Monday, August 31, 2009

The New Literacy

If you've wondered if literacy is going to the dogs with all the new technology being used, then http://www.wired.com/techbiz/people/magazine/17-09/st_thompson

"As the school year begins,
be ready to hear pundits fretting once again about how kids today can't write—and technology is to blame. Facebook encourages narcissistic blabbering, video and PowerPoint have replaced carefully crafted essays, and texting has dehydrated language into "bleak, bald, sad shorthand" (as University College of London English professor John Sutherland has moaned). An age of illiteracy is at hand, right?

Andrea Lunsford isn't so sure. Lunsford is a professor of writing and rhetoric at Stanford University, where she has organized a mammoth project called the Stanford Study of Writing to scrutinize college students' prose. From 2001 to 2006, she collected 14,672 student writing samples—everything from in-class assignments, formal essays, and journal entries to emails, blog posts, and chat sessions. Her conclusions are stirring.

"I think we're in the midst of a literacy revolution the likes of which we haven't seen since Greek civilization," she says. For Lunsford, technology isn't killing our ability to write. It's reviving it—and pushing our literacy in bold new directions."....

Storylines Northland 2009

What an amazing day it was on Saturday at the Centre for our Northland Storylines Family Day - around 1500 to 2000 people were there, all taking part in reading and writing activities, art and craft, stories and face-painting, magic and music, dancing and food, comics and competitions... So many people were involved in various aspects - planning, setting up, packing up, helping on the day, dressing up, and local businesses supporting or taking part too....
There are too many names to mention, so this is just one avenue to say a huge thank you to everyone for being part of such a wonderful occasion for children.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Hello from WIS Library

Thanks for inviting me to your blog. I am going to work on one of my own over the next week or so. I am doing a "Speed Booking" with classes next week. Will let you know how it goes.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Library displays and events calendar

From the school library listserv August 2009 :
For a new display about survival I chose the heading: 'Hey, I’m alive’. Magazine articles from the Vertical File with shouting headlines about ship wrecks, plane crashes and alligator attacks...
The Calendar of Events is a great success according to your reactions.... If you have updates you like to see on the calendar please mail me the correct date and I will add it. Cheers, Anita Vandenberghe, Librarian, St Kentigern College. vandenberghea@skc.school.nz.

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Joyce Valenza, web 2.0 and the unquiet library

Here is a link to a Joyce Valenza blog (on SLJ) post
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/blog/1340000334/post/1090041909.html

Joyce wants to recognize "the value of forward-thinking virtual library service and instruction. If I had my way, we’d formally recognize professionals who get it---who know how to identify and grab the tools now available for information and communication, who know how to use these emerging tools in ways that engage young people and promote learning and reading, in ways that model effective communication strategies for today's world. An award for those professionals who present themselves and their libraries in attractive, interactive, professional, and usable ways. "

Joyce opens the door of the of the Unquiet Library (also known as Creekview High School Media Center in Georgia), which features a dynamic blog, and lots of widgets--including Browse Inside invitations to Printz Award titles and the library's Del.icio.us bookmarks; an option to subscribe to library Twitter tweets or the feed to the library blog, scenes of library life via Flickr, other updated slide shows (stored on Slideshare) including the Georgia Peach Award for books tor teens, and a tag cloud index. ...

This is a school library which is wholeheartedly embracing web 2.0 opportunities - make a virtual visit and be inspired !

Charlotte Huck

"We don't achieve literacy and then give children literature; we achieve literacy through literature."
Charlotte Huck, author and children’s literature expert.

Reading promotion

I've mentioned the Read Kiddo Read website before and I've put a link on the right hand side of this blog... It has lots of great book recommendations and advice on getting children reading. I've signed up for their monthly e-newsletter - http://tiny.cc/Readkiddoreadnewsletter

I've also mentioned Judy Freeman, a friend of Roxie Munro - here she is writing on the Read Kiddo Read site with 12 TRIED AND TRUE WAYS TO GET YOUR KIDDOS READING - good suggestions - maybe useful for sharing with teachers and parents ? It can be downloaded as a pdf for printing...

