I enjoy humor, and found plenty of it, even when I searched "librarian collaboration" in TeacherTube. Dr. Loopy is too much fun! But when I found this sly song on YouTube I thought it might be just the thing for a monthly librarian meeting. Or maybe towards the end of the holiday party after some adult beverages...
It is PG-13, so listen without little ones nearby. Agrab.
That is Joe Uveges on guitar singing at the When Freedom Calls concert November 2, 2007 in Colorado Springs.
Saturday, August 2, 2008
Thing # 19 Web 2.0 Awards List
I found a few things I had not seen before that could be useful at my school. We just became a bilingual campus last year and I liked the SpanishPod offers of free lessons. There are many people who would like to know more of the language, and this seemed appealingly simple.
Minti also looked like it could be appreciated by the folks that visit our Parent Center every week. They could get started with it at school, and then continue with the benefits at home.
The award winner that really launched my imagination was Lulu, where you can self publish. They have applications geared towards fundraisers and I thought our PTO or my (eventual) Friends of the Library could create a calendar of photographs with students involved in learning activities. Of course, the more students in the photos, the more calendars will sell, and who will pass up that opportunity to buy for themselves, and all the relatives? You can make the calendars be Jan-Dec or school year if you prefer, so there are lots of ways to work it, plus you can actually print it with all the school events on the dates! Lulu calculates cost, so you can add a mark up to make $$$, but you don't have to worry about inventory because they print based on the orders. Maybe it's all too good to be true, but it was the award winner, so it must have been successful for a lot of other people, right? Agrab.
Minti also looked like it could be appreciated by the folks that visit our Parent Center every week. They could get started with it at school, and then continue with the benefits at home.
The award winner that really launched my imagination was Lulu, where you can self publish. They have applications geared towards fundraisers and I thought our PTO or my (eventual) Friends of the Library could create a calendar of photographs with students involved in learning activities. Of course, the more students in the photos, the more calendars will sell, and who will pass up that opportunity to buy for themselves, and all the relatives? You can make the calendars be Jan-Dec or school year if you prefer, so there are lots of ways to work it, plus you can actually print it with all the school events on the dates! Lulu calculates cost, so you can add a mark up to make $$$, but you don't have to worry about inventory because they print based on the orders. Maybe it's all too good to be true, but it was the award winner, so it must have been successful for a lot of other people, right? Agrab.
Thing # 18 Google Docs
I've been working with Google Docs for several days now and I definitely think it is a FANTASTIC tool. Except for when it is sticky and uncooperative and I want to go back to the simple ways of PowerPoint. The concept of being able to collaborate on a project with partners that are not actually meeting at the same place, but can all be looking at the work together is wonderful. There are many creative templates to choose from; actually more variety than is readily available from MicroSoft. Naturally, like anything, the more we practice with it, the better we understand how it works and how to navigate and accomplish our desires. We are putting it through a good test by using several different computers to enter our project elements. I won't be able to give a final report until after the performance under pressure for the audience on the last night of our class. Test runs have been successful so far... I spoke with our Tech Specialist yesterday and learned Google Docs is currently blocked in our district. They are also pushing us to use more technology with the students, so hmmm...it's a puzzle! Agrab.
