Archive for the “Librarian Stuff” Category

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All a Twitter: Want to Try Microblogging? – 7/1/2008 – School Library Journal

Back in March, I blogged about the joys and benefits of Twitter, an instrumental element of my personal learning network.  If you haven’t tried it, then check out this fabulous article about Twitter from Ellyssa Kroski over at School Library Journal.  This article provides an accessible yet thorough introduction and overview for Twitter newbies and veterans alike!

I am always happy to Tweet with fellow librarians and educators!   

http://twitter.com/buffyjhamilton

Twitter / buffyjhamilton

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Here is a hilarious trip back in time to 1947!  LOL!  :-)

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4RGccQFxi3U]

 

 

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The Creekview High School Media Center, “The Unquiet Library”, is proud to release its annual report for 2007-08.  In this report, we highlight what our library program has accomplished in the four roles of the media specialist/media center set forth by the American Association of School Librarians (AASL):

  • Teacher
  • Instructional Partner
  • Information Specialist
  • Program Administrator

This report highlights collaborative planning and lessons taught through the media center, skills taught to students through information literacy mini-lessons, circulation and visitation statistics, database usage statistics, and upcoming program goals for 2008-09.  You may read the report by clicking here, or by visiting the link below. 

 

 

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YA author Kelly Bingham is here in our library as I write!  She is doing poetry writing workshops with our English classes today….what an amazing poet!

Here is my poem from the list writing strategy she showed us today:

“Granny’s Chiffarobe”

Polished gleaming mahogany

Gold patina handles inviting you to open doors to the past
Lingering odor of fluffy golden biscuits mingled with Rose Milk perfume and musty mothballs
Former home to calico cotton dresses and floral aprons
         Your worn Bible and pearl-handled pistol
Bits of quilting cotton left as breadcrumbs to a time now existing only in my memories
The secret door to Narnia I never could find.

Draft 2, posted 12:55

“Granny’s Chiffarobe”

Polished gleaming mahogany

Gold patina handles inviting you to open doors to the past
Lingering odor of fluffy golden biscuits mingled with Rose Milk perfume and musty mothballs
Former home to faded calico cotton dresses and floral aprons
         Your worn Bible and pearl-handled pistol
Ghostly tufts of quilting cotton left as breadcrumbs to a time now existing only in my memories
The secret door to Narnia I never could find.

 

Draft 3, posted 2:10

 

“Granny’s Chiffarobe”

Polished gleaming mahogany

Gold patina handles inviting you to open doors to the past
Lingering odor of fluffy golden buttery biscuits mingled with Rose Milk perfume and musty mothballs
Former home to faded calico cotton dresses and floral aprons
         and your two weapons:  a well-worn Bible and a pearl-handled pistol
Ghostly tufts of quilting cotton left as breadcrumbs leading back to a time now existing only in my memories
The secret door to Narnia I never could find.

 

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Thanks to my Library 2.0 Ning, I came across this amazing upcoming conference sponsored by Mississippi State University Libraries:  http://blogs.library.msstate.edu/web2summit/?page_id=13.

This is a conference dedicated to integrating Web 2.0 tools seamlessly into your library program and harnessing the power of Web 2.0 to improve your service to your patrons.  You can go to http://library.msstate.edu/mslibrarysummit/2007summit/index.html to view last year’s conference agenda as well as hear podcasts from last year’s session.

Here is a preview of this year’s conference focus:

 

http://blogs.library.msstate.edu/web2summit/

Mississippi State University Libraries : Mississippi Library 2.0 Summit

What if we had something like this for Georgia librarians?  What about a Georgia Libraries 2.0 Summit for 2008?  Anyone out there interested in exploring and organizing this venture? 

Buffy Hamilton

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There is an old cliche that says, “Sometimes you can’t see the forest for the trees.”