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

School Library Procedures Manual

A school asked me the other day about setting up a Procedures Manual...
Here is a link to the information guide on the National Library website to creating Library Procedures Manuals
http://www.natlib.govt.nz/catalogues/library-documents/information-guide-creating-a-management-and-procedures-manual
and here is a link to a list of possible headings which could provide a starting point for gathering and sorting existing material and identifying areas for development...
http://docs.google.com/View?id=dg36bfgc_254c9jmjtg7

NZ Science website

"The Science Learning Hub provides teaching resources for school years 5 -10. Our teaching resources explore the latest research in science and technology in New Zealand adn are closely linked to the science curriculum. The Science Learning Hub is developed by educators and teachers in collaboration with New Zealand scientists. The project is funded by the Ministry of Research, Science and Technology and managed by the University of Waikato."
http://www.sciencelearn.org.nz/

Roald Dahl Day - September 13

From the TKI English online newsletter :
"If you and/or your students are Roald Dahl fans, you might like to celebrate Roald Dahl day. The Roald Dahl Day website has lots of great ideas of things you can do with your class (or entire school!) and includes interesting lesson ideas. The material on this site is linked to the UK curriculum so you will need to remember to adapt the activities to link into the New Zealand Curriculum and the learning goals for your students."

Poem : To read

http://www.slate.com/id/2224389/
The Slate Magazine online has a poem a week, in text and read by the author, and this one is To Read by Michael McFee, likening a learner reader to a learner driver...

Monday, August 17, 2009

Storylines newsletter

Members of Storylines get a useful quarterly newsletter with news of what is going on in the children's literature scene - events, awards, new resources etc along with a book list - this term's booklist features "concept books" and graphic novels - for under 10s, for 10 - 12 year olds, and for teens and adults. Go to the website for membership details - individual membership = $40, school membership = $50. http://www.storylines.org.nz/

International School Library Month and World Teachers' Day

1 October 2009 – 31 October 2009 is International School Library Month.
The theme of the 2009 International School Library Month (previously International School Library Day) will be School Libraries: The Big Picture. The event offers school librarians around the world an opportunity to share with each other others in education and in school communities.
More information can be found at http://www.iasl-online.org/events/islm/

And the 30th October 2009 is World Teachers' Day...
World Teachers' Day provides an opportunity for the public to recognise the role of teachers within the community. Celebrated in over 100 countries, World Teachers' Day acknowledges teachers' efforts in changing and challenging environments. The event is celebrated on the last Friday of October in Australia, but in many other countries takes place on the the first Friday of October. See the http://tiny.cc/Unescoworldteachersday for more information.

From the UNESCO site :

Why is literacy important?
Literacy is a human right, a tool of personal empowerment and a means for social and human development. Educational opportunities depend on literacy.
Literacy is at the heart of basic education for all, and essential for eradicating poverty, reducing child mortality, curbing population growth, achieving gender equality and ensuring sustainable development, peace and democracy. There are good reasons why literacy is at the core of Education for All (EFA). A good quality basic education equips pupils with literacy skills for life and further learning; literate parents are more likely to send their children to school; literate people are better able to access continuing educational opportunities; and literate societies are better geared to meet pressing development .

The UNESCO/IFLA School Library Manifesto http://www.unesco.org/webworld/libraries/manifestos/school_manifesto.html

Riches on the TKI website

I was looking at English online on the TKI website today - what a treasure trove for teachers !
Do you subscribe to the monthly newsletters ?
http://englishonline.tki.org.nz/Community-Newsletters/August-2009

In this latest newsletter there was a link to this NZCER blog called Shifting to 21st Century literacy in education and thinking http://www.shiftingthinking.org/?cat=3 with an interesting post about using a sophisticated picture book - Cinderella : an art-deco love story by Lyn and David Roberts, to explore character, visual literacy, moral ambiguity...
Malice is in the eye of the beholder: 'We all know the story of Cinderella, the classic fairy tale of rags to riches. But I’m sure most of us have never stopped to think about why this story continues to be read to children around the world, the complexity of the characters, and the social messages that you can extrapolate from it....'