# 17 Rollyo
Rollyo was olly-okay for me. I didn't think the explanation on Thing # 17 or even their own Rollyo site provided adequate illumination. Bruce from Spring Branch's video was what finally got me to understand the point at all. Rollyo seems nearly identical to TrackStar, or making your own WebQuest. The bottom line with these tools is they take a ton of time. It is always better to try to find someone else's creation than to reinvent the wheel. Even finding an existing product will need refining for your needs to make it appropriate for your students. I wanted to find something about oceans in case we study about Galveston, and bumped into Leo DeCaprio's environmental stuff. That was interesting. But I was also turned off by some of the completely off-color results that turned up among my keyword ocean results. I carefully backed away from some of the searchrolls and hoped that my computer would not be victimized by some of the noted tags that had NOTHING to do with oceans. That made me realize that if no tags were showing the whole search might be a trap to avoid. This tool seems a little too public for my taste. TrackStar tracks and WebQuests have been created by other educators, not just the random public. If you want to go to the trouble of creating your own from scratch it doesn't matter which format you use; you will still be spending a long time previewing the content and making sure everything is current and working properly for this school year. Agrab.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Thing # 16 Wikis
Wikis are quickies and fun. The SBISD sandbox was certainly effortless. I have these ideas planned for the upcoming school year to introduce wikis in my elementary school: 1) a book club wiki for my fourth graders who meet after school once a month, 2) a book wish list for everyone who would like to make a selection suggestion to the librarian, and 3) a classroom daily learning log. Here's what I have in mind: I'll start with my 50 book club members. This way they can log in and comment when they finish a chapter at home and so forth. It will give us a lot more discussion than we get now because we only meet to distribute the book and then a month later to discuss, eat, have activities, etc. Some kids come to the meetings just for the fun, food, and etc. without having finished their books. Maybe this will help that aspect also. The wish list could start to open wikis up to the brave in my school at any level. The classroom learning log I think would work like this: 20 kids, 6 subjects a day (reading, language arts, math, science, social studies, and either art, music, PE, or health.tech) and 3 classroom computers. The teacher sets up a rotation so that every kid gets to wiki every day about what they learned in one of those subjects. The challenge is that only one student can be composing at a time. I'll bet they'll want to come into the room early, during lunch and recess, after school from home, etc. My school has a focus this year on writing, and in May learning journals with different colored pages for subjects were proposed. I think wikis just might motivate the students to write more than those paper/pencil journals with the pretty color papers. I suppose we'll start the year the tree-killing way, but I hope to TRANSITION a few teachers as we journey through the year. Agrab.
Thing # 15 Web 2.0, Library 2.0, & the Future of Libraries
Wikipedia was most helpful for me because I needed the background knowledge of these terms we've been slinging around. I'm never comfortable saying things my son might ask me about and I don't know what I'm talking about. So that's a relief that I can at least give a brief explanation now without just having a blank look of panic take over while I stumble and make up some lingo mumbo jumbo. I do want to wave the yellow flag of caution as we all charge into the world of library change. Last week I listened to Dr. Michael Chirichello speak in my district about increasing leadership capacity and highly effective teams. The most salient point I took away was to never again use the evil word change. When we tell people we want/need them to embrace educational change to improve test scores or every other wonderful desired result, we DON'T VALUE WHAT THEY ARE DOING NOW. Before we go changing libraries and librarians as we know them, we must admit that the old and current style had/has value, or there would have been no attraction for all of us presently involved. Dr. Chirichello recommends the better way to approach change is to say: "We are going to make some TRANSITIONS, and I'm going to hold your hand as we make this journey together." This way no one feels threatened and devalued, and everyone can begin to appreciate the JOURNEY. The library 2.0 world is definitely a transitional journey for librarians, teachers, and administrators. We've got to take the trip for the students and their futures, because we have to prepare them for a world that does not even exist right now. They need the skills to know how to react to the transitions they will have to deal with... Agrab.
Thing # 12 Commenting Redux
I'm old school. (I'm old in general!) So I was actually holding my newspaper this morning and reading some other selected people's blog comments from my corner of the great state when I became inspired to add my opinions to the outside world. I realized the outside world was really my hometown and this was definitely an arena my opinion counted as much as these other opinions. So I have now gone and let them know how I feel about a local store that might close in our area mall and what should be the replacement store (local trend is we want a Fry's Electronics....could be dangerous with my new affinity for technology!) AND the big discussion about local teacher salaries and stipends and how they compare in the district I live in and work in. I ended with humor in one post, and a question in the other, so maybe I'll get some response, and MAYBE (this would elate me no end) I'll be one of the selections in next week's newspaper for the local neighborhood section. Oh lord, my ego is getting out of control. It's like I'm on blog drugs. I even thought of commenting in the sports section about Ron Artest becoming a Houston Rocket. I have opinions about that too. YIKES! I'm afraid to sit too close to the court...good thing I'm a teacher who can't afford a good ticket so he can't hit me! Oh wait, I'm not on that site at the moment... Agrab.
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