There is a great post every month on the school library listserv LM_Net that I would like to feature, the designated celebrations and observances for the month. This is a great way to incorporate books, reading material, multi-media and movies into your classroom, home, or daily schedule. Look for a way to incorporate the different types of resources. As a parent, I have enjoyed my son's US History teacher's extra credit movie choices. For instance, while studying the Great Depression students could watch Cinderella Man, The Grapes of Wrath and Bonnie and Clyde, then complete specified journal entries for extra credit. Watching the movies as a family generated great discussion, including examining the time period from a variety of experiences and perspectives and looking at current social programs in the United States and the push for more. Relating the currect issues to history created a depth of understanding (in the adults and kid!) that had me wishing I were lucky enough to have had such a great teacher. Please feel free to add your recommendations in commenting on the blog!
Black History Month (or African-American History month)
The Long Walk to Freedom the autobiography of Nelson Mandela. A great companion movie to this is Invictus starrying Matt Damon and Morgan Freeman. The poem "Invictus" by Ernest Henley is included in both the book and the movie, so this is a 3 for 1 recommendation. I know that this doesn't follow the African-American theme, but I believe all 3 are thought provoking.
Use this opportunity to look at the AP 101 recommended books for the college bound. Find the black authors on the list and knock one or two of the books of your list this month.
Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe
The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglas
Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison
The Color Purple by Alice Walker
Native Son by Richard Wright
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd was also made into a movie, starring Queen Latifah, Dakota Fanning and Jennifer Hudson. For those of you in the SE of Michigan, the story will be feature in an American Place Theater presenation at the Macomb Center for the Performing Arts on Tuesday, March 22nd.
Observations and happenings in a small town school library media center.
Monday, February 7, 2011
Sunday, January 30, 2011
ACT Prep
Thank you to the students and parents who attended the ACT prep seminar at the St. Clair Public Library on Saturday. As promised, I will post how to access the the prep course available through the Michigan eLibrary. I apologize for the late posting and the text only instruction, but I am experiencing computer issues.
The following information is for state of Michigan residents only. Although, other states and communities may have access to the database "Learning Express Library" and can follow the instructions after access. On a side note, going to the official ACT website will also allow you to take practice tests, look at a blog and have daily practice questions.
1. Go to the Michigan eLibrary website.
2. Click on the databases link.
3. Choose the database Learning Express Library.
4. You will be asked to enter a Michigan identification number or choose from the drop down option St. Clair County library and enter your SCCL card number.
5. In the middle of the LEL homepage choose new users if you haven't yet created an account or returning user if you have.
6. ACT prep is located under the College Preparation option.
7. Added courses to My Center and begin working.
Remember, the best approach is to complete the entire PREP course first before attempting practice tests. Under the high school tab, there are courses in math skills, grammar, writing and reading. If your prep course work indicates difficulty in particular areas use these courses to increase your understanding prior to attempting the practice tests. Focus on competing courses in the specified time as the timing is something students often struggle with without practice. Please post any questions or observations in the comments. Thanks for joining me and GOOD LUCK!
The following information is for state of Michigan residents only. Although, other states and communities may have access to the database "Learning Express Library" and can follow the instructions after access. On a side note, going to the official ACT website will also allow you to take practice tests, look at a blog and have daily practice questions.
1. Go to the Michigan eLibrary website.
2. Click on the databases link.
3. Choose the database Learning Express Library.
4. You will be asked to enter a Michigan identification number or choose from the drop down option St. Clair County library and enter your SCCL card number.
5. In the middle of the LEL homepage choose new users if you haven't yet created an account or returning user if you have.
6. ACT prep is located under the College Preparation option.
7. Added courses to My Center and begin working.
Remember, the best approach is to complete the entire PREP course first before attempting practice tests. Under the high school tab, there are courses in math skills, grammar, writing and reading. If your prep course work indicates difficulty in particular areas use these courses to increase your understanding prior to attempting the practice tests. Focus on competing courses in the specified time as the timing is something students often struggle with without practice. Please post any questions or observations in the comments. Thanks for joining me and GOOD LUCK!
Thursday, January 13, 2011
ALA Book Awards
This past Monday ALA announced the book award winners at the winter conference. Any parent, teacher or student looking for a great read should start with the ALA book awards lists. When starting my profession I tried for several years to reinvent the wheel, looking for the freshest, newest reads that were going to suck in teens and hook them on reading forever. A lot of time and energy was put into the process. When I became successful in this endeavor is when I stopped trying to do it on my own. As a fellow librarian said to me, "They win awards for a reason". Indeed.
