-Unpacking boxes of books to reshelve
-Reshelving
-Breaking down boxes for disposal
-Disassemble shelf units to make them lighter for moving
-Cleaning of shelves
-Moving desks and smaller shelf units into place
-Set up my own computer, printer, and other peripherals such as scanners after locating components
-Email faculty requesting
their assistance in moving shelves into place (since the work order
requesting such had no results in 3 weeks time)
-Direct moving of shelves into place and partial reassembly
-Profusely thank the teachers who came to assist
-Complete shelf reassembly
-More unpacking of boxes and reshelving while library is used for testing
-Plan new configuration for
books on shelves since one shelf unit broke last year and was not
replaced and configuration of shelves is entirely different.
-Shift books once they are on shelves since planned configuration was not efficient use of space
-Weed collection of books which are obviously too damaged to repair
-Remove barcode labels and black out school identifying stamps inside for weeded books
-Inventory over 10,000 books with assistance of another library para
-Using manual, troubleshoot software glitch halfway through inventory
-Update classroom rosters in Library software
-Print beginning of the year overdue notices to distribute to teachers
-Pull early chapter books and easy readers for recatologuing with sub-location and separate shelving
-Recatalog early chapter/easy reader books in OPAC
-Add new spine labels to early chapter/easy reader books
-Pull holiday books for appropriate spine labels so students can find them more quickly in time allotted
-Add spine labels to Halloween and Thanksgiving books
-Create holiday shelf for rotating display of books appropriate to the season
-Clean tables of food residues left from other groups using the library
-Pull materials for teachers to use in classroom
-Sort through boxes of supplies to locate shelf markers since circulation is beginning
-Stash office supplies for later organization
-Call office when a runaway student hides in the office full of supplies and refuses to come out
-Speak to new principal about whether or not new ID cards will have barcodes on them for use in the library
-At request of principal speak to the photographers on picture day to find out if barcodes will be on student ID cards
-Begin circulation schedule
-Orient students and teachers to the new arrangement of the library and remind students of library rules and procedures
-Teach each student the word bibliophile
-Receive overdue books to check in
-Reshelve check-in books
-Call teachers who are late for circulation to remind them
-Reschedule those with conflicts due to picture day or classroom activities
-Continue trying to organize work space and supplies in between classes
-Order book repair supplies through office
-Create shelf labels for new configuration of books
-Affix labels to shelves
School 2:
-Weed non-fiction of irreparable books and those too out of date to be relevant or convey correct information
-Remove spine labels and black out school stamps inside
-Dispose of books over several days
-Ask for the printer to be returned to the library
-Install a printer I am told I may use
-Reorganize workspace and move shelves to accommodate a reading class
-Print out beginning of year overdue notices for all classes, put in teacher mailboxes
-Put up posters and bulletin board
-Update class rosters in library software nearly daily
-File hard copy of admission/disenroll/transfer papers
-Email teachers to ask if books owed by students who have disenrolled or transferred may be in the classroom
-Email teachers about the circulation schedule and about new procedures for returning books since a reading class is now held in the library
-Pull materials for teacher use in classrooms
-Advise teachers about which
materials would be appropriate for various reading levels and classroom
research projects based on what is available in the collection and class
needs
-Seach OPACs of other schools to see what may be available for ILL
-Do internet search to find dual-language materials in several languages which may be helpful to ESOL program
-Receive fines and document receipt
-Supervise students providing service to the library to work off fines they cannot pay
-Catolog donated books in OPAC
-Prepare donated books for
shelving by affixing barcode, spine, and genre labels and by reinforcing
the spine or covering the book
-Repair damaged and worn
books (replace missing or damaged barcode, spine, and genre labels; tape
torn pages; repair covers; reinforce bindings)
-Send reminder emails about circulation schedule
-Orient students to the
library (behavioral expectations, locations of categories of books,
procedures, teach every student 1-5 the word bibliophile)
-Help students select
materials (examples: decode what a first grader means by "that book
about a bird," finding an exciting alternative for a fourth grader who
wants Diary of Wimpy Kid when all copies are checked
out, directing a fifth grader to the Percy Jackson books, help a third grader settle on a research topic based on her interests and find books related to that interest)
-Reschedule classes when conflicts arise such as testing or picture day
-Reinforce student behavioral expectations with rewards or negative consequences accordingly
-Retrieve books a teacher took from the library without checking them out
-Check out said books and return them to the teacher
-Send out email to teachers
and staff detailing how to use the sign out sheet on my desk to note
books they take from the library when I am not at Central
-Maintain a wish list of
books to be ordered for the library based on what has been weeded or
lost, what teachers and students are asking for, and new releases/award
winners
-Order book repair supplies through office
-Give brief talk on book care to classes coming for second visit
-Check in returned books
-Inspect returned books for damage
-Reshelve checked in books
-Check out new books to students
-Print and provide updated overdue lists to teachers and notices to students
I know the other paras have nearly the same duties as I detail in School 2. Apparently, we are not using our time with maximum efficiency because the assistant superintendent has directed the building principals to "fill in the holes in our schedules" so pretty much any time a class is not in the library exchanging books we are to be pulled for non-library duties like cafeteria monitoring, and providing interventions to special needs students in other classes, or helping kindergarteners put coats on....because 30 minutes at the beginning of the day and maybe 20 minutes in the afternoon is all we need to accomplish everything on the above lists. Elves and fairies will be shelving, cataloguing, repairing, and pulling books requested by teachers?