Archive for August, 2007

Blog Day 2007 – Read some SC LMS Blogs!


Today is Blog Day 2007, and there is a “meme” of sorts going around. So I must first post the instructions, and then point readers to new blogs. Recently i wrote an article for our SCASL Media Center Messenger about the power of Web 2.0, and asked any LMS’s out there in SC to send me URLs of their blogs. So I will point you to theirs.
BlogDay posting instructions:

  • 1. Find 5 new Blogs that you find interesting
    2. Notify the 5 bloggers that you are recommending them as part of BlogDay 2007
    3. Write a short description of the Blogs and place a link to the recommended Blogs
    4. Post the BlogDay Post (on August 31st) and
    5. Add the BlogDay tag using this link:
    http://technorati.com/tag/BlogDay2007 and a link to the BlogDay web site at http://www.blogday.org
  • Fellow SC library media specialist Brenda Branson at Crowders Creek Middle school is introducing her students using CCMS Blog

    Whack Books, is a blog from LMS April Llibre of Walhalla High School. The opening line at the top of the page says it all, which I will quote here: Welcome to the Walhalla High School Library book blog, Whack Books…as in, “That book is SO whack (good),” OR, “That book is SO whack (bad)!” Join us for discussions about books; tell us what you really think.

    Beck Academy (Greenville County) LMS Andi Fansher’s Library News You Can Use is available as a professional-type blog with a target audience of teachers. She also has a student portal, the Beck Academy Library Media Center.

    LMS Stacy Symborski of D.R. Hill Middle School in Duncan, SC is blogging at Reading Rocks at D.R. Hill Middle.

    LMS Sue Fitzgerald blogs for a target audience of students at her Dorman High School Blog to discuss school related topics.

    So now you have some other adopters of the web 2.0 way, and you can use them as models too. Don’t forget to drop by my blogs as well, TechnoTuesday and @ the CMS Library. I still consider my self a newbie, and my student blog is still in its infancy, not even yet having been introduced to our faculty or students! Be sure to visit and leave a comment. Some say web 2.0 means read/write, so read their blogs and write a COMMENT!! Show them some blog love!

    Technorati Tag: Blog Day 2007

    Come Ride the Wave of Web 2.0 and Information Fluency

    Come Ride the Wave of Web 2.0 and Information Fluency
    Cathy Nelson
    cathyjonelson@gmail.com
    Electronic Article from SCASL’s Media Center Messenger Back to School Issue

    2.0 Changes on the Horizon
    Do you handle change very well? Brace yourselves, fellow LMS’s, for a tidal wave of change is coming. Expert media specialist Alice Yucht paints this picture of information literacy today by asking this thought provoking question:
    Remember when we were all talking about the Information Superhighway? It was the new mode of travel. What an interesting analogy, because a highway has definite entrances and exits and was built to go somewhere specific. Today, however, our kids are learning to swim in the information ocean. There are no entrances and exits clearly defined, with tsunamis in every direction, pools of dangerous sharks, and yet as teachers we are charged with guiding our students through it. So how do we prepare our students and teachers for their swim in the information ocean? What is the implication for us? We continue our instructional practices for information fluency while modeling the appropriate and ethical use of the new web 2.0 tools.

    So what exactly is Web 2.0?
    Googling “Web 2.0” returns at the top of the search an article from Tim O’Reilly titled “What is Web 2.0?” It explains the conceptual genesis of Web 2.0 and defines Web 2.0 technology/applications. Wikipedia tells us that although the term suggests a new version of the World Wide Web, it does not refer to an update to Web technical specifications, but to changes in the ways software developers and end-users use the web as a platform. Popular terms associated with Web 2.0 include blogs, podcasts, digital video sharing, wikis, and social book

    marking, just to name a few. How many of us have heard of Wikipedia, Flickr, MySpace, and other popular Web 2.0 tools? I’m positive most of our kids are familiar with, if not already using many of them. The best explanation I was given at one time was this—The Internet at its birth was 1.0. We were consumers of information from the World Wide Web. Now we are at the next level, called Web 2.0. Web 2.0 means that instead of just using the WWW to find information hopefully from the experts, suddenly we can give back to the Internet. The Internet has become a forum for users, and Web 2.0 adopters are finding that the collaborative nature of these tools can be useful in getting information as well as sharing ideas. Just as we adopted film, then instructional television and videos, and online databases and information resources, so too must we adopt and model the Web 2.0 wave of resources. Joyce Valenza compares the adoption of Web 2.0 tools to the well-known story Stone Soup. Let’s recap the story.

