Sunday, August 9, 2009
Implementation Plan
I already have a wiki for NPHS library, but it is static and I would very much like to make it more evolving and interactive. In view of this it seemed most logical for my implementation plan to involve making some of these changes.
Just before I left school last spring I added a page for my student reading group, Patriot Readers (our school mascot is the Patriot), but did not really do anything with the page. I intend for it to name the book we are reading for the month, the date of our next meeting, and the reading list for this school year as well as past years. Then I want to create a blog for book discussion and link it to this page. I think I will have it only open to members of the reading group at first, which is usually from 10 - 14 students. I intend to make it available to more students later but don't know if it will ever be entirely open to the public--I have to see how it all goes. I would like this blog to include discussion on the book we are reading and whatever else students are reading. I will also use it to talk about good books I read and want to recommend or tell students about new books I just placed in the library. Students can also recommend books for the library or to read in Patriot Readers.
To make it even a bit more exciting, I think I will have students create an avatar to use in the blog, at least the Patriot Readers kids. I thought that activity was really fun and I bet they could come up with some really interesting ones when they aren't limited in any way but common decency!
The second thing I would like to attempt this year is a student book review using VoiceThread. I would have the student come to the library and facilitate their particular Thread, but have them all part of the one package. Then I would like to link this project to my library wiki and advertise in school that student book reviews are available if someone wants a recommendation from a peer. I would probably start this with my Patriot Readers students and students who regularly come to check out books. I think students would be more likely to listen to something like this than to read written reviews, and I think it could become very interesting and exciting. Reading advisory is one of the really fun connections with kids. I learn so much about them and what kids want to read. I will have to work with the kids so they can get across the gist of the book but not reveal the ending or important happenings in their reviews.
For my own personal use, I want to improve on and build up my Google Reader and my Del.icio.us page so they are truly useful to me at school.
If I truly get all of that done this school year I will impress myself beyond words. I just think all of them would make my library a little closer to becoming a Library 2.o facility.
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Week 9, Thing 23, Wrap It Up!!
Creative Commons was fascinating. I really love the idea that creative people can share all or part of their creations. I think it really optimizes creativity when people can build on each others creations and add to it or alter it in some way. Really exciting stuff. Plus the peace of knowing what you are doing is legal. Copyright laws are not always real clear.
Raven About 2.0 was a lot of fun and a great opportunity to sample lots of online tools. Not all of it excites me, but plenty does lend itself to many possibilities in the library. Some of the online image generators are wonderful tools for someone who is basically not very creative to pretend to be somewhat creative. I know I can use some of them for posters, postcards, etc. I also really do want to try using VoiceThread to have students do oral book reviews or book talks. And I truly hope this is the year I can get a blog going off my library wiki.
The class took way more than the 32 hours we were required to put in to fulfill the credit--at least for me. Sometimes I was amazed at how long I had been online working for one of the Things. Others took less time, usually because I was familiar with the tool. A few of the links were broken so were dead ends. Overall, these criticisms are so minor comparing to the overall benefits of the class. I loved the format of working at my own speed and communicating with you, Ann, and the other students via the blog. I really enjoyed reading the other blogs--so much that I even read some of the older ones from former sessions. It is interesting that everyone reacts so uniquely to different tools, but that there were a lot of commonalities. Some tools, like VoiceThread and Flickr toys, are almost universally loved. The shear volume of available blogs was overwhelming to most Raven 2.o bloggers.
Thank you, Ann, for putting this class together. I learned a lot and now know that I don't have to be at all afraid of these tools. Most are easy and intuitive to use, and I now have the textbook (which I really enjoyed and have read from cover to cover) to use as a tutorial when I venture to use one. I feel less like a novice now that I at least know what someone is talking about when they mention a tool!