Over the last year, I have been focused on trees.  Those trees have consisted of web 2.0 tools and how to incorporate those web 2.0 tools into my library program and information literacy instruction.  Those trees have included things like social bookmarking (del.icio.us), RSS, wikis, Google Scholar, Google Books, Pageflakes, podcasts, vodcasts, and blogging (of course!) to name just a few.  The buzzword “Library 2.0″ seems to be on the radar of many school library media specialists these days thanks to pioneers like Joyce Valenza.  As Joyce pointed out in her September 27 blog post, “Shift [has] happened.  Our response is not optional.“   She points out the urgency of librarians recognizing the shifting landscape of our profession,  observing:

I am seeing a huge librarian divide between the 2.0-type library folks and those who are barely 1.0.  I am worried.I am worried about many of the librarians across the state, and in programs like ours in other states.  What happens when the tech coach comes in new to the school?  What happens when the librarian finds him/herself far less trained for integration than the newly trained, newly empowered tech coach?  What happens when a librarian and a library program cannot even demonstrate awareness of the shifts in the information landscape? 

Joyce also included comments from participants in the Classrooms for the Future “Boot Camp”:

My librarian doesn’t get it.  She is only interested in quiet and books.  She doesn’t let the kids work together. She could never create an online pathfinder.  She never told me about Creative Commons or open source. Does she even know about that stuff? My librarian won’t event let the kids use Wikipedia.  Help teachers with 2.0 applications? Are you kidding?  My librarian is afraid of blogs and podcasts and wikis. 

As many of you know, Joyce’s concept of “Web 2.0 Meets Information Fluency” is truly visionary—if you haven’t read it, put this article on your “must read” list right NOW.

In two weeks, I am teaching a class about valid or authoritative resources (which is slated to look at traditional sources, web 2.0 tools, and of course, Wikipedia).  We all know that we want our students and patrons to use authoritative sources.  Heavens knows that I have done my share of hand wringing and worrying (quietly and vocally!) as we have tried to convince our students there is another world of information outside the Googlesphere.   Many of us have expressed concern about students perceiving Wikipedia as an authoritative source and their underdeveloped website evaluation skills.

Lately, though, I have been thinking long and hard about what exactly constitutes an authoritative source in our web 2.0 world.  We all know from experience as researchers and school library students about traditional and long revered authoritative sources:  reference books, scholarly journals, research databases.  We know the power of those resources from firsthand experience. Yet I also know from personal experience in the last year that I have found incredible sources of information and a wealth of knowledge through web 2.0 tools like blogs and del.icio.us. 

As I was rereading Joyce’s article on “Web 2.0 Meets Information Fluency” last week in preparation for the course I’m teaching, I could not help but start thinking again about how web 2.0 intersects with authoritative sources of information and how they are shaping that concept of “authority.” Other events that have prompted me to revisit my concept of what falls under the umbrella of authoritative sources include: 

  • Various blog entries I have read by other librarians and scholars
  • E-conversations with colleagues
  • Podcasts and vodcasts by other librarians and information literacy gurus
  • My own experiences in designing pathfinders for research with our students ( as well as pathfinders I’ve designed for my 11th grades students I teach at our district evening school).

While doing some research on library 2.0 this weekend, I happened upon a blog by newly retired academic librarian Laura Cohen and her entries about social scholarship. What started as a research effort about library 2.0 and additional resources I could share in my class turned into a whole new research endeavor about social scholarship, digital scholarship, and the concept of Authority 3.0. 

In the first blog post I read by Ms. Cohen, this quote from Leigh Dodds, Chief Technology Officer of the scholarly publisher Ingenta, jumped off the screen: 

Web 2.0 makes it easier for anyone to publish information online, and search engines make content more easily findable. But how do users know what information is authoritative? Do they even understand what “authoritative” means? And who defines that something is “authoritative” in the first place?

In scholarly publishing, the peer review process is an indicator of quality. But as content is increasingly mashed-up, syndicated and blogged in many different locations, how do users differentiate between peer reviewed content, and “user generated content”? And is there a natural progression from the creative chaos of Wikipedia, through the “gentle expert oversight” of Citizendium to, ultimately, the closed rigorous approach of double-blind peer review?

You can see Ms. Cohen’s excellent presentation here at Slideshare.

[slideshare id=154749&doc=the-promise-of-authority-in-social-scholarship-1194139645794478-4&w=425]

So what does social scholarship have to do with “Library 2.0″? 