There is a new site on TKI dedicated to raising boys' achievement through professional development for their teachers. It includes current research and school stories that explore ways to build on the evidence of what works for boys. Here is the link http://success-for-boys.tki.org.nz/professional_learning Have a look at Botany Downs Secondary College "school story"...

Sunday, August 16, 2009

Why libraries matter

Here is a link to an article "Why Academic Libraries Matter" by Barbara Fister, Librarian at Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, MN from the Library Journal, 8/13/2009
http://www.libraryjournal.com/article/CA6675616.html

She ends the article with "...in a world where information is abundant, the library—your library—also has symbolic meaning that transcends its day-to-day uses. That symbolic meaning matters because in world of abundant information, the library's role in our culture goes far beyond mere information. For those drowning in information, the library is land, a place where you can clamber up, catch your breath, gather your wits—and drink deeply."

Within the body of the article are various interesting links eg :
Steven Bell's blog posting about the three values libraries provide - totality, meaning and relationships... http://dbl.lishost.org/blog/2009/05/08/three-ways-libraries-can-be-different/
the Darien Statements outlining the purpose of the library, the role of the library and librarians... http://www.blyberg.net/2009/04/03/the-darien-statements-on-the-library-and-librarians/
Wayne Wiegand's recommendation that we focus not on how users can be made to fit into our library but on how the library fits into the life of the user http://tiny.cc/wiegand - he goes beyond information role of libraries and looks at reading and place...

List of celebration days

This message was posted on the school library list serve :

I have been on the lookout for a list of National / International days too, so I can get a 'heads up " for displays etc This is one link that has several sites that may behelpful : http://tiny.cc/celebrationdays
Joanna Broadbent, Librarian, St Mary's School, Blenheim.

The link takes you to the Office for the Community and Voluntary Sector, part of the Ministry of Social Development. Also the NZ review journal Around the bookshops publishes a good list each year called Happenings - another good reason to subscribe to this useful little resource - go to http://www.marigold.co.nz/

Friday, August 14, 2009

Hi Jeannie - thanks for the great meeting yesterday. Do you think anyone will mind if I try to publish the photos I took last night? I forgot to get

Dads and stories - Booksellers competition

Carol from Mangonui School invited dads to her Year 6 class to read stories and it was a great success for all involved - really special for the kids and for the dads too no doubt... What a great idea.
In relation to that initiative, here is a new competition announced from Booksellers NZ... (Maybe an idea for an activity for kids to do in school for a Father's Day card, if not actually entering the competition ? )
Father's day in NZ is the first Sunday in September - this year the 6th September.

"DAD, CAN YOU READ ME A STORY?" - What did your dad read to you?
From much-loved bedtime stories, to well-thumbed chapter books, over the years dads around the country have been patiently reading stories to their kids - over and over again! He has wholeheartedly re-enacted Red Riding Hood's high-pitched "What big teeth you have!", woofed along joyfully with Hairy Maclary, and has done his best to get his tongue around 'Green Eggs and Ham' after a beer and a long day at work. In celebration of Father's Day, we want you, your customers, workmates, neighbours, family & friends to tell us about a favourite book you remember reading with your dad.

WIN! 3 x $100 Book Tokens prizes. 3 winners will be selected and each receive a $100 Book Token (in time for Father's Day) 20 Award-winning books to be given away All entries will go into the draw to win one of 20 award-winning New Zealand books from the 2009 Montana New Zealand Book Awards (books will be randomly selected - could be a glossy coffee table book or a gripping fiction read). All entries will be published on the Booksellers NZ website, and the 3 winning stories will be selected and published in the Capital Times in Wellington on Wednesday 2 September - in celebration of books and dads!
GET INVOLVED! You and your customers can all enter, by emailing us at ad@booksellers.co.nz by Wednesday 26 August with your dad-book memory (50 words or less). Please include your name, age and postal address in the email. Winning stories may also be distributed to media by Booksellers NZ for Father's Day.
Anna Hutchison, Promotions Coordinator, Booksellers New Zealand
Phone 04 478 5511 Fax 04 478 5519

Thursday, August 13, 2009

SCIS Connections newsletter

Don't forget to check out the free SCIS Connections newsletter published each term - (you don't have to log in to SCIS to get it). This term's issue features RFID (Radio Frequency Identification System), a Library trainees scheme, an article Seven skills students desperately need, and reviews of websites which have been catalogued on SCIS - if you subscribe to SCIS then do make the most of the websites to enrich your catalogue and enhance search results.
http://www2.curriculum.edu.au/scis/connections/four_functions_in_one_label.html

Poetry

A website www.poemsfor.org where you can download free "posters" of poems - my favourite ones were two in the "waiting for" poems collection - The Waiting Kit by Fleur Adcock, and Waiting Room by U. A. Fanthorpe (my mother's English teacher at Cheltenham Ladies College in the 1950's !).

