Wednesday, October 17, 2012

#itec12 wrap-up

Cross-posted on the Iowa Teacher Librarians Ning.


#itec2012 was held this week and what a fantastic experience it was!  It began for me on Monday, October 15, with so many good choices of conference sessions to choose from, it was a difficult decision.  Sessions were plentiful and varied, with options for teachers at all grade levels, technology coaches, technology directors, and administrators.  Sessions ran the gamut, from things for the most novice to very advanced, and for both the PC and Apple crowd.  
ITEC

The sessions I attended:

  • Andrew Fenstermaker, “Tech Toolbox, K-2.”  Right away I learned something - I loved how he shared resources he uses in his classroom, with a mindmapping tool called Pearltrees.  I’m going to use this to keep track of options in different curricular areas and building levels.  Here’s his Pearltree - isn’t that cool?!

  • TL Karen Lampe, “Bringing history to life with primary source documents.”  I was already familiar with the Library of Congress resources - although she taught me some tricks there - but really taught me about the resources from the National Archives and how those can be used in classes.  Thanks, Karen!  (Here are her resources.)


  • Stacy Behmer, “Using Chrome in the Classroom.”  This was perfect for me as MNW has implemented 1:1 Chromebooks at the 4-6 grade level.  (Her resources are available here.)


  • Aaron Cook, “Recording better video for educators.”  This was extremely timely for me, and he was flexible enough to change his presentation to address the things the audience needed to know.  He had a pretty intimidating set-up - TV station looking cameras, professional lighting, etc., and yet, I went away more confident in my ability to do video with students.  (Here are his resources.
 
  • Roundtable discussion for technology coaches and integrationists.  The slated presenter was unable to come, so her friend and fellow tech coach stepped in.  This was a great experience to get ideas, ask questions, and network with people who do the same things we do.  That’s what conferences are for!  (Are you going to #iasl13?  You should!)
Round table - get it?

 
  • Layne Henn, “Free your students from the bondage of school boredom!”  A fun way to start a new day at the conference,  He gave us the mantra, “Technology is good, but people are better.”  Technology is just a tool, but it’s a tool that we can use to engage students and to build relationships with them.
 

  • Leigh Zeitz, “Readings, watchings, listenings, and doings:  Making learning meaningful for your Millenial students.”  He stated there are 5 Rs to engage the students born from 1984-2001:  Research-based methods, relevance, rationale, relaxed, and rapport.  Are you doing this in your library?  (His resources can be found on his blog here.)
 
  • Denise Krefting, Lynn McCertney, “Changing teaching with TPCK and Bloom’s.”  More than other session, I wasn’t sure what I was going to learn here.  The ladies did a nice job of making us work, delving into the Iowa Core and doing some backwards design.  

There were two amazing keynote speakers: 
  • Marco Torres, a social studies teacher from California who spoke about how technology can help empower students in their own learning, even in impoverished areas like his own.  He asked questions that really make me think, like, “What does YOUR evidence of love of learning look like? Is it love of learning or love of schooling? “  He took the old paradigm of learning (sorry, didn’t get that in my notes) and turned it own its head:  love of work + curiousity + access + multimedia (multipled by your PLN) = success.  Do I create remarkable moments for my students?  I’m going to work more on that.  

  • David Pogue, technology writer for the New York Times.  He showed us examples of “disruptive tech” - like the retina app (fix your wardrobe missteps before they happen), Twitteround (tells where people are that use Twitter), and Word Lens, an amazing language translation app that I’ve already downloaded.  He was the most dynamic presenter I’ve seen in ages - at the end, he played two songs with original lyrics for us on the piano, “I Write the Code that Makes the World Go Round”  and “Don’t Cry for Me Cupertino.”  Classic!  I should see if anyone has put it on YouTube yet!



