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(2) Secondary Librarians, Buckingham Browne & Noble, Cambridge, MA

BB&N is seeking two Librarians, one for the Upper School and one for the Middle School.

Job Goals: 

  • To ensure that students, faculty, and staff are effective users of ideas and information 
  • To empower students to be critical thinkers, enthusiastic readers, skillful researchers, and ethical users of information 
  • To instill a love of learning in all students and ensure equitable access to information 
  • To collaborate with classroom teachers and specialists to design and implement lessons and units of instruction, and assess student learning and instructional effectiveness 
  • To provide the leadership and expertise necessary to ensure that the school library program (SLP) is aligned with the mission, goals, and objectives of the school and is an integral component of the learning/instructional program 

Qualifications: 

The ideal candidate will have a master’s degree from a program accredited by the American Library Association (or from a Master’s level program in library and information studies accredited or recognized by the appropriate national body of another country.) A highly qualified candidate will also hold appropriate state certification as a school librarian and have completed a teacher preparation program and/or educational degree. 

 

Roles and Responsibilities:

I. Leader

As a leader the school librarian creates an environment where collaboration and creative problem solving thrive. The school librarian is an excellent communicator who instills enthusiasm in others by making them feel that they are important members of a team. Strong leaders foster an environment of creativity, innovation, and openness to new ideas, welcoming and encouraging input from others to create consensus. They anticipate future obstacles and continually retool to meet challenges. 

The school librarian demonstrates their role as a visible and active leader within the school community, an advocate for the SLP, and a professional member of the school library team by: 

  • Serving on decision making teams in the school 
  • Taking an active role in school improvement and accreditation activities 
  • Benchmarking the SLP to school, cohort, state, and national program standards 
  • Sharing expertise by presenting at faculty meetings, parent meetings, and board meetings
  • Creating an environment that is conducive to active and participatory learning, resource-based instructional practices, and collaboration with teaching staff 
  • Sharing with the learning community collaboratively developed and up-to-date policies concerning such issues as materials selection, circulation, reconsideration of materials, copyright, privacy, and acceptable use 
  • Encouraging the use of instructional technology to engage students and to improve learning, providing 24/7 access to digital information resources for the entire learning community 
  • Collecting and analyzing data to improve instruction and to demonstrate correlations between the SLP and student achievement 
  • Maintaining active memberships in professional associations 
  • Remaining current in professional practices and developments, information technologies, and educational research applicable to school library programs 
  • Advocating for school library programs and the guiding principles of the school library profession; 

The school librarian is an active, accessible, and informed proponent of the school library profession by: 

  • Advocating, communicating, and promoting opportunities to improve the profession 
  • Maintaining frequent and timely communication to stakeholders through the school and library website, parent newsletter, e-mail, and other formats, such as local cable access television, video/audio streaming, and on-demand video/podcasts 
  • Using local, state, national, and international school library data and research to engage support 
  • Writing articles and submitting regular reports providing evidence of what the library and school librarian do to prepare learners to be successful in the twenty-first century
  • Maintaining an effective public relations program 
  • Demonstrating a commitment to maintaining intellectual freedom by promoting the ethical use of information 

II. Instructional Partner

As an instructional partner the school librarian works with teachers, academic technologists, and other educators to build and strengthen connections between student information and research needs, curricular content, learning outcomes, and information resources. The school librarian demonstrates his or her role as an essential and equal partner in the instructional process by: 

  • Participating in the curriculum development process at both the building and all-school level to ensure that the curricula include the full range of literacy skills (information, media, visual, digital, and technological literacy) necessary to meet content standards and to develop lifelong learners 
  • Collaborating with teachers and students to design and teach engaging inquiry and learning experiences and assessments that incorporate multiple literacies and foster critical thinking 
  • Participating in the implementation of collaboratively planned learning experiences by providing group and individual instruction, assessing student progress, and evaluating activities 
  • Joining with teachers and others to plan and implement meaningful experiences that will promote a love of reading and lifelong learning 
  • Providing and planning professional development opportunities within the school for and with all faculty and staff, including other school librarians 
  • Supporting school programs such as global education and educational technology initiatives as an active partner with leaders of those programs, and using library space and resources to advance shared goals