At the high school level my favorite award is the Alex Award. The award is given to 10 adult titles published in the last year that are appealing to young adults. They are great reads for teens or adults. My only disappointment this year is that there aren't any sports titles. Past sports titles include Blindside: the Evolution of a game and Eagle Blue. To view the list of this year's award winners, and to see titles of previous winners, go to the following link: Alex Award
At the high school level my favorite award is the Alex Award. The award is given to 10 adult titles published in the last year that are appealing to young adults. They are great reads for teens or adults. My only disappointment this year is that there aren't any sports titles. Past sports titles include Blindside: the Evolution of a game and Eagle Blue. To view the list of this year's award winners, and to see titles of previous winners, go to the following link: Alex Award
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Teen Read Week
I know, I know. Teen Read Week was last week. The truth of the matter is that I was so busy during Teen Read Week that I didn't have time to post a blog. And that is a good thing! All but one hour of English came to the library during Teen Read Week for book talks, contests and discussion on reading.
The discussion went something like this. Do you know how many books "they" recommend you read every year? 25. How many of you are doing this? Why should you read 25 books a year. What does it do for you? How come you haven't read (since middle school, elementary school....ever). My personal mission: help every kid in my school find 25 books to read every year. But I need help.
Parents, relatives, teachers, friends.....we all need to build this philosophy in our kids. I focus on two main reasons students should read.
Final thoughts: in the difficult economic climate of public schools many have chosen to no longer employee library media specialists, considering them nonessential. My question is: who is getting the books to the kids? Who knows how to choose a wide variety of books to appeal to our varied readers? Who is taking the time to read these books so that recommendations can be made to the individual students?
The discussion went something like this. Do you know how many books "they" recommend you read every year? 25. How many of you are doing this? Why should you read 25 books a year. What does it do for you? How come you haven't read (since middle school, elementary school....ever). My personal mission: help every kid in my school find 25 books to read every year. But I need help.
Parents, relatives, teachers, friends.....we all need to build this philosophy in our kids. I focus on two main reasons students should read.
- Practice makes perfect. The one sure way to get better at something is to practice. Reading also increases vocabulary and helps with writing skills. Especially as work to increase the complexity of the text students are reading.
- Background knowledge. There is so much information to absorb in our world. Making connections requires understanding of complex thoughts and interactions. For example, I booktalked Benazir Bhutto's book Reconciliation. We brainstormed the assumptions students had of Bhutto's life based on her status as a woman in an Islamic country. What a revelation when it was revealed that she had served as Prime Minister of her country twice. While in the land of democracy we have yet to elect a female President.
Final thoughts: in the difficult economic climate of public schools many have chosen to no longer employee library media specialists, considering them nonessential. My question is: who is getting the books to the kids? Who knows how to choose a wide variety of books to appeal to our varied readers? Who is taking the time to read these books so that recommendations can be made to the individual students?
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Free Accessible Resources for Reaching 21st Century Learners
I'm excited to be sharing some great resources at the St. Clair County RESA sponsored 21st Century Symposium on Thursday, August 26th. My colleagues, Joni Rogers from Yale Public School District and Kathy Levandowski from the RESA, will join my in sharing some practical tools available at no charge to assist teachers and adminstrators in implementing activities that will appeal to our 21st Century Learners. Please use this blog as a resource; for the tutorials and for continued support through the comments option.
We will be covering a lot in a short hour, which is why we're using this blog to provide additional support. We will begin our journey with Joni sharing a great resource for lesson planning called MORE (Michigan Online Resources for Educators). MORE is available through the Michigan electronic library @ www.mel.org. From the home page please click on the MORE link. Creating a free account is recommended, but you can begin searching and accessing lessons without signing in. As many of the districts in the county will have interactiave white boards in their classrooms this year, Joni will highlight access to interactive lessons and demonstrate them on the SmartBoard. MORE focuses on Michigan standards. For a National databank checkout http://thinkfinity.org. Look for a tutorial to be posted soon!
From MORE, Jonie will take you back to MeL and highlight some of the other great resources, especially the databases. Clicking on the database link from the home page brings up a list up options with descriptions of the type of material indexed in each. Of special interest to schools is the Learning Express Library which offers practice tests (including AP and ACT), content area courses and skills building. Many of the databases offer full-text access to professional journals and magazines, making this a first stop for research and for informational text to use in the classroom.
We will switch gears with Rachelle demonstrating Animoto, a video creation platform software that offers free accounts for educators. Animoto offers some creative solutions for education. The web-based feature solves the server space issues so often associated with video content. Also, the software itself makes most creative decisions, such as timing and special effects, for you. This allows new users and younger students to make creative movies without getting bogged down with technical details. For this very reason, some of your older, more tech savvy students are going to want the creative control available with other tools such as Windows MovieMaker. Go to www.animoto.com to register for your account today. **This may take SEVERAL weeks. Be flexible in your planning the first time. The tutorial provides you with step-by-step instructions.