Other fun:
  • Lunch was excellent, and it was great to meet and talk with librarians from around the state.  Many were talking about Shannon Miller’s Monday presentation which sounded amazing.  One said, “They could have put her in the biggest room here and every seat would have been taken!”  Thankfully, she and many others have put their presentations on the ITEC website, available here.
  • Checking out the vendors in the exhibit hall.  There was a great variety here and it was fun to catch up with some I hadn’t seen in awhile.  I needed to charge my computer so I didn’t get much swag . . .
  • Looking at the exhibits and purple ribbon winners in the exhibit hall
  • Finding new folks to follow on Twitter
  • Catching up with old friends and making new ones

I can’t wait until next year!

Monday, October 15, 2012

Top Ten Picture Book Authors



This week it's top ten authors in x genre.  I'm actually not a big genre reader.  I'll read any - after I took a Readers Advisory class and had to read a novel a week in different ones, from romance to horror to literary nonfiction (that was an amazing experience) - but I can't pick any genre in which I have ten favorite authors.  Realistic fiction comes the closest, I suppose, but that seems sort of lame.  So picture books it is!

10. Brian Selznick


Normally, I wouldn't call Brian Selznick's The Invention of Hugo Cabret and Wonderstruck picture books, but the Caledecott Committee did, so that's good enough for me.

9. David Wisniewski 


I just discovered Wisniewski's work when I was reshelving picture books.  His work, Golem, for which he won the 1997 Caldecott, is an artistic wonder of paper craft.  It's a little dark for my picture book readers, though, so I added this title, Tough Cookie, to my fall book order.

8. Kevin Henkes


I know that Henkes has done a lot of other more popular work, like Lilly's Purple Plastic Purse and Kitten's First Full Moon, but A Good Day is my favorite.  If there's any book that I'd like to go cut up and make into gift wrap or posters, this is it.  

7. J. Klassen


This is a new favorite author.  This is Not My Hat continues the hat theme after the hit of 2011, I Want My Hat Back.  I feel a preschool storytime theme brewing . . . 

6. Jan Brett


Jan Brett's books are an intricate delight, and truly a must-have for any children's library.  I especially love that Brett has created signs for libraries and distributes these free on her website:  "Print as many as you wish."  How cool is that!  (Smart too - get the librarians on your side, and they'll buy all your books.)

5.  Quentin Blake


Although I'm featuring picture book authors, I have to include Quentin Blake here, just for his illustrations.  I wasn't aware that he's author/illustrator of many books in his own right.  I'll have to check those out.  Blake, of course, illustrated many of Roald Dahl's books, including most famously, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.  Check out his Rights of the Reader poster (with Daniel Pennac) - free for download here.

4.  Chris Van Allsburg


Van Allsburg's portfolio is very deep - Jumanji, The Garden of Abdul Gasazi, and The Mysteries of Harris Burdock.  The one above, though, is my favorite, for its almost ethereal images that evoke the exact emotions of the story.

3. Tad Hills


Truth be told, I've never read one of Tad Hills books - they are always checked out!  But after hearing of his generosity to a great cause - creating an original Christmas card for free - he has to be included on this list.  

2. Kate and Jim McMullan


This is a favorite book of mine to read out loud.  And how could it not be?  Know what I do when you're asleep? / Eat your trash, that's what.  I will say, though, they get to the near top of my list also for the reminder of another of their books popping up in my Amazon feed, with me just seeing the title.  I wondered what sort of book Amazon was suggesting I buy!

1.  David Wiesner


I've already talked about Wiesner, winner of the 2007 Caldecott for Flotsam, and before that, one in 2002.  Although there are other wordless books that have a less intricate of plot and perhaps are better choices for younger students, you have to hand it to Wiesner for boldly going where no one had gone (much) before.  Word is, Wiesner is working on a new book, called Mr. Wuffles.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Top 10 rewind: Top 10 books that make me think




10. Botany of Desire: A Plant's Eye View of the World by Michael Pollan - This made me think, "Genetic engineering is dangerous."  Also how great Johnny Appleseed was - he's not exactly what you think!



9. Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson - This made me think, "Being teenager isn't always great."

