All posts by Angie

Keep Up With CMLE: Follow Us on Social Media!

CMLE’s mission is to provide support, connections, and resources to our members: library people! But life can be crazy busy and we want to share information with you as easily as possible.

That’s where social media comes in! You can also subscribe to our newsletter which comes to your inbox every Friday.

We are most active on Twitter.

We’re also on Facebook

And Instagram

And Patreon, where you can support our podcasts:

Don’t forget about Goodreads (of course!!) where we have our Armchair Travel to MN State Parks Reading Group.

Plus, our YouTube channel!

Finally, this isn’t exactly social media, but if you are looking for library skills training and clock hour credits, we offer online classes through Podia. These are FREE and we encourage you to sign up!

We love connecting with you, so find us online and stay up-to-date with all we have to offer!

Read Your Book Session Feb. 27th

❄❄❄It’s that point in the winter when the ice and cold work hard to get us down. But thankfully, we have a few tools to keep our spirits up! Reading + friends + opportunities to get together = 😊

Recently, we enjoyed another evening of book discussion at Mexican Village downtown St. Cloud. We also met members in Princeton to share book suggestions and get to know each other! You can join our Meetup Group and see all the fun upcoming events scheduled!

Next week, we have our last Meetup event for February: Read Your Book Session! At 6pm we will be at the food court at Crossroads Mall with our books and a sign so you can find us easily. We’ll be there from 6pm – 8pm, arrive and depart as your schedule permits.

Finding the time to read can be HARD, life is so busy! So that’s why we are setting aside this designated time to get together and just read our books.

We aren’t going to analyze our book with others, we aren’t going to share plot points, we’re just going to read and enjoy ourselves!

RSVP on our Meetup site and we hope to see you there! (Feel free to bring several books, if like me you are waaaay behind on your TBR list!) 📚📚💕😂

Book Bouquet: Teachers Who Make A Difference

Each week we assemble a collection – a bouquet, if you will – of books you can read for yourself, or use to build into a display in your library. As always, the books we link to have info from Amazon.com. If you click a link and then buy anything at all from Amazon, we get a small percent of their profits from your sale. Yay!!! Thanks!!! We really appreciate the assistance! 💕😊

We have some really impressive members who work in school libraries and help teachers integrate tech tools into their classrooms. So we want to share some reading suggestions about books featuring awesome teachers!

Inside Out and Back Again by Thanhha Lai
“For all the ten years of her life, Hà has only known Saigon: the thrills of its markets, the joy of its traditions, and the warmth of her friends close by. But now the Vietnam War has reached her home. Hà and her family are forced to flee as Saigon falls, and they board a ship headed toward hope. In America, Hà discovers the foreign world of Alabama: the coldness of its strangers, the dullness of its food . . . and the strength of her very own family.”

Twerp by Mark Goldblatt
“Julian Twerski isn’t a bully. He’s just made a big mistake. So when he returns to school after a weeklong suspension, his English teacher offers him a deal: if he keeps a journal and writes about the terrible incident that got him and his friends suspended, he can get out of writing a report on Shakespeare. Julian jumps at the chance. And so begins his account of life in sixth grade–blowing up homemade fireworks, writing a love letter for his best friend (with disastrous results), and worrying whether he’s still the fastest kid in school. Lurking in the background, though, is the one story he can’t bring himself to tell, the one story his teacher most wants to hear.”

Sahara Special by Esme Raji Codell
“There are two files on Sahara Jones. The one the school counselor keeps is evidence that she’s a fifth-grader who needs special education. The other is the book Sahara is secretly writing, her Heart-Wrenching Life Story and Amazing Adventures. The latest chapter in her book unfolds when her mother insists that she be taken out of special Ed. So Sahara is facing fifth grade in the regular classroom, again. But why even try to do the work, Sahara wonders, if everything just winds up in the counselor’s file? Enter Miss Pointy, the new fifth-grade teacher. With her eggplant-colored lipstick, and strange subjects such as “Puzzling” and “Time Travel,” she’s like no other teacher Sahara has ever known. Through Miss Pointy’s unusual teaching, storytelling, and quiet support, Sahara finds the courage to overcome her fears and prove which file shows her true self.”