Teacher resources

Some NLNZ advisers in Auckland have put together a handout on managing teacher resources - let me know if you would like a copy jeannie.skinner@natlib.govt.nz

Wolfram Alpha / mathematical computational engine

Here is a link http://www.wolframalpha.com/ to a "computational knowledge engine", shared by Catherine Lee from EGGS on the school library list serv who said "A very useful mathematical computational engine that can also be good for trivia, eg what phase the moon was in when you were born, & it gives the right answer for ”what is the meaning of life” LOL."

From the site : WolframAlpha's long-term goal is to make all systematic knowledge immediately computable and accessible to everyone. We aim to collect and curate all objective data; implement every known model, method, and algorithm; and make it possible to compute whatever can be computed about anything. Our goal is to build on the achievements of science and other systematizations of knowledge to provide a single source that can be relied on by everyone for definitive answers to factual queries.

Tell maths teachers about it in secondary schools, and for fun, look up your birthdate !

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

NZ Book Council DVDs on writing

Following on from this afternoon's Kaitaia network meeting - actually I had done a post already mentioning the new newsletter for schools available on the NZ Book Council website - http://www.bookcouncil.org.nz/Education/Programme_Overview/Information.htm
and the Wordspace DVDs which I showed you...

The DVDs were created as a resource for high schools, featuring leading New Zealand writers answering students’ questions about writing. Covering a range of writing genres, the 14 DVDs record video-conferenced discussions between writers and secondary school students around the country. They have proved to be a popular and valuable learning tool for schools, linking with many aspects of the New Zealand writing curriculum. Here is the link www.bookcouncil.org.nz/Shop to the Shop - you can get some great author posters there too...
The DVDs are $15 each or $60 for set of 5 DVDs from 2007 (includes Fiction, Journalism, Poetry, Reviewing and Creative Non-fiction, and Scripting and Playwriting).

Sophisticated picture books list

A teacher asked me for some recommended authors / titles for developing the school library collection of sophisticated picture books - here are a couple of resources :
a link to University of Waikato Library's collection of sophisticated picture books "suitable for 8 - 12 year olds" http://www.waikato.ac.nz/library/resources/edu/booklst_sophis.shtml
and a link to a list from National Library http://tiny.cc/Sophisticatedpicturebookslist

SLANZA wiki for members

Here is another good reason to be a member of SLANZA - if not already, then go to www.slanza.org.nz for a membership form - $50 pa.
SLANZA has launched a wiki - members will have received an invitation to join. This is a place for members to share links, resources, book suggestions, etc, like on the list serv but archived and searchable...

How to join: You will receive a message directly from Wetpaint with your invitation to join the Wiki. Click the "Accept Invitation" button to go directly to the wiki and sign up. Please fill in a few details on your profile, name, school and region particularly. Please make sure that your user-name is recognisable so that people know who you are, some kind of variation of your name would be good, like LJones, rather than a made up user-name like librarygeek, then explore the site via the sidebar headings. Currently the wiki is a private site. It is possible if the members wish, that this may change, and it could become open to view for everyone if the members wish that to happen, and this can be discussed at the AGM. While the Wiki is in its infancy however, we are keeping it for SLANZA members only.

The SLANZA Wiki Moderators and Administrators

Storylines Notable Books List 2009

Storylines Children's Literature Charitable Trust announced their list of Notable books for 2009 (books published in 2008). Go here for the link http://www.storylines.org.nz/awards.asp?pid=147

ASB Wordbank Competition - NZ Book Month

New Zealand Book Month is our national book celebration, making heroes of all our great New Zealand books. We believe the words in our books are some of the most important in the country and, with ASB, we want Kiwi kids to prove it. This competition works fantastically with the Key Competencies outlined by the Ministry of Education - it is active, relevant, empowering and the national prizes make it very real!

