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Library Literacy Programs for English Language
Learners
by McMurrer, Eileen and Terrill, Lynda
In 2000, 38% of the participants in federally funded adult programs
were English language learners (U.S. Department of Education Office of
Vocational and Adult Education, 2001). Many such programs have waiting
lists, and programs of all kinds are expanding to serve the needs of adult
English language learners. Public libraries, historically active in their
support for literacy, have been increasing resources and programs to meet
the literacy needs of immigrant adults and their families (American Library
Association Office for Literacy and Outreach Services [ALA/OLOS], 2001;
Constantino, 1998).
This digest summarizes the history of public libraries and library literacy
programs; describes current delivery models; and discusses initiatives
in library literacy, profiling one successful public library program that
serves adult English language learners and their families.
HISTORY OF LIBRARY LITERACY PROGRAMS
As early as 1629, Puritans bound for Salem, Massachusetts, included
a collection of books in their cargo; in 1655, colonist Robert Keayne willed
money for the founding of a public library in Boston (Shera, 1965). While
many early libraries resided in universities, later industrialist philanthropists,
such as Enoch Pratt and Andrew Carnegie, endowed public libraries and stipulated
that local governments also provide financial support for local community
libraries. Pratt's credo, "My library shall be for all, rich and poor without
distinction of race or color," resonates among libraries today (Schuchat,
1985, p. 7). In the 1960s, the federal War on Poverty Program increased
funding to help support literacy programs (Comings & Cuban, 2000).
Individual states and communities have continued to fund projects to reach
increasingly diverse local populations. From 1988 to 1995, for example,
the California State Library funded the Partnerships for Change Program,
which involved 26 community libraries that analyzed and restructured programs
and policies to better serve their culturally diverse communities (California
State Library & Library of California, 2001).
DELIVERY MODELS
In 1999, the Library Research Center at the University of Illinois in
Champaign-Urbana conducted a survey that found that 90% of the 1,067 libraries
surveyed provide literacy services in one or more of three forms (Comings
& Cuban, 2000):
1. developing collections that support existing literacy programs and
actively promoting the services of those programs;
2. partnering with existing literacy programs by providing space and
referring patrons to program services; and
3. providing literacy programs either in their own buildings or nearby.
CURRENT INITIATIVES
The American Library Association (ALA) Office for Literacy and Outreach
Services (OLOS) supports a nationwide effort to enhance the literacy services
of local libraries to "encourage opportunities for maximum intellectual
participation for underserved populations" (ALA/OLOS, 1998). Since 1999,
OLOS has sponsored a Diversity Fair at the annual ALA conference. Broward
County, Florida, publishes a quarterly Welcome Home Newsletter in six languages
that covers topics of interest to new immigrants. Broward and Miami-Dade
counties collaborate on the Pan African Bookfest and Cultural Conference,
which focuses on topics of concern to people of African descent. The Storm
Lake (Iowa) Public Library's Book Bridges Program includes local Hispanic
and Asian leaders and organizations as partners in this town of 9,000.
(ALA/OLOS, 2000) Since 1996, the Library Literacy Initiative funded by
the Lila Wallace- Reader's Digest Fund (2001) has provided support for
public libraries to improve literacy services for adults, including those
learning English. For example, the Queens Borough Public Library has served
thousands of adults in its literacy programs. In one program at the Steinway
Adult Learning Center, immigrants from more than 60 countries meet at the
center to converse or to use computers.
PROFILE OF A PUBLIC LIBRARY PROGRAM: ARLINGTON COUNTY, VIRGINIA
Arlington County, Virginia, is an ethnically diverse community of 189,453
whose residents speak over 60 languages (Arlington Public Schools, 2001;
U.S. Census Bureau, 2001). In 20 years, Arlington County Public Library's
(ACPL) services to new immigrants have grown from a small collection of
materials to an integrated county-wide system. Following is a chronology
of how, through the development of programs, one community has been able
to meet the needs of its immigrant residents.
* In the 1980s, with the arrival of Vietnamese and Cuban refugees in
Arlington County, ACPL added small collections of materials in Vietnamese,
Spanish, and English for nonnative speakers. Today these collections have
expanded to reflect the languages and cultures of all of Arlington's diverse
neighborhoods.
* In the early 1990s, ACPL established connections with local agencies
working with immigrants. The library launched an adult new readers' book
discussion program with help from teachers in Arlington Education and Employment
Program (REEP). The discussion groups continue to meet at two locations.