Chapter 2, Students and Learning
Technology can no longer be an extra in schools, used to add a bit of pizazz to a lesson. It must become a tool like calculators and pencils have been for years. Students want to use technology to learn as well as socialize. The author states that students want adults to move beyond using the "Internet for Internet's sake." That is when the excitement can start. With all the tools available online, there is no end to the possibilities.
One of the first things schools need to do is equip every student with a laptop that they use in each class and take home. This would eliminate all the problems we have today with imcompatibility of programs between versions on home computers and those on the school computers. It would level the playing field for all students, and it would encourage the use of computers for communication between teachers and students. I think we need to start communicating via social networks and texting because this is the favored communication of this generation.
I loved the two Bloom's taxonomy charts showing the traditional next to the one revised for the influence of technology. Technology encourages a higher order of thinking that goes beyond evaluation into the realm of creating. We don't need to trash the old educational tools but combine them with technology to reach a more powerful level of learning. Technology also makes it easier for students to find and use the learning style of their preference. We, as educators, can more reliably meet the needs of each student and push them to meaningful learning.
I like the idea of learning as a continual process, leading to a variety of different careers or fields as we age. We no longer need to view education as a preparation for one job for our entire life, but know we can continuously learn and change our knowledge and do it in an informal, personal way rather than the formal education that we faced exclusively in past decades. It is all really exciting.
Friday, July 31, 2009
Week 9, Thing 22, Ebooks and Audio Ebooks
I listened to the schoollibrary.com video and it looks like a site that fits the description of making information available so that we can have buildingless schools. I then went to "Ebooks About Everything" and searched for Obama and found 42 titles. So there is already a great deal of information out there in ebook format.
Librivox is a great site to send students who want an Audiobook of a required classic when our library copy is already checked out. It was easy to search and, on my fast connection at home, the first chapter of Bleak House only took a minute to download and the first chapter of Pride and Prejudice only about 6 seconds. Some titles had more than one version so that if the listener didn't like a voice or accent, there were other options. The hits also gave a connection to the ebook on Guttenberg and referenced one or more wikipedia pages on authors, time periods, etc. I know I will refer students to this site. Unfortunately many of them probably do not have fast internet at home, and I know this would be unbelievably tedious on dialup connection. This is also the site where I made an RSS to a podcast so I should become very familiar with it in the future.
I had considered purchasing ebooks for school so had researched audible.com at that time. They have a nice, current collection and the prices are pretty reasonable. I checked for the Twilight series and they had the entire collection at around $40 each, not too steep for a massively popular title.
I don't do a lot with ebooks myself because I prefer to read with a book in hand. However, I am on the verge of ordering a Kindle so travel is lighter with such strict weight limits now. I do want to set myself up with whatever device I need or add-ons to my computer that allow me to use these online free audio-ebooks when I am on a driving trip!
Chapter 9, New Schools
It is so exciting to think that we already have the tools and potential to make offsite education a reality. Considering the cost of maintaining school buildings and providing student transportation, it is mind boggling to think of what uses all that money could be put in a School 2.0 world. It could probably bring the student body up to a level playing field technologically so that a remote school could work. We see the possibility and potential in the way the Raven About Web 2.0 is taught.
I appreciate the section that discisses the five elements of the video game experience that can have direct application to successful learning. I have a sort of snobbish disregard for video games as somewhat useless and as detractors from more worthwhile pursuits. This section made me look at my attitude a bit more critically. The education world could probably take pointers from the video game world and gain greater buy-in from our students. It is apparent that what we are doing in schools now is not stimulating students to invest the proper amount of time and energy in their education. We need to get on their level and not expect them to perform in our world that has so little bearing on the rest of their lives.
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Week 9, Thing 21
I tried to watch the Yahoo: What is a APodcast video but the link was a dead one. I then just went on to the Educational Podcast Directory and looked around a bit. I tried the Instructional Technology link but didn't find anything there to interest me. I then went under English Language Arts and found a fun one called Librivix, which is an audiobooks subscription. I subscribed to it and listened to part of one reading of a story in a beautiful British voice! This is the one to which I added an RSS feed on GoogleReader.