21st Century students want their work to have real world application. So while movies are fun, what is the real world application? Two ideas come to mind quickly. Public Service Announcements for Health class is a step-up from your typical No Smoking brochure! Probably the application most often used is to create book trailers. Students, following the format of a movie trailer, create a movie advertising a book. This is an extension of the idea of digital storytelling that has been around for some time and is popular at the elementary and middle levels. Storyboarding before creating the video covers many writing and reading standards while the movie offers students a fun project at the end of a book study or favorite read. St. Clair County schools have a library management system that is web-based and includes social and interactive components. Here is an example, using the book Tweak, of how a student made book trailer can have a real world application when it is included in the record of the library catalogue. Simply click on the weblink in the Explore section of the record.
Now that we're at the Destiny library management system, let's look at some of the interactive features. To use these features, you must login. Please remember that the tutorial demonstrates how to login for St. Clair County Michigan schools. The login formula will NOT work for all Destiny subscriptions. The other features demonstrated are available.
Some of the features, such as having students review a book or make recommendations are self-explanatory. Resource lists may require some examples. Here is how I have used Resource Lists. Teachers can identify books to be used with a particular unit or lesson, allowing the media specialist to pull the books or the student to find a resource from the list. This list is then available the next time the unit or lesson is taught. Lists can be used to identify particular genres, a favorites list or added to a visual search. Students can also login and create their own lists. This allows them to keep track electronically of resources used for research, allowing them to return for additional information or clarification. If your building collection includes websites and e-books, students can access identified materials without search time when working from school or home.
In our live presentation, Kathy will wrap up the hour by reviewing how different districts have set-up access to Destiny and who to contact in specific buildings or districts. For my online viewers, your best bet is to contact your building or district library media specialist. If you don't have one, find out from a building administrator who administrates Destiny to obtain login information and additional training.
We hope our live and virtual viewers enjoy these resources as much as we enjoy sharing them! Feel free to comment, ask questions, subscribe to this blog and continue the discussion.
We will be covering a lot in a short hour, which is why we're using this blog to provide additional support. We will begin our journey with Joni sharing a great resource for lesson planning called MORE (Michigan Online Resources for Educators). MORE is available through the Michigan electronic library @ www.mel.org. From the home page please click on the MORE link. Creating a free account is recommended, but you can begin searching and accessing lessons without signing in. As many of the districts in the county will have interactiave white boards in their classrooms this year, Joni will highlight access to interactive lessons and demonstrate them on the SmartBoard. MORE focuses on Michigan standards. For a National databank checkout http://thinkfinity.org. Look for a tutorial to be posted soon!
From MORE, Jonie will take you back to MeL and highlight some of the other great resources, especially the databases. Clicking on the database link from the home page brings up a list up options with descriptions of the type of material indexed in each. Of special interest to schools is the Learning Express Library which offers practice tests (including AP and ACT), content area courses and skills building. Many of the databases offer full-text access to professional journals and magazines, making this a first stop for research and for informational text to use in the classroom.
We will switch gears with Rachelle demonstrating Animoto, a video creation platform software that offers free accounts for educators. Animoto offers some creative solutions for education. The web-based feature solves the server space issues so often associated with video content. Also, the software itself makes most creative decisions, such as timing and special effects, for you. This allows new users and younger students to make creative movies without getting bogged down with technical details. For this very reason, some of your older, more tech savvy students are going to want the creative control available with other tools such as Windows MovieMaker. Go to www.animoto.com to register for your account today. **This may take SEVERAL weeks. Be flexible in your planning the first time. The tutorial provides you with step-by-step instructions.
21st Century students want their work to have real world application. So while movies are fun, what is the real world application? Two ideas come to mind quickly. Public Service Announcements for Health class is a step-up from your typical No Smoking brochure! Probably the application most often used is to create book trailers. Students, following the format of a movie trailer, create a movie advertising a book. This is an extension of the idea of digital storytelling that has been around for some time and is popular at the elementary and middle levels. Storyboarding before creating the video covers many writing and reading standards while the movie offers students a fun project at the end of a book study or favorite read. St. Clair County schools have a library management system that is web-based and includes social and interactive components. Here is an example, using the book Tweak, of how a student made book trailer can have a real world application when it is included in the record of the library catalogue. Simply click on the weblink in the Explore section of the record.
