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21st
Century Skills:
• Financial, Economic, Business,
and Entrepreneurial Literacy
• Communication & Collaboration
• Global Awareness
Self-Assessment Categories:
• Leadership & Management
• Partnering
• Institutional Assets
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Recipient:
Skokie Public Library
Award:
2008 National Medal for Library Service
Web site:
www.skokie.lib.il.us
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Back to
21st Century Skills Web page
Skokie, a northern suburb of Chicago, has a current population
of 68,000 that has become increasingly diverse over the past
25 years. Forty-two percent of its population is now foreign
born and 90 different languages are spoken throughout the
community. In response, Skokie Public Library has formed a
broad array of partnerships and focused its operations and
programs to serve the entire community. This leadership vision
and community-centric approach helped the Skokie Public Library
earn the National Medal for Museum and Library Service in
2008.
At the White House ceremony celebrating this achievement,
Carolyn Anthony, Director of the Skokie Public Library said,
“The library is integrated into the fabric of the community,
constantly working in collaboration with other organizations
to address the ever-changing needs of and challenges facing
Skokie. Because we serve such a diverse population, we focus
on building community and supporting lifelong learning and
the exchange of ideas among groups and individuals”
(“Skokie Public Library” 2008).
Being embedded in the community is intentional and strategic.
Every three years as part of the strategic planning process,
the library scans the community for emerging needs, and determines
how and whether the library can help address them. This process
revealed several years ago that the economic base had shifted—seemingly
overnight—from large corporations as the major employers,
to smaller, more nimble businesses. Local entrepreneurs were
relying more heavily on the resources provided by the Skokie
Public Library, where specialized business and workforce development
information could be accessed along with guidance from expert
library staff. Sensing the need to better understand this
audience, Anthony became involved with the Chamber of Commerce.
In that capacity she helped create a non-profit education
organization, the North Suburban Business Development Foundation,
to help provide continuing education to members of the business
community and educate the broader community about the work
local businesses are doing.
The new business initiative is a fitting example of the service
culture embodied by the Skokie Public Library—the institution’s
leaders know that all community needs cannot be met by a library
alone. Library leadership in addressing these needs—to
listen, to research, to connect the dots, and to bring partners
to the table—is a fundamental value that infuses the
entire Skokie library system.
Skokie Public Library initiatives enhance global awareness,
communication, and life and career skills throughout the community.
Its Festival of Cultures, a cooperative project started 19
years ago by the library, Village of Skokie and Skokie Park
District that takes place in Skokie every May, originally
started with just six cultures; in 2009, representatives of
42 cultures engaged the community around the central theme
of sustainability, with interactive games and an obstacle
course all crafted out of recycled materials. A range of activities
also encouraged global awareness: participants “earned”
colored beads by engaging in educational activities at each
cultural booth and turned the beads into global necklaces
representing the diversity of the community.
Next
21st Century Skills profile: New York Hall of Science
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