Kids just pick a Kiwi book, write a letter to the author, and deposit it in a Wordbank at any ASB branch.
All children at Primary and Intermediate school are eligible to enter, and we encourage class entries (Level 1 = 5 to 7 year olds, Level 2 = 8 to 10 year olds, Level 3 = 11 to 13 year olds). The competition runs from 1st October to 30th October 2009 so it can be started in Term 3 ready for drop off after school holidays, or even be a Term 4 project. Best of all it's really easy! Entry forms will be available online from mid Sept or at the ASB bank branches from 1st October.

Key Competencies: In choosing a Kiwi fiction or non-fiction book, and telling us what they loved, connected to, what it made them think etc. we're looking to encourage application of learning and independent creativity - making students really think about books they have read. They might have read the book at home or at an after-school group, or within other authentic contexts. We anticipate the competition will encourage thought and discussion with others about what or why they loved about that particular book and author above another. And of course, the prize packs will reward and empower students' involvement, both as a group - towards the community prize - and as individuals towards prizes for best letters. We do believe our Kiwi books are inspirational, they tell our stories, in our voice, and take us to new places where we can meet fantastic characters and have amazing adventures. So we'd love to hear from your kids. There are lots of prizes!

Community prizes: The five ASB branches with the most letters deposited in their Wordbanks (worked out by formula so even small communities can win), can nominate a school for a visit by a great Kiwi author and a prize pack for the school library.
Individual prizes: The best individual letters win a trip to Auckland for a behind-the-scenes tour (complete with elephants!) at the Auckland Zoo, and a TVNZ experience. There are prizes for runners up too.

Get your kids involved! It's a perfect time to start them reading Kiwi authors and then writing their letter for the Wordbank competition. Entries open on the 1st of October and close at 4pm on the 30th of October. Entry forms, flyers and further information can be downloaded at http://www.nzbookmonth.co.nz/ or http://www.asb.co.nz/

Crissi Blair, Youth coordinator, NZ Book Month
Email nzbm.wordbank@gmail.com Web http://www.nzbookmonth.co.nz/

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Exploring Google

I've discovered / been shown some new aspects of Google which you may like to explore if you haven't already...

Google Kids and Teens Directory : open Google, on the top left corner there is a list Images Maps News etc Go along to More, in the drop down tab there is Even more - then go to Directory and then to Kids and Teen Directory. Make this a Favourite eg in your Links toolbar (ask me if you don't know about this) and then it is a quick click to get to for your students... This directory search will prioritise sites aimed at kids and teens...

Google Wonderwheel : open Google, do a search of a topic and on the top left click on Show options - check out the Wonderwheel and the Timeline...

Google squared : go to http://www.google.com/squared and type in a search eg cloud types, or planets - see what works - and doesn't work !

And check out Google Docs which is a free web-based word processor and spreadsheet, which allow you share and collaborate online.

Northland Storylines 2009

The Northland Storylines Festival family fun day is a celebration of books and reading for children and their families, on Saturday 29th August from 10am to 2pm at The Centre, Cobham Road, Kerikeri. Free, and all welcome...

Listen to wonderful stories with guest Storyteller Lesley Dowding, and author Kyle Mewburn and “Auntie Elsie” from Kiss, kiss, yuck, yuck, and other guest readers all through the day…
Meet authors and illustrators – writers Maria Gill and Kyle Mewburn, illustrator Bruce Potter and comics artist Dylan Horrocks plus local authors to meet and talk to about theirs and children's work…
Explore the science of world around us – volcanoes, birds and oceans…and take part in various writing, art and craft activities for all ages – torn paper collage, bookmaking, mazes, quizzes, postcards, bookmarks, origami…
Be entertained by Mike the Magician, making balloon animals, exploding paper and other tricks
Learn some Maori games – mu torere, whai, and other activities with Harko Brown
Celebrate The Very Hungry Caterpillar’s 40th birthday with cake, candles, song and stories…
Dress up in fancy dress as your favourite book character and take part in the parade – spot prizes
Enter the competitions – two age categories 4 – 8 and 9 – 12 years old, lots of prizes – writing, illustration, comic strip and colouring competitions…
Meet some of your favourite book characters – Mrs Wishy-Washy, Spot, Wally (where?!), Clifford, Peter Rabbit, Geronimo Stilton, Lucky, Winnie the Pooh, and the Cat in the Hat
Take part in the launch of Kyle Mewburn’s brand new book Old huhu
Have your face painted !
Buy a book from the Take Note bookshop and meet the author at a signing session
Enjoy the food and music in the Courtyard – popcorn, sausage sizzle and refreshments…

