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Librarian–Counselor Collaborations: Reimagining Learning through Information Literacy and Holistic Support

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Session description

Discover how school librarians and counselors can join forces to support students’ academic growth and social-emotional wellness. This session offers strategies for collaboration, including enhancing library collections, promoting SEL professional development, and sharing resources. Partnering these roles creates a stronger safety net and fosters information-sharing, literacy, and well-being.

Outline

I. Introduction: Redefining Information Literacy

A. Traditional View: Information literacy as an academic or research skill.
B. Reframed View: Information literacy as a lifeline—a means of navigating emotional, social, and mental challenges.
C. Purpose of Proposal: To explore how critical information literacy can empower students beyond the classroom.

II. The “Why”: The Reality Students Face
A. Modern Student Challenges
Stress, anxiety, and social pressures at all grade levels.
The digital landscape: constant information flow, misinformation, and “self-help” overload.
B. Information-Seeking for Survival
Students aren’t just researching for essays—they’re searching for answers about themselves and their lives.
Examples: Coping with anxiety, managing friendships, seeking identity, finding safe online communities.

III. Critical Information Literacy: A Liberatory Framework
A. Definition
Moves beyond skills-based learning to a reflective, justice-oriented approach.
Encourages learners to question power, bias, and access in information systems.
B. Teaching for Empowerment
Promotes agency, curiosity, and self-awareness.
Builds capacity for self-care, empathy, and resilience.
C. Application Beyond Academia
Using information literacy to make informed personal decisions.

IV. The Power of Partnership: Counselors + Librarians
A. Shared Mission-Both roles foster student growth, equity, and well-being.
B. Collaborative Opportunities
Co-develop workshops on emotional wellness and reliable online resources.
Integrate coping and resilience tools into library programming and advisory lessons.
Build safe spaces—physical and digital—for exploration and self-help literacy.

C. Case Examples/Scenarios (i.e“Wellness Wednesdays”: A joint initiative where librarians curate trusted self-care resources and counselors lead reflective discussions)

V. Transformative Outcomes
A. Academic and Emotional Benefits
Improved critical thinking, digital discernment, and self-regulation.
Enhanced sense of belonging and empowerment among students.
B. Building Lifelong Learners
Information literacy becomes a habit of mind—students learn how to seek truth, find help, and support others.
C. Cultivating Empathy and Resilience
Learning to evaluate not just what’s true, but also what’s kind and healing.

VI. Practical Implementation Strategies
A. Curriculum Integration
B. Professional Collaboration
C. Student Voice
D. Family Engagement

VII. Conclusion: Information Literacy as a Pathway to Wholeness
A. Final Reflection:
“When we teach students to find, evaluate, and use information critically, we’re not just teaching research—we’re teaching resilience.”
B. Call to Action:
Strengthen counselor–librarian collaboration to nurture informed, empowered, and emotionally healthy learners.

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Outcomes

By the end of this session, participants will be able to:

Redefine information literacy as a holistic, liberatory practice that extends beyond academic research to support students’ emotional and mental well-being.

Analyze how students’ everyday information-seeking behaviors relate to coping, identity development, and resilience.

Evaluate the collaborative roles of school counselors and school librarians in fostering critical thinking, empathy, and informed wellness choices among students.

Design actionable strategies or programs that integrate information literacy and social-emotional learning to empower students as lifelong, self-aware learners.

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Supporting research

Canty, N. (2017). Bibliotherapy. Logos (London, England), 28(3), 32–40. https://doi.org/10.1163/1878-4712-11112133

Everhart, N., & Mardis, M. (2014). What Do Stakeholders Know about School Library
Programs? Results of a Focus Group Evaluation. School Library Research, 17, 1-14. www.ala.org/aasl/slr/volume17/everhart-mardis

Gilligan, C. (1982). In a Different Voice: Psychological Theory and Women's Development. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Glesne, C. (2006). Becoming Qualitative Researchers: An Introduction. (3rd Ed.). Boston: Pearson/Allyn & Bacon.

Harper, M. (2017). Helping students who hurt: Care based policies and practices for the school
library. School Libraries Worldwide, 23(1), 41–54.
https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/slw/index.php/slw/article/view/6921

Harper, M. (2020), “Trauma-informed school libraries”, School Library Connection. https://schoollibraryconnection.com/Content/Article/2215489?terms=Trauma-informed+school+libraries&topicCenterId=1945913&citeId=2

Hong, J. S. & Lee, J. M. The effects of bullying on schoolchildren. In Brandell, J. R. & Ringel, S. (Eds.). (2019). Trauma : Contemporary Directions in Trauma Theory, Research, and Practice: Vol. Second edition. (pp. 256-273). Columbia University Press.

Levine, S. L., Cherrier, S., Holding, A.C., & Koestner, R. (2020). For the love of reading: Recreational reading reduces psychological distress in college students and autonomous motivation is the key. Journal of American College Health. https://doi.org/10.1080/07448481.2020.1728280

Loh, C. E., & Binny, A. L. (2025). ‘I use the library sometimes just to lose myself’: School libraries supporting students’ wellbeing and flourishing. IFLA Journal, 51(2), 399-408. https://doi.org/10.1177/03400352241276840

Mak, H. W., & Fancourt, D. (2020). Reading for pleasure in childhood and adolescent healthy behaviours: Longitudinal associations using the Millennium Cohort Study. Preventive Medicine, 130, e105889.

Merga, M. (2020). How can school libraries support student wellbeing? Evidence and
implications for further research. Journal of Library Administration, 60(6), 660-673. https://doi.org/10.1080/01930826.2020.1773718

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Presenters

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Assistant Professor
Georgia Southern University
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Assistant Professor
University of North Texas

Session specifications

Topic:

Library/Media

Grade level:

PK-12

Audience:

Counselor, Librarian, School Level Leadership

Attendee devices:

Devices useful

Attendee device specification:

Smartphone: Android, iOS, Windows
Laptop: Chromebook, Mac, PC
Tablet: Android, iOS, Windows

Subject area:

Elementary/Multiple Subjects, Other: Please specify

ISTE Standards:

For Education Leaders: Visionary Planner