    According to the story, some soldiers come to a village, carrying nothing more than an empty pot. Upon their arrival, the villagers are unwilling to share any of their food stores with the hungry soldiers. The soldiers fill the pot with water, drop a large stone in it, and place it over a fire in the village square. One of the villagers becomes curious and asks what they are doing. The soldiers answer that they are making “stone soup”, which tastes wonderful, although it still needs a little bit of garnish to improve the flavor, which they are missing. The villager doesn’t mind parting with just a little bit to help them out, so it gets added to the soup. Another villager walks by, inquiring about the pot, and the soldiers again mention their stone soup, which hasn’t reached its full potential yet. The villager hands them a little bit of seasoning to help them out. More and more villagers walk by, each adding another ingredient. Finally, a delicious and nourishing pot of soup is enjoyed by all. The stone may or may not be reused in the next soup, and fortunately is not eaten.

    What is the implication of this little story?
    We are all being bombarded with Web 2.0, whether we like it or not. Some are more reluctant than others, but most would agree, change happens, whether you are ready or not. And so too does Web 2.0. So how does that affect the school library media specialist? Are we to drop our online database subscriptions and throw out our collection development plans, now that the “information ocean” of blogs, podcasts, and wikis seem to be the first and most popular resource our students turn to? Of course not! This is not a battle that we can win. So, just like the soldiers in the story mentioned previously, we must adopt and earn buy in. One of the dominant issues involved with student-use (and yes even adult-use) of online material centers on finding information, evaluating it, and using it ethically. Web 2.0 has not changed that. We still are charged with teaching students to evaluate and use information in an ethical manner.

    So how do we embrace this tidal wave called Web 2.0?
    We present ourselves as lifesavers. We embrace the tools, and begin to learn about them. We model their appropriate use. Remember all those pathfinders you spent endless hours creating for appropriate web resources? How many times have you had to return and edit these same static websites? This is a great opportunity to create a wiki pathfinder. Teach your teachers and students to use the wiki, and make the creation a collaborative effort where everyone is adding information. What an awesome way to model a wiki and how it works. Begin reading blogs. Create blogs to serve your purposes. Over and over I am seeing school LMS’s create blogs for state or local book clubs. Blogs can become the 2.0 version of your traditional book clubs and literature circles. Remember the story of the Stone Soup. Just like the soldiers who couldn’t get anyone to give them resources to make a meal, it will be difficult to get some teachers (and even media specialists) to jump in and provide meat to create something. BUT if we model using the tools—just like they modeled making soup with a stone, we may pique interest and stir up buy in. You can be the catalyst for your school using Web 2.0 tools.

    Some of you may very well have noticed that these tools are being modeled through our association (SCASL) at the state level. There is a SCASL Blog, and Martha Alewine, our state department of education liaison for library media programs also maintains a blog. The new tools are being modeled for you even now. Don’t turn your back on the wonderful opportunities these tools will offer. I promise, your students are not. And please don’t fret if you don’t have a comfort level in Web 2.0 yet. Most of us learn by doing, and teacher-librarian guru Joyce Valenza proclaims that she is yet to be 2.0, and hovers right around 1.8. According to her, its okay to still be in beta on this. So now I know its okay to not totally know everything.

    Tools to get started!

    Recipe for beginning the journey into learning about Web 2.0 for Educators
    (Best done if read through an RSS aggregator like Bloglines )

    1 dose daily: Read blogs from the experts in the field daily:

  • Joyce Valenza’s Neverending Search Blog
    David Warlick’s 2cents Worth
    Doug Johnson’s Blue Skunk Blog
  • 1 dose periodically: Read professional blogs and/or listen to podcasts from fellow LMS’s in SC!

  • SCASL Blogs
    Valerie Byrd-Fort’s Blog: “Library Goddess”
    Mary Haddon’s Untitled Professional Blog
    Cathy Nelson’s TechnoTuesday Blog
  • 1 dose periodically: School Library Blogs & Podcasts of interest!

  • @ the Northside Library
    Bookin’ It: DFES Podcast
    Dutchfork Middle School Media Center
    DFES – The Book Blog
  • Blogging Programs for beginners:
    These programs are free and offer you a chance to begin your own blog. They are not listed in any specific order, as all seem to have a simple interface and offer easy access to your own blog. Don’t feel pressured to create one if you are not ready. Instead, enjoy reading others.

