Abstract

In this digital age and the Internet era, can a high school library in the remote West China, burdened with the examination-oriented education, escape the fate of being marginalized, and be able to achieve something in assisting the cognitive educationof the students? The answer is “Yes”. As a past high school teacher, a past school administrator and a current high school library director, the author looked back on her experience working with the Evergreen Education Foundation in developing the services andcapacity of two high school libraries in Southeast Guizhou province, and analyzed possible paths and key factors to achieve this breakthrough. The analysis in this paper provides a useful reference to school libraries in remote West China that set about to explore a path leading to excellence riding the wave of the New Curriculum Reform.

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