Friday, April 2, 2010
Back to Blogging
It's the first truly warm day of the spring, warmer in Chicago than at my home, and I am inside, online, networking. Moving around the coffee shop to snag the coveted "with electricity" space. Working on my electronic life -- blog, portfolio, twitter account. . .
I know I'm not a "digital native" but I feel as if I've lived in the country for a very long time, especially since I teach the "natives" new things every day. Time perhaps, to embrace the value of some old fashioned notions (privacy, accuracy, objectivity) instead of feeling ashamed to have values.
I know I'm not a "digital native" but I feel as if I've lived in the country for a very long time, especially since I teach the "natives" new things every day. Time perhaps, to embrace the value of some old fashioned notions (privacy, accuracy, objectivity) instead of feeling ashamed to have values.
Monday, November 3, 2008
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Thursday, October 9, 2008
Julie goes to the Vice Presidential Debate!
My sister in law is the last interview on this video from St. Louis television news.
Friday, July 18, 2008
Saturday, July 12, 2008
That's my friend Faith!
StoryTubes in the national news. http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6576615.html?nid=2413&rid=984415493
Even if Faith wasn't my best friend from library school, I'd think this was a terrific project. Check it out -- and start planning to have your students create StoryTubes for next year!
Even if Faith wasn't my best friend from library school, I'd think this was a terrific project. Check it out -- and start planning to have your students create StoryTubes for next year!
Friday, June 20, 2008
Monday, June 9, 2008
Blog worth reading!!!!
My nephew is spending a month in Germany as a high school foreign exchange student. Check out his blog at http://rwhealey.blogspot.com
Friday, April 11, 2008
School Libraries Today
Thinking about school libraries. . . now and in the future. This video from Henrico County, West Virginia, uses clips from an old career film to show what school libraries are like today. It's a fun film to watch, and a good vision of what the best of school libraries are like today. http://www.henrico.k12.va.us/hcpstv/vv_library.html
Tuesday, March 11, 2008
High School Library Web Site
I've redesigned the web site for my high school. It's really designed for student use, with the subscription databases as the home page. This is the information literacy page. http://www.nhsd.k12.wi.us/hs/LIBRARY/Media%20Center%202008/Pages/information_literacy.html
Monday, March 10, 2008
StoryTubes! Do you know a creative person in Grades 1-6?
Check out this great opportunity to promote reading and have fun! Children in grades 1-6 are invited to enter a nationwide contest to make the best video about their favorite book. The project is called StoryTubes. Check it out at http://www.storytubes.info
Friday, February 15, 2008
Thinking about technology in schools
Check out this article about Teen Tech Week and school libraries. http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/article/CA6526727.html
Read the National Association of School Boards report on social networking mentioned in the article
and the Pew Studies on Teens and Technology
Does using technology mean that all teens are technologically literate? Or do we need them to go beyond the ability to use software and authoring tools? These are the national standards for information literacy from the American Association of School Librarians -- are we meeting those standards? http://www.ala.org/ala/aasl/aaslproftools/learningstandards/AASL_LearningStandards.pdf
At least one study says that information literacy and technology literacy are not the same thing, and our students need more information literacy instruction. What do you think? http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/article/2670/computer-literacy-doesnt-mean-information-literacy-report-says
What responsiblity do we have as teachers, parents, students, school board members? Should we be concerned that funding for technology in schools has been removed from the Federal Budget? http://www.nea.org/lac/funding/index.html Does every school have a trained teacher/librarian and an information literacy curriculum? Does every school have adequate funding for technology, and library materials, both books and databases? Does every school have policies that encourage students to use all available technology for education?
What do you think we should be doing, as a society?
Read the National Association of School Boards report on social networking mentioned in the article
and the Pew Studies on Teens and Technology
Does using technology mean that all teens are technologically literate? Or do we need them to go beyond the ability to use software and authoring tools? These are the national standards for information literacy from the American Association of School Librarians -- are we meeting those standards? http://www.ala.org/ala/aasl/aaslproftools/learningstandards/AASL_LearningStandards.pdf
At least one study says that information literacy and technology literacy are not the same thing, and our students need more information literacy instruction. What do you think? http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/article/2670/computer-literacy-doesnt-mean-information-literacy-report-says
What responsiblity do we have as teachers, parents, students, school board members? Should we be concerned that funding for technology in schools has been removed from the Federal Budget? http://www.nea.org/lac/funding/index.html Does every school have a trained teacher/librarian and an information literacy curriculum? Does every school have adequate funding for technology, and library materials, both books and databases? Does every school have policies that encourage students to use all available technology for education?
What do you think we should be doing, as a society?
Monday, December 3, 2007
Unshelved the Library Comic
Ok, this is my totally FAVORITE comic. Even people who don't work in libraries find it funny. Consider signing up for their comic AND buying their books! Or shirts. Or bumper stickers. Great holiday gifts!
Cultural Anthropology 2.0
I've been looking at a lot of Mike Wesch's work from Kansas State University. Check it out. I feel that my blog should be more interactive -- and perhaps a little more random, so I'm including some notes that are, as they say in online classes "a little off topic".
One of my favorite bands. . .
I love this band, Uncle Earl. I'm not sure how I feel about this video, but it is like nothing you've ever seen before!
For more about the band http://www.uncleearl.net/
For more about the band http://www.uncleearl.net/
Thursday, October 18, 2007
Blog worth reading
I've been thinking a lot about information literacy, and about teaching, and about high school. . .I just haven't been writing about it.
