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LIBR 260-10
Resources for Children, Ages 0-6
Summer 2007 Greensheet

Penny Peck
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Students must self-enroll for this course on Blackboard, beginning on June 1st, and must be self-enrolled by June 10th. You will be required to use a password access code that will be provided through the MYSJSU messaging system.

Course Description

Survey of children's materials for ages up to six, with emphasis on board books and pictures books, books for emergent readers, media, and integration of this material into library and school programs, and collection development and program planning for this age group.

Prerequisites: none

Course Objectives

Student Learning Outcomes
At the completion of this course, students should be able to:

LIBR 260 supports the following SLIS Core Competencies:

In addition, this section supports the following SLIS Core Competencies:

Textbooks and Readings

Go to SLIS e-Bookstore.

Other Assigned Reading
Be sure to see the Course Documents on the Blackboard for the assigned readings for the class, including the journal articles assigned for the class. You will also see a sequence of lectures, the weekly topic for the discussion question, and more extensive descriptions of the assignments.

You will also want to visit your local public library to find the children’s books you will use for the assignments as well as reading book reviews in School Library Journal, Horn Book, Booklist, and Publishers’ Weekly. Remember, Summer Semester is shorter but earns the same units as Fall or Spring, so you have to read the same amount of material in half the number of weeks!

Course Requirements

Course Format
Students must self-enroll for this course on Blackboard, beginning on June 1st, and must be self-enrolled by June 10th. You will be required to use a password access code that will be provided through the MYSJSU messaging system. Students will also be required to attend an “in person” class on one of the following dates/places (it is your choice which to attend), where you will present Assignment 4: July 21 in Fullerton, July 28 in San Jose, 10am-4pm.

Class Discussion
Our class discussions (worth 20 percent of your grade) will be your responses to a different discussion question posted each week. Always post to the Discussion Question by the date listed on our Reading Assignments calendar. You will be graded on both the content of your posts (not just “I agree”), and meeting the minimum of posting at least once a week. Last day to post to the Blackboard Discussion Board is Friday, August 3, 2007.

Assignments
All assignments (except Assignment 4) should be a Word file posted to the Blackboard site in the Digital Dropbox, or sent as a Word document attachment to email. All assignments must use APA format for sources. Assignment 4 is presented at the class meeting (see above).

Assignment 1: Due Monday, June 18, 2007, by 11:59pm.

Assignment 2: Due Monday, July 2, 2007, by 11:59pm.

Assignment 3: Due Monday, July 16, 2007, by 11:59pm.

Assignment 4: Due: Students will also be required to attend an “in person” class on one of the following dates/places (it is your choice which to attend), where you will present Assignment 4: Saturdays July 21 in Fullerton or July 28 in San Jose, 10am-4pm.

Assignment 5: Due Monday, August 6, 2007, by 11:59pm.

Assignment 1: Board Books and Picture Books
Choose two board books and two picture books to read and evaluate. Write a book review of each of the four books. Each book review should be at least 100 words in length, not counting the bibliographic information. Give full bibliographic information. Look at reviews in School Library Journal or Horn Book for a model. These are evaluative reviews, not just plot descriptions. Evaluate the text and the illustrations, commenting on the media used for the illustrations and how (or if) the text and illustrations work well together. There is a clear explanation of the difference between Board Books and Picture Books in the lectures, but feel free to email me if you are not sure a book “fits” for this assignment. List all your sources.

Assignment 2: Visit to a Public Library Storytime
Observe a Storytime at a Public Library (you should phone and make arrangements to attend and talk to the presenter after the storytime). Write up a report of this observation, listing all the books, songs, and other activities used during the storytime. What age group was the target audience – Baby Lapsit, Toddler, Preschool, Family, Bilingual, Head Start, etc.? What was the demographic of those in attendance? How did the presenter handle any disturbances? Was the presenter a children’s librarian, support staff, or volunteer? How do they publicize the storytime? Is registration required? List all your sources.

Assignment 3: Children’s Television/DVD
Watch a television program or DVD intended for toddlers or preschoolers. Write a review of the program, keeping in mind the intended audience. Was the show well produced (high quality acting, music, sets, lighting, cinematography, costumes, etc.)? Will the show add to a child’s vocabulary or knowledge? Is the show suitable for a library program or Kindergarten class, or just a “time waster?” List all your sources.

Assignment 4: Storytime
Design a half-hour Storytime you could present at a public library, daycare, preschool, or Kindergarten. You will present an oral demonstration of one book and one song from this program at the “in person” class meeting (see above). Designate if this Storytime is designed for Baby Lapsit, Toddler Time, Preschool Storytime, Bilingual Storytime, Family Storytime, Families for Literacy Storytime, or for a Kindergarten Class. Create a handout outlining the Storytime, listing which books (include at least five), songs, fingerplays, flannelboards, apron stories, puppets, craft, and/or other parts of the Storytime you would use. List any and all websites or books you used to find ideas. Make 30 copies of this handout and bring to the “in person” class meeting to distribute to your fellow students.

Assignment 5: Reader's Advisory Notebook/Database
Create an entry for 50 items (books and media) appropriate for children ages 0-6. Each entry should include the bibliographic information, a brief plot description, your personal thoughts on the book (yes, you need to read each book), and mention of any books that are similar in style, content, theme or characters. Also include any of the following items that you think might help you with reader's advisory activities in the future:

Complete project should include entries for all different book genres and reading levels discussed in class. Complete project should include several recent (1990+) award winning titles (such as Coretta Scott King, Pura Belpre, or Caldecott Award picture books).

Entries must be formatted using Microsoft Word. You may not use any of the books used in your other assignments. These are 50 other books besides those. They can be a mix of board books, picture books, nonfiction, easy readers, folktales, DVD/video, magazines, CDRoms, or audio recordings for our age group (but not websites). List all your sources.

Grading
Class discussions are worth 20 percent of your grade; Assignments 1, 2, 3 are worth 10 percent each, Assignments 4 and 5 are worth 25 percent each. Assignments submitted late are not accepted.

Grading Scale
The standard SJSU SLIS Grading Scale is utilized for all SLIS courses:

97-100 A
94-96 A-
91-93 B+
88-90 B
85-87 B-
82-84 C+
79-81 C
76-78 C-
73-75 D+
70-72 D
67-69 D-
Below 67 F

Academic Integrity
Your own commitment to learning, as evidenced by your enrollment at San José State University, and the University's Academic Integrity Policy requires you to be honest in all your academic course work. Faculty members are required to report all infractions to the Office of Student Conduct and Ethical Development. The policy on academic integrity can be found at http://sa.sjsu.edu/student_conduct.

Reasonable Accommodation of Disabilities
If you need course adaptations or accommodations because of a disability, please e-mail me as soon as possible. Presidential Directive 97-03 requires that students with disabilities register with the Disability Resource Center (DRC) to establish record of their disability.

No matter where students reside, they should contact the SJSU DRC to register. The DRC Web site: http://www.drc.sjsu.edu/

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