In a word, everything.

Scholar Michael Jensen outlines what he sees as Authority 3.0 that he feels will come to pass in 10-15 years:  a whole new matrix or set of matrices that will influence scholarly authority.  You can read his June 2007 full article here at The Chronicle  of Higher Education, but in short, he feels resources like blogs, wikis, and other web 2.0 tools will change the landscape of authoritative sources.  

Why should we care about these concepts?  What do they have to do with us as school librarians?

First, we have to be able to see this “forest”.  I have been focused on the web 2.0 trees, but it is just in the last few months that I’ve started to see the “forest”—the implications of how these web 2.0 tools ARE shaping the information world and what counts as an authoritative source.  I haven’t even jumped into GALILEO yet to research these ideas, and look at how much knowledge I have already gleaned from blogs of respected scholars and librarians!  Can we not assume the same will be, if not already to some extent, true for our students? 

As Laura Cohen observes in her blog post, “Information Literacy in the Age of Social Scholarship”,

Blogs are also used to discuss matters that never make it into the journal or monographic literature, or even into magazine columns – and therefore their great value. In any case, you’re among the critical mass of individuals who read blogs as an important part of your professional engagement.

What do these web 2.0 tools really mean for our students?  My primary focus has been using these tools to help facilitate information to our students, but now I see my focus must shift to thinking about how these tools will be actual information sources for my students and teaching them how to evaluate them.  Does this mean I abandon my beloved databases and other reliable sources of information, such as books?  No, but I would be putting my head in the sand to ignore the fact that web 2.0 is changing the landscape of scholarship even as I write this blog post. 

In her blog post, “Resistance is Futile“, Laura Cohen discusses an article from Information Week that goes to the very heart of why being Librarian 2.0 is a necessity, not an option:

The article in question is titled “Resistance is Futile Fatal.” Yes, you read that right, strikeout and all. You can read it online. The article states, plainly enough, thatToday’s social networking and digital content sites are shaping IT users’ expectations and experiences for years to come….Businesses must take a longer-term view of these emerging applications and recognize that they’re being driven by forces that are more likely to gain momentum than die out. Rather than fight the inevitable, business technology managers must start exploring ways to leverage the new digital content ecosystem to meet their companies’ objectives.

Substitute “libraries” for “businesses” and this statement sounds familiar to those of us advocating for changes in the information culture of libraries. And did I see the word “must”? Dare to suggest in the library world that these changes are imperative and you need to duck for cover.

She concludes with this observation:

Our profession, as a whole, still hasn’t taken much of this seriously. How routinely do we use social networking to practice our profession? …I’m bringing all this up to make a point: as the information culture changes around us, the pressures for us to make wise use of this culture in our own practice will grow. Is resistance futile, or truly fatal? You tell me.

I have always felt “Library 2.0″ and “Librarian 2.0″ are not passing fads, but instead, concepts that describe how our profession should be and is changing to reflect the world around us and the needs of our users.  While we may struggle with the challenge of keeping up with these dizzying changes, we have to make the effort to do so. 

My research this weekend has truly been a revelation.  While I have heard and read all kinds of articles about web 2.0 and “Library 2.0″, this is the first I’ve really heard of “social scholarship”, “digital scholarship”, and “Authority 3.0″.  Yes, I have been blogging, and yes, I have been using del.icio.us with our students as a pathfinder tool.  Yes, I have experimented with wikis with our students.  I truly thought I was on my way to being a “Librarian 2.0″!

However,  I see now that what I have been doing is not enough.  I share my findings with you to help us all rethink and reenvision the concepts of “authority” and “authoritative research.”  Is it messy?  Yes.  Does the shifting landscape of web 2.0 require us to be open to redefining what we always held to be true?  Yes. 