It will be a fun time for families to share the delight of books and reading - please do come along and take part !
Contact Jeannie at jeannie.skinner@natlib.govt.nz if any questions or if you would like to help in any way on the day…

Author / illustrator websites in catalogue records

There are so many wonderful resources and insights you can gather from visiting authors or illustrator's websites - nowadays it is easy to add those links to the relevant catalogue record- eg in the www field or the notes field... Then when students bring up a record there would be the link to more information... Also, non-fiction books often have a list of reputable sites on the topic which could be added... What do you think ?


Kate Di Camillo on writing

Here is Kate Di Camillo's website to explore
http://www.katedicamillo.com/
There is a great story by her on learning to be a writer - and some advice to would-be writers
http://www.katedicamillo.com/onwrit.html
and some poetic entries in her journal each month on love, luck and starfish...
http://www.katedicamillo.com/journal/j09-05.html

David Small and Sarah Stewart

I enjoy the books produced by husband and wife team of David Small and Sarah Stewart. The Library is one of my favourites, also The Gardener, and The Journey, The Friend...
Sarah writes the words, David illustrates them.

David has just produced an autobiographical graphic novel - Stitches - and it is very different in scope and style from his gentle, humorous, lighthearted illustrations for the titles above. I haven't seen it yet but it sounds bleak and powerful - Stitches is being compared to Maus, the graphic novel which won the Pulitzer prize... See this link for a review on Booklist -
http://www.booklistonline.com/default.aspx?page=show_product&pid=3604681
which concludes with the sentence "If there’s any fight left in the argument that comics aren’t legitimate literature, this is just the thing to enlighten the naysayers." Ian Chipman.
Here is another review... http://bookends.booklistonline.com/2009/07/31/stitches-by-david-small/

David's own website is at http://davidsmallbooks.com/ and it includes some background to Sarah, with a picture of her (she looks just like characters in their books) and her amazing garden http://davidsmallbooks.com/sarah_bio.php

From here http://www.pippinproperties.com/authill/stewart/ you can get a wonderful idea of the sort of person Sarah is... She is an author who early developed a love for quiet, orderly places. The former Latin and philosophy student loved libraries and her grandmother's garden as a child, two loves that have carried over into the children's books she's written in collaboration with her husband, David. She has five gardens and an orchard in which she works daily from May until October. "Then much of the late fall and winter is spent in my library, daydreaming and reading and writing, on the second floor of our home. Like a small animal in hibernation, I make a warm nest in the old wing chair with my grandmother's quilt and the lamp and my beloved books. It is paradise."
Sarah talks about three things libraries and gardens have in common - quiet, order, and hope.

Writer's rooms

This link to the UK Guardian newspaper shows portraits of the spaces where authors create
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/series/writersrooms

Voicethread

An article from Book Links magazine, July 2009.
Thinking Outside the Book: Responding to Literature with VoiceThread
By Jessica Mangelson and Jill Castek
VoiceThread is a free interactive online tool that allows students to create products and share them widely. These collaborative multimedia slide shows integrate images, documents, and sound files. Commenting on VoiceThreads is an essential part of the process. Through the interplay of multimedia and commentary, VoiceThread becomes an interactive environment that encourages literary response. Participants can post from anywhere, at any time, making it easy to involve groups in different time zones, or even different countries, in a single conversation. Viewers simply click on “Record” or “Type” to add a comment that appears in the border outside the VoiceThread, and the response becomes a part of the overall project.

