Guest speaker sessions via Zoom:
Fridays, October 7, 14, and 21, from 2:00 to 4:30 pm ET (recordings available)
Workshop:
Asynchronous, facilitator-led workshop over 3 weeks
Effectively serving the needs of your community requires an understanding of how to support their social and emotional needs in addition to their information and practical needs. It also requires self-care strategies and engagement tools for yourself, colleagues, and staff. You’ll learn actionable steps for embedding social emotional communication, restorative justice, and trauma-informed practices into all of your services, as well as ways to support wellness in yourself and your library at large.
Join us for this guest speaker program and online workshop where you’ll learn from experts how to support the ‘whole patron’ in your practice, programs, partnerships, and services.
You’ll complete assignments to create your own initiative over 3+ weeks in an interactive online classroom environment with personal coaching from an expert in the field. In addition, you’ll have access to bonus content—rich supporting materials you can explore at your own pace, including a series of webinars from Library Journal and School Library Journal contributors, readings, activities, and videos.
Megan Emery Schadlich (she, her) |
Lyrical Faith (she, her, hers) |
Sonia Alcantara-Antoine (she, her) |
Fobazi Ettarh (she, her) |
The live sessions run on Fridays, October 7, 14, and 21, from 2:00-4:30 pm ET with an ongoing facilitator-led workshop over 3 weeks. All sessions will be recorded and can be viewed at your convenience. Don’t miss this opportunity!
When you sign up early, you’ll have immediate access to our Early Access On Demand Resources—a series of webinars from Library Journal and School Library Journal contributors along with rich, supporting materials in the form of readings, activities, and videos—to explore at your own pace.
After you attend this interactive online course and workshop, you’ll be able to:
Support the emotional well-being and self-care of staff and colleagues
Implement multiple conflict resolution methods
Incorporate the foundations of Social Emotional Learning (SEL) into your practice and programs
Identify and secure supportive community partners to help deliver needed services
Any librarian who needs support learning how to meet the social and emotional needs of their community and students in order to improve services. This course will have something for school, public, academic librarians, and beyond!
Can’t make a live session? All guest speaker sessions are recorded and available on demand following the initial broadcast. Asynchronous workshops allow you to complete assignments and receive feedback from experts.
15 professional development credits are available
For support with online courses, please contact libraryjournal@edmaker.co
Discounted registration fees are available for groups of 3 or more. When you register your team for our online courses, they will be placed in the same small workshop group, where discussions and project-based assignments receive feedback from an experienced librarian.
Send us a request for a quote.
If your group prefers to work separately, just let us know.
Megan Emery Schadlich
MLIS, Author, Speaker, and founder and director of The Healing Library This LLC is dedicated to creating lendable kits for families who have experienced trauma to create a self guided journey of healing utilizing high quality picture books, discussion guides, and holistic play, art, environmental, and bibliotherapy activities. Each kit is rooted in Every Child Ready to Read standards, Social Emotional Learning core competencies, and dialogic reading skills. With over 19,000 downloads since launching in 2017, the kits have been used to address the traumas experienced by Napa Valley following the second set of devastating wildfires they experienced in 2020 and are being adapted for use in Highland Park, IL following the deadly mass shootings which took place there in 2022.
Megan is also the author of Cooking Up Library Programs Teens & Tweens Will Love and is a two time recipient of the YALS Writing Award. She has been invited to speak and participate in Etsy’s Reimagining Manufacturing Summits and multiple IMLS focus groups. She is well regarded as a speaker and facilitator and has presented on numerous library and information related subjects for Library Journal magazine, School Library Journal magazine, YALSA, ALSC, and multiple state library associations. During her time as Experience Designer & Coordinator at the Chattanooga Public Library, she founded and designed the Sewing Lab located in their 4th Floor makerspace. During her time with Dokk1 in Denmark, she assisted with the SmartLibraries project and the second iteration of the Design Thinking for Libraries Toolkit.
By registering for this event you confirm that you have read and agree to our Code of Conduct.
For support with online courses, please contact libraryjournal@edmaker.co.
Session 1 | 2:00-2:45 pm ET
This session will lay the groundwork for understanding SEL and the specific ties it has to librarianism. From there, we’ll unpack the idea of “social emotional librarianship” and define the ways it can be applied to a range of library contexts. This session will also teach you how to conduct a needs assessment to better understand your community’s needs and how best to support them. This session will be the foundation from which everything else in this course is built, and will bring together SEL theories with tangible applications you can implement in your library today.
Speaker:
Lindsay Welles-Wyczalkowski, (she, her) Educational Leader, Social and Emotional Learning District Coordinator, Professional Learning Expert |
An introduction to this week’s assignment and an overview of what to expect from the online workshop in this course
Session 2 | 3:00-3:45 pm ET
In this rapid-fire session, you’ll hear from several minds behind new initiatives that address the needs of community well being. Each panelist will present a short snapshot of their latest work, and the group will host an extended Q+A session to answer your questions about partnerships, parameters of success, budgeting, and whatever else you want to know!
The Healing Library - Learn about The Healing Library, a series of kits to help ease healing from trauma, and the way Anne Arundel County Public Library adapted the unique lending program to meet their community’s SEL needs.
Speaker:
Megan Emery Schadlich, (she, her) MLIS, is the founder and director of The Healing Library |
Intergenerational Community Circles - Learn about this Restorative Justice-based program that combines peace circles and intergenerational community reads–building community, offering support, and more. The program is led by trained library staff, community partners, college students, and local middle grade students who all act as guides through thought-provoking and challenging discussions of titles like Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and You and the March series at Oak Park Public Library in Illinois. Originally intended to be in-person, the program launched during the pandemic and has been a success in a virtual setting.