Funding is provided by the Southland Corporation and the Friends of Arlington
County Public Library, a nonprofit local group that raises funds for the
library system.
* In the mid 1990s, ACPL launched satellite collections and weekly story
times at four of the county's Bilingual Outreach Centers. The Centers,
located in apartment complexes with large immigrant populations, were established
by the county to assist with adjustment to life in a new culture. The programs,
collections, and services at the Centers acquaint immigrants with the services
available through the library system. Initially funded with grants from
the Virginia State Library, the U.S. Department of Education, Community
Development Block Grants and Friends of the Library, the Outreach Centers'
libraries are now funded by ACPL's operating budget.
* In the late 1990s, the library director convened a summit to examine
services to the rapidly increasing immigrant community. Advisors ranged
from the coordinator of the Queens Public Library New Americans Program
to local community leaders. A work group was charged with developing an
organized program of services for the immigrant community. One of its outcomes
was a welcome brochure that explains library terms in clear, everyday English.
* In 2000, a "CyberCenter" computer learning lab was instituted at a
library branch in a neighborhood with a large immigrant population. Grant
funding provided computer equipment for the lab, staffed primarily by a
coordinator and volunteers. In its first year of operation, CyberCenter
served over 12,000 users. With funding from the Gates Foundation, a CyberCenter
at the Central Library opened in June 2001.
* Young Adult Services' library staff work with the county schools.
Two middle schools host library-sponsored discussion groups for immigrant
learners. Staff make presentations to parent groups at schools with diverse
populations and have hosted "family evenings" at the library for Spanish-language
parent groups, where stories in Spanish and potluck dinners provide a festive
atmosphere.
* ACPL staff reflect the community they serve. The library recruits,
hires, and promotes staff from various ethnic and cultural backgrounds.
Bilingual staff members wear badges printed (in the specific language)
with "I speak Spanish," "I speak Amharic," "I speak Vietnamese," and so
forth. CONCLUSION Public libraries have changed throughout U.S. history
to become increasingly inclusive of the communities they serve. The efforts
of the American Library Association, granting institutions, and local libraries
are helping to address the complex literacy needs of adult English language
learners and their families. Arlington County Public Library's long-term
plan of working with local partners and shifting available, stable resources
to meet and sustain the needs of immigrant learners is a promising model
for communities throughout the United States.
REFERENCES
American Library Association Office for Literacy and Outreach Services.
(1998). "About OLOS: Mission statement". Chicago: Author. http://www.ala.org/olos/aboutolos.html
American Library Association Office for Literacy and Outreach Services.
(2000, June). "The American Library Association Office for Literacy and
Outreach Services (OLOS) 3rd Annual Diversity Fair". Chicago: Author. http://www.ala.org/olos/divfair/2000divfair.html
Arlington Public Schools. (2001)."Student demographics". Arlington,
VA: Author. http://www.arlington.k12.va.us/demog/
California State Library & Library of California. (2001, March).
Partnerships for change expands original program. "Connection". [Web newsletter]
http://www.library.ca.gov/newsletter/2001/CSL_Connection_Mar01.pdf
Comings, J. T., & Cuban, S. (2000). "So I made up my mind: Introducing
a study of adult learner persistence in library literacy programs". New
York: Wallace-Reader's Digest Funds. http://www.mdrc.org/Reports2000/MDRCLibLit.pdf
Constantino, R. (Ed.). (1998). "Literacy, access, and libraries among
the language minority population". Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press.
Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund. (2001). Libraries and literacy: A
natural partnership. "Focus: Adult Literacy". New York: Author. http://www.wallacefunds.org/publications/pub_lit/lib.htm
Schuchat, T. (1985). "The library book". Seattle, WA: Madrona Press.
Shera, J. H. (1965). "Foundations of the public library: The origins
of the public library movement in New England 1629-1855". North Haven,
CT: Shoe String Press.
U.S. Census Bureau. (2001). "Arlington County 2000 census demographic
profile". Washington, DC: Author. http://www.co.arlington.va.us/census/arlington.pdf
U.S. Department of Education Office of Vocational and Adult Education.
(2001). "Adult education data and statistics". Washington, DC: Author.
http://www.ed.gov/offices/OVAE/datahome.html
Copyright Note
This webpage is a copy of the ERIC Digest, Library Literacy Programs
for English Language Learners, published by the US Federal government
and ERIC. ERIC Digests are in the public domain and may be
freely reproduced and disseminated. The text from that book on this
page is in the public domain. All other information on this page
(including the arrangment of the subject matter) is copyright (c) 2003
Amazing Cheap Books.
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