Literature in Digital Environments: Changes and Emerging Trends in Australian School Libraries

Authors

  • Judy O’Connell Courses Director, School of Information Studies, Faculty of Education, Charles Sturt
  • Dr Jenni Bales Adjunct Lecturer, School of Information Studies, Faculty of Education, Charles Sturt
  • Pru Mitchell Australian Council for Educational Research and School of Information Studies, Faculty of Education, Charles Sturt University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/iasl7467

Keywords:

eBooks, eReading, School libraries, Collection development, Learning ecology

Abstract

Igniting a passion for reading and research is core business for school libraries, inevitably placing the library at the center of the 21st century reading and learning experience. It is in this context that digital literature creates some challenging questions for teachers and librarians in schools, while the emergence of digital technology and/or device options also offers a great many opportunities. Collection development in school libraries encompasses an understanding of the need to contextualize these e-literature needs within the learning and teaching experiences in the school. The Australian Library and Information Association’s 2013 statement Future of collections 50:50 predicted that library print and ebook collections in libraries would establish a 50:50 equilibrium by 2020 and that this balance would be maintained for the foreseeable future. This statement from the Australian professional body raised the need to know more about e-collections in school libraries. For teacher librarians in Australian schools, the nature of online collections, and the integration of ebooks into the evolving reading culture is influenced by the range and diversity of texts, interfaces, devices, and experiences available to complement existing print and media collections or services. Management and budget constraints also influence e-collections. By undertaking a review of the literature, a discussion of the education context, and a critical analysis of the trends evidenced by national survey data, this paper presents an overview of the changes and emerging trends in digital literature and ebook collections in school library services in Australia today.

Author Biographies

Judy O’Connell, Courses Director, School of Information Studies, Faculty of Education, Charles Sturt

Judy O’Connell has worked as lecturer and Courses (programs) Director at Charles Sturt University since 2011. From 2008-2010 she was Head of Library and Information Services at St Joseph’s College, Hunters Hill, Sydney. In 2006-2007 she was an Education Consultant in Library and Web 2.0 developments for 80 primary and secondary schools in the Western Region of Sydney. Her professional leadership spans school and tertiary education, with a focus on libraries, learning spaces, online learning design, innovation, social media and technology for learning and teaching. In 2014 she received a Charles Sturt University Faculty of Education Award for Academic Excellence.

Dr Jenni Bales, Adjunct Lecturer, School of Information Studies, Faculty of Education, Charles Sturt

Dr Jennie Bales has worked as an adjunct lecturer in the School of Information Studies at Charles Sturt University since 2014. Prior to that a long career as a teacher librarian for the Department of Education Tasmania has included school leadership in the primary and secondary sectors, predominantly around the integration of ICT into teaching and learning. Her professional and research interests revolve around online and digital learning, curriculum resourcing and children's literature with several action research investigations conducted within schools.

Pru Mitchell, Australian Council for Educational Research and School of Information Studies, Faculty of Education, Charles Sturt University

Pru Mitchell is Manager of Information Services at the Australian Council for Educational Research in Melbourne and an adjunct lecturer, School of Information Studies at Charles Sturt University in Wagga Wagga. Her professional and research interests include metadata, education librarianship, collection management and professional learning. After working as a teacher librarian across K-12, Pru spent twelve years managing national online education projects including the Schools Catalogue Information Service. In 2010 she received the Australian School Library Association Citation.

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Published

2021-02-22