Speaker:
Beronica Garcia, (her, ella) Children's Librarian II at Chicago Public Library |
Slam Poetry in Schools: Community through Art - Learn about ways to center equity, social-emotional learning, and community art in your school library with slam poetry. This art form is inherently communal and has been proven to provide young people with tools to express themselves and to build empathy for others with different life experiences. This program will be led by nationally-recognized slam poet and PhD student whose research focuses on the integration of performance poetry into educational spaces as a method for student engagement with justice, community, and wellness.
Speaker:
Lyrical Faith, (she, her, hers) Educator, Activist, Spoken Word Artist, 3rd Ranked Woman Poet in the World |
Optional Session 3 | 3:45-4:30 pm ET
Learn ways that small, rural or underfunded libraries can partner with social workers or social service organizations to address needs in the library community. You’ll learn insights into the transformational program, The Social Workers in Rural and Small Libraries Project, which has helped connect librarians and patrons to available resources and deepen their understanding of social services available to patrons. Leave this session with ideas for wide-ranging community partners and grant writing tips to support this work.
Speaker:
Tiffany Russell, (she, her) Licensed Clinical Social Worker |
Session 1 | 2:00-2:45 pm ET
Strong leadership skills ideally extend to all library staff as they take ownership of their individual roles and contributions to the library at large. Best-in-class communication practices benefit from strong social-emotional skills and can be the ticket to reaching patrons and colleagues during challenging times. In this session, you’ll learn strategies for communicating openly and honestly as a way to shift organizational culture, connect with employees, and engage your community. You’ll learn a framework for participatory decision making and tips for communication strategies you can adopt as an individual or as part of your department or team.
Speaker:
Sonia Alcantara-Antoine, (she, her) CEO of Baltimore County Public Library (MD) |
An introduction to this week’s assignment and an overview of what to expect from the online workshop in this course
Session 2 | 3:00-3:45 pm ET
Restorative justice is practice that focuses on repairing harm, and healing for both the people directly involved in a situation as well as the community at large. The restorative approach relies on proven techniques of forgiveness and empowerment rather than punishment. In this session, you’ll learn how restorative justice can guide a powerful shift within an organizational culture. There will be actionable takeaways, like de-escalation techniques, that you can include in your practice immediately, as well as resources to measure the success of outcomes, ways to continue learning about restorative justice, and how to engage with other libraries already doing this work.
Speaker:
Stephen Jackson, (he, him) Director of Equity and Antiracism, Oak Park Public Library |
Optional Session 3 | 3:45-4:30 pm ET
Embedding social and emotional support and solidarity into libraries requires intentionally weaving these values into the foundations of our work. In this session, you’ll learn how to advocate for yourself and staff members or colleagues by setting clear, values-driven policies, practices, goals, and objectives directly into your institution’s driving documents at multiple levels: strategic plans, vision statements, needs assessments, and action plans.
Speaker:
Callan Bignoli, (she, her) Library Director, Olin College of Engineering |
Session 1 | 2:00-2:45 pm ET
Frontline workers have to face some of the hardest challenges in libraries and classrooms, and no matter how much you might love the work, it’s easy to burn out quickly. This session is all about centering teacher, librarian, and staff needs, including strategies on setting and maintaining boundaries, advocating for yourself in the workplace, and prioritizing wellness through rest and connection to others through affinity groups.
Speaker:
Fobazi Ettarh, (she, her) Librarian, Independent Consultant, and PhD student at UIUC's iSchool |
An introduction to this week’s assignment and an overview of what to expect from the online workshop in this course
Session 2 | 3:00-3:45 pm ET
Lessons learned from social work-library collaborations can bring profound change to the practice of librarianship. In this session, you’ll learn about Whole Person Librarianship – the application of social work to improve library public service – and how it can serve you. You will learn examples of the evolution of social work partnerships in libraries, discuss how to choose and prepare for these types of partnerships strategically, and how to set healthy, supportive boundaries to grow personally, professionally, and as a community.
Speaker:
Sara Zettervall, (she, her) author of Whole Person Librarianship |
Optional Session 3 | 3:45-4:30 pm ET
Learn ways that teacher librarians can incorporate social-emotional and trauma-informed practices into their schools. Advocating for social-emotional content and practices can be especially difficult in schools because of constraints from administrators, parents, and state governments. This session will teach you tangible ways to manage those challenges and give you practical ideas to infuse your school library with healing-centered programs.
Speaker:
Dr. Rose Prejean-Harris, (she, her) Social Emotional Learning Director, Atlanta Public Schools |
DAYS 1-2 On Demand |
DAY 3 2.5 hours |
DAYS 4-7 1-2 hours (optional) |
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PRE-LIVE SESSION - Resources - Discussions - Bonus Content |
LIVE SESSIONS - Guest speakers via webcast - Q&A via chat - Recordings available on demand |
ASYNCHRONOUS WORKSHOP - Project-based homework, applied to your job - Personalized feedback from a facilitator - Group discussion in an asynchronous workshop setting via discussion forum |
3-WEEK WORKSHOP - Facilitator-led feedback WEEK 1 Looking inward WEEK 2 Looking outward WEEK 3 Create plan of action |
Live session with Andrea Blackman and Tasneem Ansariyah Grace |
Live Guest Speakers Each Week
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Recordings of guest speakers |
Recordings Available After The Live Session
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Facilitator-led workshop |
Online Classroom Organizes All Materials
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Early Access On Demand Resources |
Early Access and Ongoing Resources To Support Learning
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