 

8. My Life in Dog Years by Gary Paulsen - This made me ask myself, "If I named a handful of events to symbolize my life, what would they be?"  Also, how absolutely great it is to share your life with dogs.


7. Abraham Lincoln, Vampire Hunter by Seth Grahame-Smith - Even if I'm mad at Grahame-Smith for how he ruined this book for the big screen (with that said, I've already pre-ordered the DVD), his book definitely made me think, "What if it's true?"
 

6. The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls - This made me think, "I have no idea what my students' lives are like at home."


5. The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer - This made me think, "Are we already on the road to El Patrón's world?"
 

4. Night by Elie Wiesel - This made me think, "How can man do this to man?"  Also, "How did a generation live through these horrors?"


3. Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America by Barbara Ehrenreich - This made me think, "I really have no idea what life is like for those around me."  And it made me a better tipper.


2. The Other Wes Moore: One Name, Two Fates by Wes Moore (obviously) - This makes me think, "What one decision have I made that changed everything in my life?"


1.  The Giver by Lois Lowry - I refused to finish this book the first time I tried, it made me so angry.  I finished it eventually, and it makes me think, "Be careful what you wish for." 



Monday, October 8, 2012

It's Monday - What are you reading?


It's Monday!  What are you reading?
Sponsored by Sheila at Book Journey
 
I have been busy reading this week - I finished The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry (I was really surprised by the book, in a good but sad way), but most of my reading has been for my Coursera class.  I've suspended reading Tomatoland until my Kindle reappears as it's gone missing in our house!
 
So this week, I'm reading:
 
 
The Odyssey, Fagles translation, chapters 9-16.  I plan to get this done before Sunday so I can actually watch all the videos before the quiz is due.
 
 
The Casual Vacancy by J.K. Rowling - I told my(adult) daughter she can read it when I'm done so I best hurry up on this one.
 
 
Anna Quindlen is one of my favorite authors so I was happy to see this available at the public library.
 
 
I love to read cookbooks!  I have Ree's first book, The Pioneer Woman Cooks:  Recipes from an Accidental Country Girl.  Although I do find the step by very slow step ("Here's an egg," e.g.) a bit annoying, I will say her cookbook gave me the courage to try chicken fried steak, one of my favorite dishes when I go out to a restaurant, and it was fabulous.
 
 
We have a stack of new books to add and this is one I definitely want to read.  I'm going to a couple of meetings in the next two weeks, so when I am here, we're doing technology things with the classes, so no picture book reading for me with the students.  But this one looks great - I don't want Donna to get all the fun!

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Weekly Update

Here's the last to-do list I posted here:

*Book orders at elementary & high school - I did half the order at the elementary, and have the HS one ready to go the next time I'm in the building (the office puts it through).  This week!

*Finish article for newsletter - Check.

*Wednesday teacher exploration meeting - We had that which went pretty well, even if the projector was had a funky TV from 1978 vibe (the display was purple for some inexplicable reason!).  The elementary principal asked me to go to the SAI meeting this week about integrating technology, and we're going to decide how to proceed with these meetings after that.

*Year-end report infographic - Chirp, chirp, chirp (cricket sounds).  That would be a no.

*Create ebook information page on website - I did this - can't link to it because whenever I seem to blog (at night), the site is under maintenance.  TLC - it doesn't need maintenance every stinking night.  FYI.

I did lots of other things too, though, including hosting an anti-bullying assembly on Monday, having two Technology Club and one Book Lover's Club meetings, and hey, catching up on my RSS!  Hmmm, it felt like a lot of other things even if it doesn't sound like it.

Oh!  And I got the greatest email from a bestie who said, "I love teaching but no one I know has a passion for their job like you do. You're awesome."  How cool is that?!



So, what's new on the list?

*Order video camera for Technology Club.  We're making a news program video for Literacy Night next month.  We don't need to start filming yet - still in the planning stages - but need to do so ASAP.

