Sunday, October 21, 2012

The Future of Librarians...

Watching this video made me wonder....



If this is what teachers are being charged to do, will ALL teachers soon be librarians?  



We have been teaching like this for years (or at least we should have been)...

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Twitter Tutorial

I am enrolled in an online Professional Development course... and as part of the course I have had to revisit Twitter.

Thankfully, they provided a link to this video on Twitter basics... And a link to frequently used Educational Hash Tags.   There is hope for me yet!

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Twitter... Still not flying

It's been more than four months since I admitted I need remedial Twitter classes... and I still need them.

I recently found this graphic and find that I am stuck at Stage 2...


I am stuck at Stage 2 not because I ramble about the weather, lunch, and my favorite quotes, but because the tweets I receive are still gibberish to me.  Does Berlitz have an audio course for speaking Twitter?

I follow some great people:  Joyce Valenza, Maribel Castro, Karen Bonnano, Jennifer LaGarde, Teri Lesesne.  I respect what they have to say... I just prefer to read it somewhere else.

Anyone else out there prefer to learn from their PLN's via RSS blog feeds?
Any Twitter language shortcuts you can teach me?


Tuesday, October 2, 2012

Myth #7: Library Skills Take 15 Minutes to Master

When school resumes each year, one common request I receive is for an overview of the resources in the library.... "Maybe for the first or last 15 minutes of class."  These requests are not asking for a library orientation, rather a crash course in subscription databases.

Well, sure, I can do that.  Just like you can teach me World History in 15 minutes...  Explain calculus in 15 minutes...  Give me an overview of plant DNA in 15 minutes...  Unless your students are already proficient library users, familiar with when and how to use subscription databases, it will be a wasted 15 minutes.


I do my best to accomodate any and all teacher requests - even the 15 minute overview.  But, naturally, I do a little educating along the way.  I begin by asking questions... what is the teacher's objectives and goals?  Which resources would they like spotlighted?  With which resources are students already familiar?  Are students currently doing research?  About what?  If not, when will they begin their next project?  The best time to introducing resources is when the learning will be applied.

I much prefer to introduce one resource at a time when they are relevant to instruction.  Then provide time for students to use them, practice, ask questions, make mistakes, and get comfortable.

My goal is to communicate that a more effective approach is a frequent 15 minutes (or full class period) several times throughout the year, introducing individual resources that apply to and enhance what is currently being taught in the classroom.  It takes collaboration to make library resources an integral part of the classroom curriculum, not something you find some spare time to do.


Think of the last inservice you sat through where information you might need "someday" was thrown at you (i.e. staff handbook).  Do you remember where to find that information?  Do you even remember what was covered?  Probably not.  But if you ever have had an on-the-job injury or a possible situation involving harassment, I bet you can quote page numbers and paragraphs in the handbook.


Please, if you want to use library resources, give them the time that is due.  You can't even read a newspaper in 15 minutes.