If you think that perhaps the concept of social scholarship is mere rhetoric, I challenge you to “Google” terms like social scholarship or Authority 3.0.  Once I started digging this weekend, I was astonished at what I found.  As I mentioned earlier, I haven’t even yet had the chance to research these concepts through GALILEO, but stay tuned…I will bookmark anything I find there to http://del.icio.us/theunquietlibrary/social.scholarship.  My  mind is still reeling even as I write this post, and I know I have barely scratched the surface.   Take a look at this person’s “Dissertation 2.0″—a Pageflakes mashup of digital scholarship! Be sure to visit the actual link as my “Kwuot” capture didn’t quite get the “live” version of the screencast).

Laura Cohen goes on to warn us that, “Authoritative bias is messy. It’s not as clear-cut as peer review vs. popular publishing. Its metrics have yet to be figured out. But the neat little world of beware-of-bias is fast disappearing. Information literacy needs to acknowledge this, and train students to watch for the train coming around the bend.”

Cohen also warns us that we must be open to change and to rethink how we define authority:

How do we do this?  Cohen cites these strategies and action steps:

  • Make students aware of the emergence of social scholarship.
  • Teach students about Authority 3.0 – or whatever you want to call it. Alert them to the expanding world of scholarly communication.
  • In conjunction with this, abandon of the notion that there is a clear distinction between traditional peer-reviewed authority and authority derived from social scholarship. To put this another way, introduce the notion that there are emerging metrics of authority that can be derived from social scholarship.
  • Use social tools (blogs, wikis, forums, social bookmarking, etc.) as part of the research process in their courses.
  • Assign readings from authoritative blogs in the research areas students are asked to explore.
  • Practice social scholarship, and show these activities as examples of what’s on the horizon.
  • Incorporate this new material in tutorials on their library’s Web site.

I am not advocating we abandon our traditional sources and ideas about authority and authoritative resources.  Instead, I am asking us all to think about if we as individuals and as  a group are being responsive to the needs of our patrons, needs that are rooted in the world around all of us.  We are already fighting to show our legislators that we make a difference;  in some communities, the challenge to show the validity and importance of today’s librarian spills even into the classrooms as we try to bring our teachers, students, and administrators into the world of Learning 2.0 and Library 2.0.   Here is a golden opportunity to seize the moment to lead and become an even more integral part of learning in our schools.

We cannot wait for change to envelop us.  Now is the time for us to be more proactive than ever and to be part of the change, not a mere spectator.

Buffy Hamilton, Ed.S.
Media Specialist, Creekview High School
http://theunquietlibrary.wordpress.com
http://theunquietlibrarian.wordpress.com  

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One of the great things about being a librarian is the network of colleagues I can turn to whenever I have a question or an information challenge.  I am lucky to work with people both within and outside of my school district who are always willing to share their pearls of widsom with me to help me be a better librarian and constantly refine the services and products we offer our patrons.   I am also grateful to work with my extremely talented fellow media specialist Ruth Fleet and media clerk Tammy Beasley!

We are often too busy to take pause and really express our gratitude, but I would like to give a public word of thanks to these people for their assistance in recent weeks!

  • Debbie and Damon Abilock of NoodleTools—these two always go above and beyond whenever I have a question about citing a particular source or using some feature of NoodleBib.  Over the last two weeks, both Debbie and Damon took extra time and care to investigate some questions I had about citing articles from the Greenwood Daily Life online database.   Damon has never failed to answer any of the barrage of questions I have sent him over the last four years!  :-)
  • Bobby Blount, Director of Technology Services for the Cherokee County School District, for getting us pricing on Flip cameras and Camtasia software.
  • Sandi Adams, Web 2.0 Queen, Cherokee County School District, for her great work as our teacher in our Podcasting 101 class!  Thank you for helping me get my podcast feed set up on iTunes and troubleshooting my MP4 issue!  :-)
  • Dave Falke, GALILEO Support Services, for helping me figure out how to find the persistent link to articles in EBSCOhost Literary Reference Center so that I could bookmark literary criticism articles in our Creekview HS Library del.icio.us account for an upcoming pathfinder I am designing for the week of February 25.
  • Mike Timmons, Kennesaw State University, for being a guest speaker today for 10th grade students.  He spoke about his experiences as a soldier in Vietnam and Operation Desert Storm as part of a collaborative research project that I have been working on with English teachers Susan Lester, Kendra Nayman, and Sheila Robinson at my school.  Thank you to fellow media specialist Vicki Barbre of Cherokee High School for letting us borrow your slide projector!