I then moved over to Podcast Alley and searched for book reviews--the list was heavy on comic book reviews. I tried a few of their top podcasts and subscribed to a couple that I may or may not keep--I just wanted to practice the subscribing. I did find a Twilight podcast that would be very interesting to a number of students at NPHS. The last two entries in it were a comparison of the movie and the book of Twilight and a preview of the New Moon movie. I will have to point that out to one particular student that we in the NPHS library call Amy Twilight because of her serious obsession with the series.
The whole podcast world is fascinating, if a person just had more time to listen to them! I think podcasts would a nice addition to my library wiki--another thing to explore in my days that are already to full at school.
Monday, July 27, 2009
Week 9, Thing 20, TeacherTube
A lot of the videos are truly amateurish, which is also true on YouTube. There is a great deal of variation in quality. If one perseveres, there is good stuff on TeacherTube. A lot of what is there would be a hard sell to students who usually are looking for something more entertaining and flashy.
I searched for "librarians" and found one that was entertaining called "What Do Librarians Look Like?" High school students are being asked that question and the answers are amazingly clueless--much of it involving glasses, old, gray hair in buns, and shhhh. I can hardly believe that image is still at the forefront--I don't think that is happening in our District HS libraries.
There is a lot of information on Web 2.0 that might be worth checking out. I found a couple of neat Twitter sites as I am interested in learning more about that since much of the political world is using it.
I attached a cute video where first graders are asking President Obama questions. One of my searches was "Obama" because I am a great fan and this was one of the few that was original and not just his inauguration or some other event.
On YouTube I really enjoyed the Library Dominos clip--actually there were several, but my favorite was the one where the books are falling down in lines running around the shelves. However Conan has been removed so that one remains a mystery to me. I have used YouTube to listen to political speeches that I missed, but find that most of them are done in sound bites of five minutes or less. I have now turned to MSNBC online for the full speech in one video.
YouTube is really fun to play with--I wish it was available at school, because it is a great way to show something when trying to explain an unknown to a student. Just as an aside: there is a YouTube video of my son-in-law playing the saz, entitled "Abbas playing the Azerbaijani saz.
Week 8, Thing 19.1, Alaska's Diginal Pipeline
I determined to try something I had not done, so I looked into creating journal alerts and search alerts and opened and saved the tedious instructions on each. The second thing I did was watch the Flash movie on the coming Ebscohost 2.0 interface. However, it sounded like it was to have been implemented in 2008. I went on to the Digital Pipeline and discovered that it was indeed the interface used now.
At school I teach the students to go on the the databases through our District web program called FILE' under the resources tab. On there I always taught them to use the Student Research Center because it was supposedly designed for high school curriculums. Last year during the school year it was not using the Ebscohost 2.0 interface. I logged on to the databases in this manner and discovered that Student Research Center still does not use the Ebscohost 2.0 interface, whether I went onto it from FILE' or from the Digital Pipeline link on SLED. From now on I will teach students the Digital Pipeline way because the Ebscohost 2.0 interface is so much more powerful.
My information gleaned on placing journal or search alerts from the Ebsco Support link from the Raven About Web 2.0 page is now obsolete as the alerts are so easy to place from the Ebscohost 2.0 interface--just a click away.
I then went in and started a folder for myself, something I had never done before. It was easy and it is one click to put an article in the folder from Ebscohost 2.0. Can see it as useful when I am doing research that I can't complete in one session. I can add to the folder and sort later for the cream of the crop.
I am a huge fan of Ebscohost and am very grateful to the Legislature for providing it free of charge. I know I would not be able to afford it in my Library and cannot imagine living without it. We have a big automotive department at NPHS so I also point that database out in my freshman orientation.
Chapter 7 of textbook.