Wordia - video definitions of words

Here is a site, www.wordia.com where people can upload a video definition / description of a word that they are passionate about - I enjoyed Quentin Blake's talk about "illustration" complete with his deft, quirky illustrations as part of it...

UK Children's Laureate's choices

From the Achuka blog here is a piece about "the best children's books for all time" as chosen by the 5 former Children's Laureates - Quentin Blake, Anne Fine, Michael Morpurgo, Jacqueline Wilson and Michael Rosen ( the new Laureate for 2009 - 2011 is Anthony Browne).
http://www.achuka.co.uk/achockablog/archives/2009/04/on-the-laureate.html

The 1930s emerges as the vintage decade for children's fiction, with seven titles making it onto the list, including Sword in the Stone by T.H. White, Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild and P.L. Travers's classic, Mary Poppins. The most popular authors with two selections apiece are E. Nesbit for Five Children and It (chosen by Quentin Blake) and The Railway Children (chosen by Jacqueline Wilson); and Robert Louis Stevenson for A Child's Garden of Verses (chosen by Fine), and Treasure Island (chosen by Michael Morpurgo).

Book shelving online game

Here is a link to an online game to practice sorting books - might be fun for your student librarians...
http://users.ece.utexas.edu/~valmstrum/s2s/utopia/library4/src/library4.html

Stephen's Lighthouse blog

Check out this great blog http://stephenslighthouse.sirsi.com/

One of the posts links to a list of good blogs for teachers..
100 Most Inspiring and Innovative Blogs for Educators by L. Fabry
"This list attempts to cover those blogs where teachers share innovations, strategies, trends, insights and emerging technologies. It's a fun list to start off and its organized into four parts: general teaching blogs, specialty subject blogs, best podcasts for teachers, best video blogs for teachers.
Being a teacher is a difficult and often thankless job. Between lesson plans, unengaged students, and new emerging technologies, teachers need help now more than ever. By visiting these 100 blogs, they will find answers to all their questions, as well as valuable teaching resources. http://www.universityreviewsonline.com/2005/10/100-most-inspiring-and-innovative-blogs-for-educators.html "

Amongst the wealth of information in Stephen's Lighthouse blog, I came across some fun posts - eg a window blind made of old catalogue cards, and a discussion on what do you call a group of librarians (ie the collective noun) - a gaggle, collection, catalogue, shush, volume, stack, shelf, answer, ask… ?


SOURCE: Stephen's Lighthouse (Stephen Abram), 15 May 2009

Ideapaint - walls into whiteboards

IdeaPaint is a single coat roller applied paint that turns any smooth surface into a dry-erase writing surface. It can be used to transform office walls, desks, and hallways into collaborative spaces. With IdeaPaint, work environments become areas of increased functionality that evoke creativity and impromptu teamwork and cultivate innovation by providing a dry-erase writing surface without seams, borders, or restrictions. IdeaPaint can be used in a myriad of ways including in open work areas, conference rooms, offices, hallways, and even on columns." http://www.redferret.net/?p=14038

SOURCE: Stephen's Lighthouse (Stephen Abram), 1 May 2009

Ideapaint - walls into whiteboards

IdeaPaint is a single coat roller applied paint that turns any smooth surface into a dry-erase writing surface. It can be used to transform office walls, desks, and hallways into collaborative spaces. With IdeaPaint, work environments become areas of increased functionality that evoke creativity and impromptu teamwork and cultivate innovation by providing a dry-erase writing surface without seams, borders, or restrictions. IdeaPaint can be used in a myriad of ways including in open work areas, conference rooms, offices, hallways, and even on columns." http://www.redferret.net/?p=14038
SOURCE: Stephen's Lighthouse (Stephen Abram), 1 May 2009

Speedbooking - book promotion

Here is a post from the list serv from Clenda Wockner, Director of Library & Information Services, Waimea Collegewr@waimea.school.nz