*Meet with Reading Coach about reading incentive program.  My para and I did a fun program last year, Read Around the World, but it was soooooo heavy on our end with work.  We're going to change things up so the record keeping is more on the kids.  Students have been asking us what we're doing this year, and how soon we're starting.  They really liked the competition aspect of it.  I think it's a balance to encourage reading for reading's sake with putting in prizes and such.  Things to consider.

*Make a list of magazines available online.  An English teacher wanted this, and for now, I was able to placate her by giving her a bunch of magazines (like a 3' high pile!) that we got over the summer.  But I would like to expand that a bit with an online presence.

*Portfolio.  I'm in my second year of teaching, and so my portfolio is due in February.  I have my portfolio online right now and expect to expand on that.  I bought myself a domain and hope to put it there, using Iowa Core standards.  

*Keep up with my Coursera course in Greek and Roman Mythology.  I was done a day early last week, but am reverting to my old habits and finished this week's work twenty minutes early.  (And only because I did the quiz before I watched all the videos . . . )


By john.schultz, from Flickr
Used with permission under Creative Commons license


Thursday, October 4, 2012

Things I love Thursday

5.  O, the Oprah Magazine


I've subscribed to a lot of magazines over the years - Martha Stewart Living, Everyday Food, Cook's Illustrated, Cook's Country, Newsweek, Fitness, National Geographic, etc. etc. etc.  But the one that I will always get is this one.  Yes, the clothes are terribly expensive, but it was in this magazine I learned about the store Steve & Barry's, where everything was under $10 (which sadly has gone out of business).  It was in O that I read about Valer Austin, an amazingly rich woman who has changed the world with her philanthropy.  I love that you open the cover, turn one page and then there is the table of contents - rather than having to look through twenty pages of perfume and makeup ads.  I haven't watched Oprah's show or channel in decades, but I do love her magazine.



I just started a class with Coursera in Greek and Roman mythology.  So the first week we had some videos about mythology in general, and now we're reading this classic.  I read it a decade ago when I was a student at Austin Peay State University.  I had a class in World Literature and here I was, a good decade older than my classmates, and we read this and Gilgamesh and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.  Pretty much all of my classmates were too cool for school, having read a lot of these in high school.  (I read A Separate Peace and The Old Man and the Sea when I was in high school - I'm glad it was saved until I could really appreciate it.  Thanks, Mr. Blaine!)  Now I'm reading The Odyssey again with a different translation (Fagles translation, where before I'd read the Fitzgerald one), and it's just as amazing.  I simply cannot wait to get to "Test of the Bow" scene!

3.  Fall leaves

Image by mksfly, used under Creative Commons copyright; Available on Flickr



It's that time of year where the air gets cooler and I'm definitely wishing we'd bought a new dryer this summer.  (I put clothes on the line yesterday, but I think we'll have to go appliance shopping this weekend.)  I hope we have as mild of a winter as we had last year, though!



I came upon this Twitter feed when someone online said Honest Toddler was their form of birth control.  I had to see what that was and my goodness, is it hilarious!  Here are his tweets from a trip to the library:

Not participating in library story time. How will learning animal sounds make me successful.

I'm only here because I heard there would be a snack. So far no sign of refreshments.

How am I supposed to learn on an empty stomach. Librarians don't care about anyone but themselves.

Cow says moo who care WHEN IS THE SNACK

When my brain is this hungry it can't keep the knowledge.

Dog says woof I already knew that what's your point

Cat says meow when are we eating

I hope we didn't pay for story time because it's not worth a red cent and libraries don't keep their food promises.

Snack Time! Lining up with all my best friends I love this place!!

This lady just handed me a box of raisins and a sticker. I can't...I just can't.

This is so hateful. Volcano coming.

Tried to push over a bookshelf and break a chair with my teeth. On our way home.

Ate my sticker.

Enjoy cleaning up my mess library I won't be back because I can't trust you.

1.  My kids


My kids are so. much. fun!  I love hanging out with every one of them.  That's not to mean one or another or all of them don't get on my nerves from time to time - they definitely do!  But if I've done anything in the world, I've raised some pretty cool kids.