Until I read this chapter, I was not aware that districts receiving various federal funding were subject to the CIPA requirements. I think I will be a bit more patient with the filtering of the net now that I am aware of that. I have always understood the reasoning for filters but when helping students do research on some topics it is really frustrating to see official sites that would have the best information for them blocked. My tendency has been to blame the shortsightedness of the District administration, but now I know that the impetus comes from higher up than the District.
I hope we can come up with some method of letting students do some of the social networking on school computers. There are a lot of projects that this would enhance. I also realize that their are a lot of bad people out there that we like to protect our students from. However, most of these kids are on these sites at home and many on their cell phones, so they view us as so antiquated at school when they can't use any of the sites and tools there. Surely there has to be a happy medium. I think districts are going to have to do something, because it is getting harder and harder to justify the inability for students to use something like Flickr or Twitter in school.
The copyright issue is huge and one I deal with on a daily basis. Kids really do think that because "it" is on the net that it is available for downloading or copying. They also view information as true because it is on the net. What copyright means and what things are legal to use or download and what are not are tough topics to get students to believe and comply with when they research. Equally important is the ability to evaluate websites for pertinence and expertise of opinion. These topics need to be dealt with as regulary as reading and math, beginning in the elementary grades.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Week 8, Thing 19, Library Thing
Friday, July 24, 2009
Week 8, Thing 18 Summary
Week 8, Thing 18B, Googledocs
Week 8, Thing 18B, Googledocs
Zohotest
Week 8, Thing 18, Online Productivity Tools - Zoho Writer |
This is so cool because using an online document program was on my agenda for the summer. We have some teachers and students at NPHS that are using GoogleDocs and there are some features that are different so sometimes I have to work at answering questions for students on printing, saving, inserting, previewing, etc. I was determined that come fall I would be an expert and here I am getting started. Because GoogleDocs is used and I don't know anyone using ZohoWriter, I am going to try posting from both to compare them. I dolled this up with some extras just to play with them, including inserting a picture.
I am inserting a header to see if it works as the title of my blog entry. Here goes.
Web 2.0: New Tools, New Schools, Chapter 1
We are definitely in a different world today than we were when I was in high school and things are changing at such a rapid rate that it is dizzying (if that is a word). The strange thing to me is that in a world where information is so available and kids are so wired, most of them are not very well informed on what is going on around the world. Kids are obviously using technology for things other than news and politics. I suspect that the social aspect of the web is where most of the action is for the millenium generation. Almost a hundred percent of students in high school now carry cell phones and text whenever they think they aren't being observed. Most also have Ipods, although Iphones are rapidly replacing the latter. With the Iphones they can surf the web, text, visit Facebook, and email, as well as talk on the phone.
Students are way ahead of adults, staff included, in their comfort with technology of this type. They have grown up with it and are as easy with it as we are with newspapers and TV. Schools are not up there with them. At NPHS students are not allowed to visit social networking sites, email except for school business, use cell phones, connect their personal laptops to the internet, or use instant messaging. That is supposed to be true in all the schools in the District, but I don't know if all enforce the code. Some teachers have gotten permission to use online chat to connect their students to other classes or cultures--for instance the Spanish teacher has her more advanced classes talking Spanish to a class in Argentina. Several of the teachers have class blogs and the District has enabled their site to be opened in school, thought the filter disallows other social networking sites.
I agree with the authors that the three skills of reading, writing, and arithmetic are not adequate measures of successful education in the 21st century. Things like global awareness, information gathering and manipulation, and just plain technology savvy are fast becoming the primary items that we as schools are going to have to ensure our students have when they graduate. Our exit exams and other measures of fitness for graduation have to be replaced with something more emcompassing and rigorous.
As I mentioned earlier, students are very comfortable with the use of the various technologies, but don't really know the wisest uses. They are very clumsy information seekers; they lack skills in searching the Web, know very little about website evaluation, and think that cutting and pasting is how you use information instead of synthesizing it into their ideas and words. These are all things that need to be taught in regular classrooms and not just as library orientation blurbs. They are complex and necessary skills that they will need throughout their lifetimes.
