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LRC
Philosophy |
| The Naperville District #203 K-12 Library Media Program
is an integral part of the education process. Our mission is to provide
excellent resources, programs and services to our educational community
in order to graduate students who are effective users of ideas and information
in their pursuit of lifelong learning.
Some of the goals included within this mission
statement are:
The LRC will be integrated into the curriculum and central
to the teaching process.
The LRC will provide a comfortable, inviting, and efficient
facility that serves as the current information center for integrated,
interdisciplinary, intra-grade and school wide activities.
The LRC will promote literacy and the enjoyment of reading,
viewing and listening by providing resources and experiences that contribute
to lifelong learning.
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M.O.S.T.
Math
Objectives Skill Time |
M.O.S.T. is a program for
volunteers to help all students become more proficient in using
and applying fundamental math skills by prescribing engaging
one-on-one or small group activities. M.O.S.T. is for all
types of students. Students struggling with some basic
concepts, possibly students new to the school district and need
to be "caught up" in areas, students having a strong
understanding of basic concepts and could benefit from
extensions, are types of students who could use the MOST of this
time.
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F.L.I.P.
Fluent,
Literate, and Independent at Prairie |
FLUENT: Children need to
read, read and read again from the same text.
LITERATE: Rereading helps the child become more fluent,
therefore more literate.
INDEPENDENT: Fluency and Literacy growth leads the way to
independent readers.
Volunteers help children become the best independent readers
they can be by signing up for a time when a child can read to
them in the LRC. The children come to the LRC for a 1-1
reading session with volunteers.
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Volunteers |
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Volunteers are the backbone of the
LRC. It is because
of all the wonderful parent volunteers that we are able to sponsor programs like M.O.S.T.,
F.L.I.P.,
computer stations and group checkout. When parents volunteer they may find
themselves working with children during activity times or performing LRC
tasks such as checking in books or shelving them. Every year in September,
all the parents are invited to attend a tea in the LRC where they learn
what it means to be a LRC volunteer. There is a Home and School committee
assigned just to serve as a liaison between parent volunteers and the LRC
staff.
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Computers |
Our LRC contains a lab of
30 IBM compatible HP Personal Computers. Each computer is networked. The lab
computers are part of a LAN (local area network) as well as a WAN (wide area
network). Classes have a regular scheduled time each week
to come down and work in the lab. With the help of LRC Staff, Classroom
Teachers, and Parent Volunteers, the students work on word processing, math and
reading games, research work on the Internet. Only curriculum-related material
can be accessed through the Internet. All of this is also accessible from
classroom computers, 4th and 5th grade wireless laptops, as well as the flex lab
located in the library.
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