  • Google’s Blogger
    WordPress
    Edublogs (by teachers, for teachers)
  • Citations:
    Valenza, Joyce K. “Web 2.0 Meets Information Fluency.” 6 July 2007. http://informationfluency.wikispaces.com

    “Web 2.0.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. 6 July 2007, 18:56 UTC. Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. 6 July 2007 . http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_2.0

    Yucht, Alice. [Podcast] “SIGMS Forum at NECC: Alice Yucht.” 7 July 2007. http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/contents/
    media/SLJ_SIGMSForum_AliceYucht.mp3?nid=3381

    Show your support for DISCUS and other db you use

    Quoted right off LM_Net from Saturday, Joyce Valenza said:

    Please consider joining the Teachers Teaching Teachers webcast on
    Wednesday night, 9 PM Eastern–http://edtechtalk.com/taxonomy/term/58.

    This critical event is the last of three discussions that attempt to share the value of subscription databases with classroom teachers and educational leaders who may not yet have had “the tour” and do not recognize the worth of these resources.

    Please encourage any colleagues—including vendors and people who support your state and regional databases– to attend.

    Read some of the archives here:
    http://teachersteachingteachers.org/?p=130

    My last two posts:
    http://joycevalenza.edublogs.org/2007/08/15/more-on-databases/
    http://joycevalenza.edublogs.org/2007/08/10/teachers-teaching-teachers-webcasts-on-subscription-databases/
    and a couple of my SLJ posts:
    http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/blog/1340000334/post/1250012925.html

    Friends, I am afraid most folks outside the library world don’t get it. Please help me spread THE WORD to the edtech community!

    joyce

    Joyce Kasman Valenza, Ph.D.
    Springfield Township HS Library
    Phone: 215-233-6030 Ext. 2502 Fax: 215-836-5237
    Cell: 215-518-1846
    Library website: http://www.sdst.org/shs/library/
    NeverEndingSearch (School Library Journal)
    http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/blog/1340000334.html
    Personal Blog: http://joycevalenza.edublogs.org
    TeacherLibrarianNetwork http://teacherlibrarian.ning.com

    DISCUS Anyone?


    Recently a live webcast I frequently tune in to (called Teachers Teaching Teachers Wednesdays at 9:00pm) focused on databases used in the schools, and their primary focus was state funded databases. [UPDATE August 11, 2007: Podcast NOW available here.] Our state funded database is called DISCUS, and I really do not know what I would do for database subscriptions if we did not have it. The focus of the conversations, both in the chat and in the skype calls focused on how our students and yes, even us, often first turn to Google for our information need, and the concern that this source is not necessarily a good source at all. The potential is so great for misinformation! If you are from South Carolina and you haven’t been in a while, you probably should check it the redesigned DISCUS site. It has a whole new look and feel. DISCUS is one of the only ways public schools in South Carolina can provide database subscriptions to their students and teachers. Generally a subscription to one of these databases would cost upwards of $1000, and many schools don’t even net that amount for one school year to buy books, let alone subscribe to databases. Be sure the next time you have an opportunity, thank our legislators who continue to support funding so that it is a free resource in our schools.

    The discussion on TTT centered on why teacher-librarians and educators in general can’t seem to win students over on using these databses as a first choice in their research. Some of the reasons stated (Joyce Valenza for one) named the complexity of the interface as one reason. Another issue is the complexity in login/password. Google doesn’t require a password, does it? What are your thoughts??

    Join the next two Wednesdays at 9:00pm to listen live, and perhaps join in the discussion, either through the chat or skype. You never know who is going to be there! Already booked an appointment or have a conflict? No problem, visit the TTT site to listen later straight from the web, or subscribe as a podcast. There is some powerful learning there for you.

    Conference Update

    2008 Conference update!

    Make sure you include this important date on your school calendar! The SCASL 2008 Annual Conference, March 12-14, 2008 at the Columbia Metropolitan Convention Center-Power Up @ your library. There will be a new hotel and a parking garage, so there will be no reason for you not to attend…(and, why not present while you are there? Applications for concurrent sessions and for our Exploritorium can be found at the SCASL website).

    Who will be at conference? 

    *Wonderful, innovative Library Media Specialists for you to learn from

    *Annette Lamb and Larry Johnson

    *Eloise Greenfield (Poet and author of many books including Honey, I Love and Other Poems.)

    *Jaime Adoff (Author of South Carolina Young Adult Book Award nominee, Names Will Never Hurt Me) 

    *Alan Katz (Author of Take Me Out of the Bathtub and Other Silly Dilly Songs) 

    And even more guests to be announced soon!

    Remember, only those who pay their dues by October 1 will qualify for member rates for conference!

    Valerie
     
    Technorati Tags:


    SCASL's Flickr Photos

    DSC02266

    DSC02268

    DSC02273

    DSC02267

    DSC02269

    DSC02265

    More Photos

     

    August 2007
    M T W T F S S
    « Jul   Sep »
     12345
    6789101112
    13141516171819
    20212223242526
    2728293031  

    Blog Stats

    • 13,634 hits