It is an exciting time to be in education and I just hope we, as teachers and librarians, can rise to the occasion so that we don't leave a generation groping for skills that we should have been able to impart.
Week 7, Thing 17, Sandbox Wiki
VoiceThread book review connection on my NPHS wiki--I actually thought of that during our VoiceThread assignment, and was reminded of it on this wiki.
Every four years (new student body) I do a Guess-the-Baby contest where I have staff submit baby pictures. The idea of having staff design an avatar and submit it instead of a photo sounds like a really fun alternative!
Creating a blog for a contest where I would post questions and students could submit answers--I could use trivia around topics such as Banned Books, authors, book titles, and any number of seasonal subjects.
I always do a big Banned Books week display. I loved the idea for students to design Banned Books trading cards using Flickr toys. I may just put that into play this fall.
There is unlimited room for creativity and fun. I wish there were enough hours in a day to do it all justice.
Week 7, Thing 16, Wikis
The Library Bloggers Wiki was fun because there were so many Wikis listed. I went into the School Libraries section and explored several school library wikis and there was quite a bit of variety. Some were much more vital and active than others. Some looked like they might have been created with good intent or as part of a class or project and then left to die. It challenged me to make my library wiki better and more active. I definitely need a blog --I think I will start with a book discussion one restricted to our school at first. I'll see if I can actually stimulate enough NPHS students to participate to make it interesting. If not, I will expand to the District and, if necessary, to the world.
I liked the idea of the wiki for special events like the conference one. In the last AkLA conference hosted by Fairbanks, we had a website but I like the idea of a Wiki that includes some more interactive areas, like a blog of general questions and/or special topics. Maybe some discussion of what attendees would like for entertainment and tours. Or a place to answer questions that people might have if they were unfamiliar with particulars regarding Fairbanks. Also a place that attendees can connect with acquaintances from other places in Alaska who may be attending. Endless possibilities.
I was so taken with the Library Success: A Best Practices Wiki that I joined it. It is so full of information and possibilities that I hope I have a suitable amount of time to spend on it and that I can contribute something useful to it. Seems like a person could get an answer to any question here and information on any topic for which questions arise.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Week 6, Thing 15, Librarian 2.0
However, I also value what the internet has brought to the information world, made even more exciting and interactive with Web 2.0 tools. I realize that the Milleniums are wired differently than my generation and don't feel that same nostalgia for library 1.0. In order to serve the information needs of this generation and gen X and Y, libraries have to become much more than collections. Dr. Wendy Schultz put it in perspective--things will continue to change and each phase will just be incorporated into and expanded by the next phase. Library 3.0 sounds pretty wild though. I wonder how soon to expect it--will I be retired by then?
My challenge is to figure out how to expand my library--how to become much more a library 2.0. My wiki is a start, but there is so much more that I can do with it to make it interactive and vital. Can I make it a place that is usable from IPhones and homes, making it unnecessary for students to have to wait until we are open in the morning to access needed information. Hopefully I can move seamlessly into the Library 2.0 world.
Week 6, Thing 14
I generally think that tags are useful and can help cut to the chase when looking for items. It does seem, however, that some folk use tags too liberally in order to get hit in more searches. Some of the sites just don't really have much more that a mention of the word I searched so were not helpful. If everyone would tag with just the really major topics it would certainly help. But overall, taging makes it better--like subject headings in a library catalog search.
Week 6, Thing 13, Del.icio.us
I think Del.icio.us would make an awesome research tool for students at school. I need to explore and see if there is a way I can set one up that could be accessed by students that would contain info on searching, evaluating websites, citing sources, and all kinds of helpful stuff. Thanks for making this one of the tools in this class.