Now that we're at the Destiny library management system, let's look at some of the interactive features. To use these features, you must login. Please remember that the tutorial demonstrates how to login for St. Clair County Michigan schools. The login formula will NOT work for all Destiny subscriptions. The other features demonstrated are available.
Some of the features, such as having students review a book or make recommendations are self-explanatory. Resource lists may require some examples. Here is how I have used Resource Lists. Teachers can identify books to be used with a particular unit or lesson, allowing the media specialist to pull the books or the student to find a resource from the list. This list is then available the next time the unit or lesson is taught. Lists can be used to identify particular genres, a favorites list or added to a visual search. Students can also login and create their own lists. This allows them to keep track electronically of resources used for research, allowing them to return for additional information or clarification. If your building collection includes websites and e-books, students can access identified materials without search time when working from school or home.
In our live presentation, Kathy will wrap up the hour by reviewing how different districts have set-up access to Destiny and who to contact in specific buildings or districts. For my online viewers, your best bet is to contact your building or district library media specialist. If you don't have one, find out from a building administrator who administrates Destiny to obtain login information and additional training.
We hope our live and virtual viewers enjoy these resources as much as we enjoy sharing them! Feel free to comment, ask questions, subscribe to this blog and continue the discussion.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Jing
As I prepare for the 21st Century Learning Conference hosted by St. Clair County RESA I want to share with you a great tool that I heard about @ the conference 2 years ago. It's called Jing. It's a web capturing tool that you can download FREE from http://www.jingproject.com. As with many of the tools that I love, my time is too limited to try all of the great features available. It's actually a great screencasting softward that enhances online conversations. However, I use the screen capture feature to create visual tutorials. Save the screen, add visual highlighs and instructions and save to presentation software. Using Google presentations or saving a PPT presentation to slider sharer allows you to easily link and share your help tools. How will you use this tool? How can your students use this tool? The application possibilities will be fun to watch unfold!
Here is an example I created to show teachers and students how to create and iGoogle page:
One word of caution with this tool. Unless you have adminstrative rights on your network you will not be able to download the software. At this time I am forced to use it from my home computer, but many tech departments are willing to add software for teachers and students if getting some time.
Here is an example I created to show teachers and students how to create and iGoogle page:
One word of caution with this tool. Unless you have adminstrative rights on your network you will not be able to download the software. At this time I am forced to use it from my home computer, but many tech departments are willing to add software for teachers and students if getting some time.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Summer Reading
The sun is shining, the water is inviting, who wants to be inside? Finding the right book is so important! Here are some suggestions for the intellectuals, the beach readers and those who think they hate fiction. First, most schools make available reading lists for AP courses, English classes and other classes that incorporate extensive reading. Using the summer for a first read of required books can take some of the pressure off of the experience. Unless you have been given a specific assignment, as with an AP English class, read the book for fun. It doesn't matter if you don't "get it" the first time. Sometimes we forget that reading can be pleasurable because we only read with an analytical eye to complete class assignments. Just get lost in the book. Persevere. Don't let vocabulary, style or characters intimidate you. No one is grading your summer reading! I personally enjoy Alexandre Dumas' The Three Musketeers. Romance, political intrigue, friendship, patriotism, bravery; it has something for everyone.
Those of you looking for good beach reads, vampire fiction series are plentiful. Richelle Mead's Vampire Acadamy series has a new release this month. One of my favorites! There are some great series that are NOT vampire or romance for my male readers or those who enjoy more realistic fiction. If you enjoyed the Bourne book or film series, try Robert Muchamore's CHERUB series. As an added bonus, filming begins this summer for the movie version.
Hate reading novels? Then don't. Yup. You heard me. It's your summer! I still want you to read, but fiction isn't the only genre that counts. Biographies and memoirs are increasingly relevant for teen reads. Some of my picks include:
Have a reading suggestion to add to the list? Let me know.
Those of you looking for good beach reads, vampire fiction series are plentiful. Richelle Mead's Vampire Acadamy series has a new release this month. One of my favorites! There are some great series that are NOT vampire or romance for my male readers or those who enjoy more realistic fiction. If you enjoyed the Bourne book or film series, try Robert Muchamore's CHERUB series. As an added bonus, filming begins this summer for the movie version.
Hate reading novels? Then don't. Yup. You heard me. It's your summer! I still want you to read, but fiction isn't the only genre that counts. Biographies and memoirs are increasingly relevant for teen reads. Some of my picks include:
- A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier
- Tweak (definately edgy and explicit-recommended for older teens)
- Smashed: Memoir of a Drunken Girlhood
- Three Cups of Tea
- The Glass Castle
Have a reading suggestion to add to the list? Let me know.
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