In his book, Schools that Work: America's Most Innovative Educational ProgramsGeorge traveled the country highlighting public schools, that work!
School can develop young people ready and able to participate in a democratic society--citizens who are insightful, creative, compassionate, and wise. Pie in the sky? No, this phenomenon is exactly what is happening right now in innovative, exciting American public schools in all types of settings--wealthy and poor neighborhoods, inner-city and rural areas. In Schools That Work, parent and educator George Wood takes us into schools around the nation and shows us firsthand the critical changes that make the difference between schools that work and schools that don't, including innovations in curriculum, physical layout of classrooms, scheduling of the school day, and the educational approach of heroic teachers and parents.
There are millions of dollars out there now that were not out there when George wrote this book in the 1990's.  Here is a list of grants (free money) that teachers can apply for.  Someone is going to get this money, it should be YOU! And here is a list of ways to get FREE money for technology and learning tools for your classroom. If you have the desire and the will to stick with some of these applications, you CAN and WILL be able to get your projects funded.  Look at folks like 2015 SLJ School Librarian of the Year Kristina HolzweissDiana Rendina, and Colleen Graves!  Each of them has applied for and received multiple loans through various Donor organizations and the links above will share their tips with you. YOU CAN DO IT!  It might seem hard, but it is just getting in a groove and pouring your passion and love for learning with your students onto the page or the 'screen!'
Sorry for that brief diversion, but I think it is really important to put that out there so we can move past it.  Kathy went on to tell me that the location of my school was a big part of the conversation with the panel of esteemed judges.  I don't remember her words exactly, but she said something like this: '...in the end, we looked at what you've done to share what you do with the world.  Your blog is read on every continent with readers in over 120 countries.  You present at conferences local and international.  You put it out there for all to benefit from and in the end that is what made us choose you.'  Apologies Kathy for paraphrasing, I truly was in shock during most of the conversation!
The weeks and now months that followed that initial phone call have been filled with tremendous trepidation, excitement, joy, humility and in the end, PRIDE.  Not just for me, but for my parents (especially my Mom for reading those thousands of books with me), my grandmother (who was a librarian and would have been so incredibly proud) my college professors, both undergrad at Ohio University, but also at NLU for my Masters and My Library Information Sciences Program.  For the amazing Superintendent Trisha Kocanda; Tech Director Maureen Miller; then Principal Daniel Ryan; our new Principal Beth Carmody; to the Principal who hired me, Maureen Cheever. The list continues to the phenomenal president of the PTO Jen Hayes and her RELENTLESSLY SUPPORTIVE parent team.  One parent, Sarah Graham took this project on and held on to it like a relentless pit bull (in a good way Sarah!)  I am proud of the teachers in our building who put up with my craziness.  I'm proud of the phenomenal colleagues that I share my space with Amy Trogdon, Kristin Osborn, and Dexter Codell; they make everything we dream about actually happen!  We have a mind-blowing custodial staff Clive Lascelles, Dennis Myers and our head Maintenance Director Adam Rappaport.  Most important of all is my wife and kids who put up with the insane amount of time spent away from home; they did it because they knew that it was filling my heart with pride and joy. None of this could have happened if it were not for the OVERWHELMING spirit of positivity.  "Yes and..." became the mantra of this team.  We researched, went on field trips, brainstormed, planned, dreamed and sweat together over the many months of manual and mental labor that went into creating and effectively orchestrating our first year in the IDEA Lab.  
So, I know this post has gone long.  I want to wrap it up to say something I said in an interview with my hometown newspaper, The Kenosha News: 'This award is just as much a challenge for me to work even harder than I did last year.  But work harder to share and help spread the ideas and understanding of how and why the learning that happens in Winnetka, and in our STEAM spaces specifically is so important to children.'
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So many doors are opening for me due to this immense honor.  Some I can't write about just yet.  Some I'm not even sure where they may lead.  What I can tell you is that after twenty-four years (that's amazing isn't it?) of teaching, I have never been more excited to get out of bed and into the 'Libratory' than I am right now.  That tells me things are pretty darn fine.

12 comments:

  1. Dear Todd,
    What a lively & nourishing letter to us, all over the world.
    It's so sweet to mention your grandmother-librarian heritage.
    And to share from your professor's book & to thank your fabulous posse.

    I am very struck by how at nearly the same time we honor our nation's first woman Librarian-in-Chief, Carla Hayden, who is from my town, we are celebrating our nation's first male School Library Journal School Librarian of the Year! From Winnetka. Do you mind if I wave my magic wand in hopes that your paths cross soon?
    Your Group Blog pal,
    Jan

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    1. Jan,
      I really appreciate your sweet reflection. Indeed my grandmother would be so proud. I also am looking forward to meeting the first female African American Librarian of Congress. I've reached out to her in hopes that I might get to visit when I am in DC. for the SLOTY. It is such an honor. Thank you friend!

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    2. You two librarians are each of you, so busy next month, but who knows? Sprinkling the splendiferous possibility stars about... And curious now, about your grandmother's domain - a village library or a school space? How cool, how cool. I appreciate all your lessons, Todd.
      More smiles for this
      & more best to you!

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  2. This is s wonderful boon for school librarians everywhere, Todd. You will be our poster man and spread the totality of what a caring, tainted, imaginative school librarian can do as a leader. BRAVO! So proud to call myself a librarian, too. Scale this up for all the kids all over the US.

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    1. Kathy, you deserve an award for being the greatest promoter of all things positive! Thank you for all your hard work promoting the GROG and educators all over the world! Thank you for the kind words once again about me and the award. Indeed, my goal this year is to take this platform and shake the very foundations of libraries all over the world. What we do in Winnetka is what should be the case in every school around the world. We have a lot of growing to do as well, but we are on the right path. While I know the reality is that we won't be able to mirror this exactly, we can begin moving toward that goal. I am honored to call you a fellow librarian and friend!

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  3. Congratulations again, Todd! Very fun to read your post and feel your excitement. I like your word: libratory!

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  4. Congrats Todd! Well deserved. You imagineered a broader context for what a library can be. Great post - am sending it on to librarians I know.

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  5. Thank you, Todd, for making a difference in the lives of kids at Hubbard Woods Elementary School.

    I enjoyed reading this newspaper article in the Chicago Tribune.

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/suburbs/winnetka/news/ct-wtk-librarian-of-the-year-tl-0915-20160912-story.html

    All the best as you continue to share the love of literacy and learning with students.
    ~Suzy

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  6. So happy for you, Todd! Your efforts at Hubbard Woods have been extraordinary and the accolades are so deserved.

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  7. Hip hip hooray, Todd...congratulations! And thank you for all you do to help kids become lovers of books and reading! And you are hilarious...this post was like stand up comedy. ;) ;)

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  8. YAY! Let's hear it for Librarians! :D

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