Friday, July 17, 2009
Week 5, Thing 12, VoiceThread
Week 5, Thing 11, Award Winning Applications and NING
The Ning I ended up joining was KnitPicks, as knitting is another passion. I looked at several different knitting Nings, but this one really looks great. There are videos, chatrooms, podcasts, and all kinds of stuff. It has a large membership and a staff listed, including pictures, so I can even get help from an individual. I think I will have fun with this site, but it will not be of any use at work.
Week 5, Thing 10,Online Image Generators
I made this on FDtoys - motivator using a snapshot of my grandson at his third birthday party. He is really into trains and had just received the conductor cap/bandanna/whistle. So, why not a reading train!
http://www.imagechef.com/
Thursday, July 16, 2009
Week 4, Thing 9, Useful Blogs and Feeds
Bloglines Searchtool: Posts search would only be useful if I was looking for comments on a specific book. Feeds search only found a total of 4 sites and one was a pay to subscribe EBSCO site. The only useful one was on middle school books.
School Library Blogs was interesting and I subscribed to it.
Syndic8 was slow and the format wasn't friendly.
Technorati was easy to use and I like the arrangement, but in the time I spent there I had nothing to show. Lots of useless stuff.
Blogdigger.com was a broken link. I even tried a google search for blogdigger.com and came to the same deadend.
Topix.net was interesting--I like that it automatically came up to local news. The ads and appearance of the page bothered me.
Google Blog Search was my favorite. I located one helpful blog that was linked to a website so subscribed to that. I think this is the searcher I will be inclined to use.
BlogPulse only found one applicable hit when I searched CSLA 2.0.
I don't see myself getting involved in a lot of blogs as I think the time involved would not reap the benefits I might find in other avenues. I will try to find more sites to prove that statement false.
Week 4, Thing 8, RSS Feeds.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Week 3, Thing 7, Anything Technology Related
Week3, Thing6, Flicker Mashups and 3rd Party Sites.
From there I went to FlickrTools and explored the many possibilities including mosaic maker (I like mosaics) and the jigsaw maker, but I spent the bulk of my time on FX, which transforms photos with special effect like sepia, negative, swirl. I turned my granddaughter into a monster with implode. FX could be used so nicely in making an album by turning some pictures into sepia or black and white. There was also a portrait effect, which made the photo into a painting. It was all really fun and I know I will use it in the future.
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
Week 3, Thing 5, Explore Flickr.
If I wasn't already using Facebook to share photoes with my two kids, one who is traveling all over the world and one living in Denmark who has my only two grandkids, I would suggest we do photos on Flickr. When I think of how difficult and clunky it was to share information and pictures with my mother thirty-five years ago compared to the options we have now, it makes me wish so much that the technologies had developed earlier. There are almost too many options now--it's hard to know what is best and when it all gets to be too much. I use Skype, Facebook, and email with my daughter and don't know if there is something better and more exciting out there that I am missing or if I have it fairly well covered. I do know that technology has made it possible for my grandkids to know me and be comfortable with me even though we can get together physically only twice a year.
I have viewed photo albums in Picasa that others have shared with me, but have not made an album myself. Photograhy is not a passion or even a remote interest of mine, so I guess the incentive is not there.
This is my neighbor!
Week 2, Thing 4,
Week 2, Thing 3, Setting up my Blog.
Week 1, Thing 2, Pointer from Lifelong Learners
I think the item I find the easiest to observe is item 6, Use Technology to Your Advantage. Working in a high school library in a school that strives to be technologically on top of things, I am almost always scrambling to learn more in order to answer student questions or suggest ways they can improve projects. I have several sites (for example Atomic Learning and Noodletools) that I regularly use for information. When Atomic Learning fails me, I search the net for a tutorial that might have the desired information.
The hardest factor for me is item 3, View Problems as Challenges. When I am really busy, which is most days at school, and a problem comes up I very often view it as a nuisance and time-sapper and just want it to go away. If I would instead pause and think, "I am about to learn something that will make life easier for me and for my students," it would make my day more pleasant. I will strive to face my inevitable technological problelms with a new attitude this year!