AASL and ISTE Standards
The American Association of School Librarians (AASL)
Standards are solely used by school librarians and help guide instruction along
with state curriculum standards. It is organized by six shared foundations
(inquire, include, collaborate, curate, explore, and engage) and four domains
(think, create, share, and grow). Freedman and Robinson state that the Think
domain in the AASL standards help school librarians foster student curiosity through
the exploration of multiple formats for a variety of purposes (2019). School
librarians use the AASL standards to present information in creative and
purposeful ways using bother technology and other library resources like
physical books, makerspaces, and tools.
The International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) Standards govern the use of technology in schools at all levels (students, educators, administrators, and coaches). Their focus is on promoting digital literacy and the exploration of digital resources. Both frameworks value collaboration, exploration, and creativity, but the ISTE standards are singularly focused on how we achieve this using technology.
Resources:
Freedman, J., & Robinson, A. (2019). School
Librarians Level Up: Transform Your Teaching By Unpacking the AASL Standards
Integrated Framework and Implementing Shared Foundation V: Explore. Knowledge
Quest, 47(5), 10-15.


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