"Found an idea on OZTL-Net a while ago and decided to give it a go. It is a heap of fun and has resulted in great borrowing. We have offered the option to our English teachers with their reading classes and so far have had 6 classes of Year 9 and 10 students participate – all successfully. It’s called speed booking – a bit like speed dating with books. We put out about 25-30 titles on each of the tables in the library (we have 8). The books are a combination of fiction, non-fiction and true story type titles. The class comes in and sit 4 to a table. They have a look at the books on the table and after about 3 minutes we ring a bell. They all then move to the next table. We allow them to carry one book with them to the next table which they can then continue to carry or change for another book. They don’t have to carry books on of course. We usually go through about 4 or 5 table changes and then they can borrow a book they have found or sit and read or continue to peruse the tables.
We have found that the kids enjoy the experience. The magazine borrowing in those sessions has been hugely lower than usual. I have no problem with magazines but it’s good to see kids finding a book! I think it’s having books in front of them that they may not normally pull off the shelf. They can see a much wider variety of books in one session than if they are trawling the shelves too. Now all we have to do is find a way for the left over books to find their own way back to the shelves! Having said that, I firmly believe that it is worth the work. It is interesting to put out books that have not moved off the shelf and have them borrowed. "

There have been many good follow-up posts about how effective this technique is, at all ages... This sort of information is a good reason to join the school library list serv if you haven't already ! See the post in this blog for directions, or go to the SLANZA website www.slanza.org.nz

Aotearoa People's Network (APN)

The Aotearoa People’s Network http://www.peoplesnetworknz.org.nz/ is about providing free access to broadband internet services in public libraries so that all New Zealanders can benefit from creating, accessing and experiencing digital content. It is funded by the Community Partnership Fund of the New Zealand’s Digital Strategy and by other government funding through the National Library of New Zealand. Phase 3 now being implemented includes the Far North District Council Libraries.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Infoblitz homework website for primary school children

A post from the school library list serv from Wendy Ballard, librarian at Greenpark Primary School in Tauranga.

"Last year I received an NZEI Support Staff Scholarship to create a Website of Online Resources for NZ Primary Schools. Some Intermediates and Group Special Education have also expressed an interest. I'm excited to announce that it is now live on
www.infoblitz.co.nz

Please check it out - it can be used free from schools, home or any Internet connection. This website directory has been created with Kiwi children in mind and is safe, manageable, educational, high-interest, has visual appeal and showcases NZ. It can be used to research class & homework curriculum topics as well as children's hobbies and interests. There is a special link for Teachers and one for Librarians. I welcome suggestions & feedback. If you like the website please bookmark it & spread the word by sharing it with students, parents, teachers and librarians. I've tried very hard to exclude direct weblinks to sites with non-educational games, arcade games, advertising overload, and inappropriate content. I look forward to hearing how Kiwi students are Blitzing their schoolwork with www.infoblitz.co.nz "

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

New Zealand poetry

http://www.victoria.ac.nz/modernletters/bnzp/index.html New Zealand poems with notes from authors...

Monday, August 3, 2009

Maurice Sendak, wild things

A site shared by Desna Wallace, Fendalton School on the school library list serv:

Just had to share this wonderful site which is a tribute to Maurice
Sendak's Where the wild things are. http://www.terribleyelloweyes.com/
Heaps of illustrators have created some wonderful art work. You could spend ages just looking at the art work or get lost clicking on the different illustrator's own sites. Too good not to share.

Donald MacLean papers

Sir Donald Maclean was the first Minister of Native Affairs. Since the launch of the MacLean papers website National Library customers can search the 14,500 English-language letters McLean received from many hundreds of correspondents, both public and private. What is not so well known is, there are also another 3000 letters in the Māori language written by various rangatira. This is the largest surviving series of nineteenth-century Māori language letters. The letters have research value for studying Māori attitudes to land, inter-hapu politics, the social history of Māori communities, the wider history of interaction between Māori and Pakeha, and for the study of how te reo Māori developed as a written language.
Huria Robens, National Library

Reading Champions toolkits (pri and sec)

Here is a link http://tiny.cc/Readingchampions to the (UK) National Literacy Trust's new Primary and Secondary toolkits which "use the motivational power of male reading role models to inspire other boys and men to read more" - they are packed full of ideas, activities and case studies to give you plenty of inspiration....
You can download the toolkits by right clicking on the link and then "save target as" and selecting a file location on your computer.