Ongoing thanks are always in order for:

  • Esther Brenneman, Instructional Technology Facilitator of CCSD Technology Services for taking care of all the CCSD Media Specialists.
  • Dr. Mary Ann Fitzgerald, University of Georgia, for her constant wisdom.

I have no doubt that just like the winners on Oscar night, I am omitting others, and if I am, I apologize, but I wanted to take a few minutes to publicly thank these great colleagues for their generous help!

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wordsearch1.jpg

I just stumbled across a great library/librarian blog, Gargoyles Loose in the Library.  I have been inspired by this post and photo to create something similar although I have no idea where we will put it since we have no wall space and our request to have a bulletin board installed outside the media center was denied.

I am sure we will find a spot somewhere, though!  What a great way to highlight our Peach Books, Printz Award winners/honor books, or any other group of books you may be featuring!  Many thanks to Frances Harris for sharing this clever idea!

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Beloved author Jon Scieszka, who was just named the National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature by the Library of Congress and Children’s Book Council, recently wrote a guest column in The New York Times entitled “Turn Page on Kids’ Book Boredom”.   I think the four major tips he offers are simple yet powerful:

1. Let the reader choose what they like and want to read. Fiction doesn’t have to be everyone’s favorite. I’ll never forget my own son’s reaction reading “Little House on the Prairie” (a favorite of many other readers): “Are they really going to spend this whole chapter making a door?”

2. Expand the definition of “reading” to include nonfiction, humor, graphic novels, magazines, action adventure and, yes, even Web sites. If a child enjoys reading, the focus of his or her reading will naturally broaden. He won’t read only shark books forever.

3. Be a good reading role model. Show your kids what you like to read, what you don’t like to read, how you choose what you read. Let kids see you reading.

4. Avoid demonizing television, computer games, and new technologies. Electronic media may compete for kids’ attention, but we are not going to get kids reading by badmouthing other entertainment. Instead, talk with kids about how reading can make a world in ways that movies and games can’t – and admit that TV and games can do things books can’t.

In a separate interview with School Library Journal, Scieszka also offers this piece of advice to teachers and librarians:

The thing teachers and librarians can do is to really step back and take a look at their required-reading lists: they don’t have to be all fiction; they can include alternative genres—and they should absolutely include some nonfiction.

Humor is another genre that gets slighted. You don’t see that many funny books on required-reading lists. Thank God Holes got the Newbery Medal, because otherwise I think people would have just skipped over it and said, “Ah, Louis Sachar, he writes some funny stuff.” People often think that humorous books aren’t really legitimate. So all of those things—nonfiction, graphic novels, science fiction, humor—should be on teachers’ and librarians’ lists.

I found these articles and comments interesting for two reasons.  First, it speaks to the issue of the general concern in our country about the decline in reading among young people.  More importantly, though, these articles raise the question of “What counts as reading”?

In elementary and middle school, students’ reading choices are often dictated by their “STAR”/Accelerated Reader Level (or something comparable) or a Lexile.  While the intentions behind these scores are typically honorable, I believe the consequences of using these kinds of scores/programs have long term negative effects.  I am always fascinated by high school students’ reflections on their experiences with Accelerated Reader.  Never have I heard one say, “It made me want to be a lifelong reader.”  Instead, I either hear immense relief at being liberated from the restraints of the program and requirements imposed by teachers or I hear students say because there are no longer any external rewards (”prizes”), they see no reason to read.  I have heard this over and over again both as a high school English teacher and a high school librarian.   During the one year I did elementary library, I can’t tell you how often I cringed when a well-meaning teacher would tell a student he or she could not check out a book because it was not the “right” level. 

I was a voracious reader as a child (at home and in school), but I can assure you I might not have been a lifelong reader had AR or something comparable been imposed on me in my early years. 