I ran across this blog this morning and thought it was so good I wanted to add it to my list. You may have to be subscribed to Education Week or Teacher Magazine to get to it, but I think they offer free subscriptions as well.
I also recommend the article in this week's Newsweek on Brain Based learning.
I ran across this blog this morning and thought it was so good I wanted to add it to my list. You may have to be subscribed to Education Week or Teacher Magazine to get to it, but I think they offer free subscriptions as well.
I also recommend the article in this week's Newsweek on Brain Based learning.
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
Technology on Vacation
I'm camping, in beautiful Door County Wisconsin, and I'm at the Fish Creek Public Library, just to check my email. . . and the sun is shining. Shouldn't I be at the beach? Is it a tool, or an addiction?
Happy summer. Take a vacation!
Happy summer. Take a vacation!
Sunday, July 29, 2007
Standards

Many people have ideas about what the information literacy standards should be, and just as many people don't know that such standards exist.
The standards written by librarians are my favorites.
The Association of College and Research Libraries has had a long list for a long time. Check it out and see how many of these things you know how to do. And did you learn them in college?
http://www.ala.org/ala/acrl/acrlstandards/informationliteracycompetency.htm
They will also tell you how to create a program that teaches the standards in the document Characteristics of Programs of Information Literacy that Illustrate Best Practices: A Guideline.
The American Association of School Librarians also have standards, newly revised this year, and still in process. You can see the draft document here: 21st Century Library Learning Standards
I like them best because they focus on theory and concepts, and will be useful for a long time. They focus on what learners will be able to do, and the goals are practical and useful.
In the State of Wisconsin, information literacy for grades K - 12 is included under Information and Technology Literacy. The curriculum standards are listed in a book length document:
Wisconsin's Model Academic Standards for Information and Technology Literacy.
There is good information in this document, but there is also a lot of emphasis on specific technology skills, many of them 20th century skills. Yes, there are people in the world who cannot create email or word processing documents, but not many of them are children. It seems more useful to me to frame the concepts in broad terms e.g. use computer programs to create products that can be shared. Saves a lot of re-writing, and focuses on the strategy, not the skill.
The best technology literacy standards come from the International Society for Technology in Education, and they list them for students, teachers, and administrators. This is their vision of what students should be able to do: National Educational Technology Standards: The Next Generation.
The whole web site is worth looking at http://cnets.iste.org/index.shtml
and if you're a teacher or an administrator, take a look at the standards for your job and use them as a little self test. [How did I do? Between 80 and 90% on both lists, but libraries, information literacy and libraries are intimately intertwined, and I've been a librarian for some time now. . . ]
Intellectual Freedom

Intellectual Freedom, and it's counterparts, Freedom of Access to Information and Freedom of the Press, have been one of the foundational ethical values of my life.
It began when I was an editor of my high school newspaper. During a teacher's strike, we took photos of the picket line and the teachers crossing it, and interviewed the teachers we could reach. When school resumed, we wrote a story on the strike, and published it, along with the photos. One of the scab teachers made a huge fuss, and tried to get the story suppressed. The editorial I wrote in response ran under the quote "Our liberty depends on the freedom of the press, which cannot be limited without being lost." -- Thomas Jefferson.
I have had more education on the subject, and have expanded my values beyond the freedom of the press to the broader idea of intellectual freedom, but my basic ideals have not changed.
In library work, I have had the opportunity to do a lot of collection development, and have striven for balanced collections -- making an effort to overcome my own prejudices to be sure that as many points of view as possible are available to library users.
I had the very great privilege of being taught by Dr. Lester Ashiem at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His iconic article, Not Censorship But Selection, seems to me to still be relevant. It is posted on the American Library Association's web page, and I have provided a link to it for you. http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/basics/notcensorship.htm
The relationship between information literacy and intellectual freedom goes beyond having both things in a library -- though the concept of balanced, selected collections in an Internet age needs to be carefully explained and guarded.
What are the issues?
Access. This is an issue both in what materials are available, and what equipment, Internet connections, etc. are available, and under what rules. If I were in charge of the public schools, there would be no Internet filtering. I am not suggesting wholesale disregard of federal law, but I am suggesting that we should rethink that law, and the assumptions behind it. It is our responsibility to educate our students to live in the real world, which has no safety net. If they do not learn how to evaluate information and stay away from dangerous sites and situations, what have they learned?
Education. Students have to be explicitly taught both online safety and how to evaluate materials and information found in any format. This is an ongoing project, and it should involve all parents and teachers. And it is a much more complex subject than most people realize. We need more, not fewer, librarians, all of whom should be teaching information literacy in an online environment.
Materials. We need school and public libraries that provide a wide variety of sources of information, including books, magazines, video, and online databases. We cannot afford to either ignore emerging technologies because they might not catch on or because they have dangers associated with them, or to imagine that the need for print and for balanced collections has ended.
I could talk about this forever. . . but I need to move on to my other assigned topics.
For more on Intellectual Freedom and Young people, check out this ALA page:
http://www.ala.org/ala/oif/foryoungpeople/youngpeople.htm
And this page from the Young Adult Library Services Association Development Center, which I worked on several years ago, and which has been recently updated: http://www.ala.org/ala/yalsa/profdev/intellectual.htm
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Fortune Cookie
Information is not knowledge.
Knowledge is not wisdom.
Wisdom is not truth.
Truth is not beauty.
Beauty is not love.
Love is not music.
Music is the best.
Frank Zappa
Knowledge is not wisdom.
Wisdom is not truth.
Truth is not beauty.
Beauty is not love.
Love is not music.
Music is the best.
Frank Zappa