III. Information Specialist 

As information specialist, the school librarian provides leadership and expertise in the selection, acquisition, evaluation, and organization of information resources and technologies in all formats, as well as expertise in the ethical use of information. The school librarian ensures equitable access and responsible use of information by: 

  • Developing and maintaining a collection of resources appropriate to the curriculum, the learners, and the teaching styles and instructional strategies used within the school community
  • Cooperating and networking with other libraries, librarians, and agencies to provide access to resources outside the school 
  • Modeling effective strategies for developing multiple literacies 
  • Evaluating, promoting, and using existing and emerging technologies to support teaching and learning, supplement school resources, connect the school with the global learning community, communicate with students and teachers, and provide 24/7 access to library services 
  • Providing guidance in software and hardware evaluation, and developing processes for such evaluation 
  • Understanding copyright, fair use, and licensing of intellectual property, and assisting users with their understanding and observance of the same 
  • Organizing the collection for maximum and effective use 

IV. Teacher 

As a teacher, the school librarian empowers students to become critical thinkers, enthusiastic readers, skillful researchers, and ethical users of information. 

The school librarian supports students’ success by guiding them in: 

  • Reading for understanding, for exposure to diversity of viewpoints and genres, and for pleasure 
  • Using information for defined and self-defined purposes 
  • Building on prior knowledge and constructing new knowledge 
  • Embracing the world of information and all its formats 
  • Working with peers in successful collaboration for learning 
  • constructively assessing their own learning and the work of their peers 
  • becoming their own best critics 

V. Program Administrator 

As program administrator, the school librarian works collaboratively with members of the learning community to define the policies of the school library program, and to guide and direct all activities related to it. The school librarian maximizes the efficiency and effectiveness of the school library program by: 

  • Using strategic planning for the continuous improvement of the program 
  • Ensuring that school library program goals and objectives are aligned with school long-range strategic plans 
  • Ensuring that the library is an inclusive place for everyone in our diverse student body
  • Using effective management principles, including the supervision of personnel, resources, and facilities, in developing and implementing program goals and objectives 
  • Using evidence of practice, particularly in terms of learning outcomes, to support program goals and planning 
  • Generating evidence in practice that demonstrates efficacy and relevance of the school library instructional program
  • Conducting ongoing action research and evaluation that creates data that is used to inform continuous program improvement 
  • Supervising and evaluating support staff, which may include volunteers, and student assistants 
  • Preparing, justifying, and administering the school library program budget to support specific program goals 
  • Establishing processes and procedures for selection, acquisition, circulation, resource sharing, etc. that assure appropriate resources are available when needed 
  • Creating and maintaining in the school library a teaching and learning environment that is inviting, safe, flexible, and conducive to student learning 
  • Selecting and using effective technological applications for management purposes 
  • Participating in the recruiting, hiring, and training of educational library assistants, students, and volunteer staff 

V. Community Member/Advisor

As a fully integrated Community Member, the school librarian will be involved in the School’s Community Events and serve on an Advisor Team as an advisor to a small group of students. 

About BB&N:

BB&N, a coeducational day school in Cambridge, MA, was established in 1974 by the merger of two independent schools, the Buckingham School and the Browne & Nichols School, founded respectively in 1889 and 1883. Located on multiple campuses, we work as one School in pursuit of excellence. We celebrate the diversity of our community, which enriches our daily experience.  At BB&N we foster intellectual curiosity, critical thinking, and a deep concern and respect for others.

BB&N’s mission is to promote scholarship, integrity, and kindness in diverse, curious, and motivated students. The School prepares students for lives of principled engagement in their communities and the world. We value a diverse and inclusive community that fosters respect for the identities and perspectives of all.

 

To Apply: 

Please visit the employment opportunities page at www.bbns.org or click https://www.bbns.org/about/employment-opportunities to complete your online application. Please upload your Cover Letter, Resume, Personal Statement and/or Teaching Philosophy and Reference List as a single combined document.

 

Contact Information: 

Questions about this position should be emailed to: [email protected] – (Please, no phone calls/e-mails to Head’s office and/or HR.) 

Buckingham Browne & Nichols School does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, creed, age, gender, national origin or ancestry, veteran status, sexual orientation, or any non-job related physical or mental disability. We welcome candidates who will increase our diversity; we encourage candidates of color and all diverse candidates to apply.