On the flip side of the K-12 spectrum, I have been a witness and a participant in debates about reading lists for high school students in English courses and what choices should be included on those lists.  Deep rooted traditions, educators’ personal experiences, district mandates, and political agendas drive who and what makes the final cut on these lists.   In recent years, I can’t tell you how many times I wished there was more room in the curriculum for more contemporary literature.   This “wish” was expressed by other media specialists at our recent January district meeting.

Yes, there are many classics worth our students’ time, but these classics often crowd out high quality and engaging modern literature that speaks to our students.  One example would be Nancy Springer’s I am Mordred.  During 2006-07, I elected to use this novel in place of some of the more traditional Arthurian legend novels on our district’s reading list (I will add that Mordred is an approved novel on the district list, but from what I have gathered in talking to other English teachers in our district, it is not one that many people are aware of or may not be perceived as “higher level” reading).  In the three times I read this novel with three different sets of 10th grade students, I was amazed, awed, and humbled by the connections my students made with this text and how it fired up their interest in Arthurian lore.   Not to “dis” other great Arthurian texts, but The Once and Future Kingjust does not speak to many young adults the way that Nancy Springer’s novel does.  Furthermore, one group of students was so perplexed by unanswered questions they had about the novel that we emailed Nancy Springer our “wonderings”.  We were thrilled and delighted to receive a response to *every* question within two days!  Hearing from a real life author was thrilling to my students and validated their thoughtful questions about the novel!  Susan Lester and Kim Blakenship, two fellow English teachers who used this novel with their students, have had the same experiences:  students who may have never enjoyed reading or read a book as an adolescent, totally got into this novel. 

As Scieszka points out, it takes only one great reading experience to hook a child or teenager on reading.   As a librarian, I try to provide a diverse range of books and magazines that meet the reading interests and needs of our students.  One of the most liberating things about being a high school librarian is helping students find a book or author that the student wants to read for fun, not because he or she has to do so!  Nothing is more thrilling to see the delighted surprise and excitement in the eyes of a teenager who connects to a genre or author!

The question, “What counts as reading?” is not a new one.  In my research as a M.Ed. student and Ed.S. student at the University of Georgia, the question was explored in my Language and Literacy Education classes.  Plenty of healthy debate as well as qualitative research studies abound regarding this question, yet the conversation of “What counts as reading?” does not seem to be reaching many veteran teachers or even or new teachers who are spanking brand new out of undergrad teacher education. 

I hope this question and conversations about it will become more commonplace as we try to balance traditional values and beliefs about reading with the “new literacies” that are evolving right before our eyes.  I hope that our libraries will be places where there are many and diverse answers to “What counts as reading?”!

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I actually stumbled on this yesterday while working on a pathfinder (and sent an email of pure excitement to my fellow district media specialists!), but in case you haven’t heard this exciting news, the Library of Congress is now on Flickr!  Check out all the tags on the Library of Congress Flickr account!

What is the project about?  Why would the Library of Congress create a Flickr account?  You can read the full scoop here, but here is what you need to know in a nutshell straight from the Library of Congress on Flickr Project Page; you can also learn more by visiting the Library of Congress on Flickr FAQ Page.  The purpose of creating a LOC Flickr page includes these aims:

  • To share photographs from the Library’s collections with people who enjoy images but might not visit the Library’s own Web site.
  • To gain a better understanding of how social tagging and community input could benefit both the Library and users of the collections.  
  • To gain experience participating in Web communities that are interested in the kinds of materials in the Library’s collections.

Here are two “must read” posts detailing the project and the public’s response to this new project from the Library of Congress Blog:

What does all this mean for us as educators and librarians?  I personally feel this is going to make the rich photo collection so much more accessible to our students and the American public in general.  Talk about an easier mode of searching!  Wow!  This new tool is a fabulous way to tap into these amazing primary sources.  To me, this is another example of the power of Web 2.0 tools to ignite learning and get our students excited about history. 

As always, Joyce Valenza has her thoughts and musings on this exciting development, too—you can read more in her post, “Let’s Tag:  Library of Congress Shares on Flickr“.

What do you think about the Library of Congress @ Flicker?  Share your thoughts!

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