Dancing in a Distant Place by Isla Dewar
“A warm and intelligent novel about a young teacher who throws herself into the lives of her students in the hopes of forgetting the past, only to find it returning more vividly than ever.
When Iris Chisholm arrives in the tiny Scottish Highland community of Green Cairns, she’s still in a state of shock–not so much from her husband’s untimely death as from the discovery that he’d gambled away all their money and even their home. In addressing the problems of the children at the school where she works, Iris finds distractions from worries. Further distractions come in the shape of a honey-tongued lawyer and a gentle handyman. This is a novel with wit and heart from an author who is quickly rising in the ranks of international women’s fiction authors.”

The Class: A Life-Changing Teacher, His World-Changing Kids, and the Most Inventive Classroom in America by Heather Won Tesoriero
“Andy Bramante left his successful career as a corporate scientist to teach public high school–and now helms one of the most remarkable classrooms in America. Bramante’s unconventional class at Connecticut’s prestigious yet diverse Greenwich High School has no curriculum, tests, textbooks, or lectures, and is equal parts elite research lab, student counseling office, and teenage hangout spot. United by a passion to learn, Mr. B.’s band of whiz kids set out every year to conquer the brutally competitive science fair circuit. They have won the top prize at the Google Science Fair, made discoveries that eluded scientists three times their age, and been invited to the Nobel Prize ceremony in Stockholm.”

AASL Recommended Apps: Chatterpix Kids

The American Association of School Librarians (AASL) announced their picks for Best Apps for Teaching & Learning 2019. “Apps recognized foster the qualities of innovation, creativity, active participation, and collaboration and are user friendly to encourage a community of learners to explore and discover. “

“Give your photos a voice with ChatterPix! Chatterpix can make anything talk — pets, friends, doodles, and more! Simply take any photo, draw a line to make a mouth, and record your voice. Use ChatterPix whenever you’re doing a video project with students on the “no photo” list. They can take a picture of whatever they want, record their voice and still participate.”

Platform: iOS & Android  
Grades: All
Cost: FREE

Journey with Technology has this article about several different ways to use ChatterPix Kids in the classroom. This page from Common Sense Education has tons of lesson plans that incorporate the app. The Digital Teacher has a detailed description and more ways to use the app in the classroom in this article.

Watch this EdTech tutorial to find out how to use the app (approx 3 min video)

If you are interested in the best apps for your library, media center, or classroom, you can read our 2019 series here or find all past apps discussed in our archives.

Fun and Learning With ClassVR Continues!

Thanks to Sarah Thomas from Maple Lake Elementary for the photos!

This program is funded in part with a grant from the Minnesota Department of Education using federal funding, CFDA 45.310 – Library Services and Technology Act, Grants to States Program (LS-00-19-0024-19).

Last week, we held an all-day training at CMLE for our member school libraries to learn how to use our ClassVR headset devices. (Huge thank-you to LSTA and the MN Dept of Ed for this grant!)

Thank you to all the members that took time to join us! Many attendees had already reserved their kits for the month of February and were able to take the kits back to their schools after training. It has been SO exciting to hear feedback already from how students are enjoying the headsets!

If you are in a CMLE member school library and haven’t reserved your kit yet, don’t worry! We still have SOME availability for April and May, and are happy to let you make reservations for the upcoming school year, too. Find the application here.

We will be holding another training session on June 11th, so mark your calendars if you’d like to join us to learn how to best use the devices when you bring them to your school! More information about the program can be found on our page.

As a reminder – this is a FREE program! We are so pleased to share this technology with our members.

Questions? Email vr(at)cmle.org 🙂

Thanks to Sarah Thomas from Maple Lake Elementary for the photos!