All posts by Angie

FREE ClassVR Webinar on December 12

ClassVR will share basic information and allow time for Q&A

UPDATE: all the December spots for this webinar have been filled. Watch our website and newsletter for updates on the next available free webinar, hopefully taking place mid-January.

It’s been such an exciting year at CMLE sharing our VR headset kits with our school members! However, since this is such a new program, we know we are not experts. That’s why we have been pleased to share these free webinar opportunities from our ClassVR vendor, which provide demonstrations and allow time for Q&A.

Just a quick note to say that if you haven’t heard about our VR program, get all the information here! And complete this Google Form to reserve kits for your school. (CMLE member school libraries only).

Register for your spot here! The November webinar did fill up pretty quickly, so we recommend securing your seat ASAP. We have also found it helpful to keep a list of questions nearby as you work with the headsets, in order to update it with any concerns you may have, because these webinars are the best time to ask them!

From their website: “Part one: Demonstration with the opportunity for questions afterwards. Part two: ClassVR updates followed by questions.

CMLE is planning some more in-person training for the VR kits in late January/early February. We will share these dates on our site when they are scheduled.

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).

Join the Relaxed Readers Meetup Group

Book fans, listen up! We’re excited to be trying something new. CMLE has started a Meetup Group called Relaxed Readers. It will be an in-person book group, but instead of everyone reading the same book and having Very Important Literary Discussions (also fun, don’t get me wrong) we want people to come to chat about whatever book they are reading at the moment. And just an FYI, you are welcome to join us even if you are not a CMLE member!

If the group indicates interest in all reading one book together, awesome! We can do that! If everyone would prefer to just share their own Currently Reading selection, fantastic! We just want to enjoy dinner and some easygoing book conversation. We’ll have fun questions prepared beforehand and look forward to hearing about what you are reading!

Here is the link to the Meetup Group.

We have two events on the calendar now:

Wednesday, Dec. 11th at 5:30 we have reservations at Mexican Village in downtown St. Cloud!

And Wednesday, Jan 8th at 5:30 we will be at Mexican Village St. Cloud again.

If you are interested in joining our group and have a suggestion about a different location, definitely let us know! Leave us a comment or email admin @ cmle.org (no spaces).

It’s going to be a cold and snowy winter – cozy up with some books and reading friends! Hope to see you there! 🙂

Book Bouquet: Pacific Northwest

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! 💕😊

I recently returned from a trip to Newport Oregon, so this week we are looking at books either set in or written by authors from the Pacific Northwest.

City of Weird: 30 Otherworldly Portland Tales edited by Gigi Little
City of Weird conjures what we fear: death, darkness, ghosts. Hungry sea monsters and alien slime molds. Blood drinkers and game show hosts. Set in Portland, Oregon, these thirty stories blend imagination, literary writing, and pop culture into a cohesive weirdness that honors the city’s personality, its bookstores and bridges and solo volcano, as well as the tradition of sci-fi pulp magazines. Including such authors as Rene Denfeld, Justin Hocking, Leni Zumas, and Kevin Sampsell, editor Gigi Little has curated a collection that is quirky, chilling, often profound—and always perfectly weird.”

Permeable Borders by Nina Kiriki Hoffman
“Nina Kiriki Hoffman has published over 200 stories. Her stories have gained many honors, including the Writers of the Future award, Locus Award, and the Nebula Award. This current collection collects 16 of her more recent stories, as well as earlier work not previously collected. It also includes a previously unpublished story.”

Half and Half by Lensey Namioka
“FIONA CHENG IS half and half: Her father is Chinese and her mother is Scottish. Fiona looks more like her father than her mother, so people always expect her to be more interested in her Chinese half than her Scottish half. Lately even Fiona’s confused about who she really is.”

Beasts of Tabat by Cat Rambo
“When countryboy Teo arrives in the coastal city of Tabat, he finds it a hostile place, particularly to a boy hiding an enormous secret. It’s also a city in turmoil, thanks to an ancient accord to change governments and the rising demands of Beasts, the Unicorns, Dryads, Minotaurs and other magical creature on whose labor and bodies Tabat depends. And worst of all, it’s a city dedicated to killing Shifters, the race whose blood Teo bears.
When his fate becomes woven with that of Tabat’s most famous gladiator, Bella Kanto, his existence becomes even more imperiled. Kanto’s magical battle determines the weather each year, and the wealthy merchants are tired of the long winters she’s brought. Can Teo and Bella save each other from the plots that are closing in on them from all sides?”

Invisible Lives by Anjali Banerjee
“From the acclaimed author of Imaginary Men comes an enchanting new novel about a young woman with an uncanny ability to see deep into every heart but her own. Lakshmi Sen was born with a magical ability to perceive the secret longings in others. Putting aside her own dreams to help run her widowed mother’s struggling Seattle sari shop, Mystic Elegance, Lakshmi knows exactly how to bring happiness to customers — from lonely immigrants to starry-eyed young brides. And to honor her father’s dying wish, she has agreed to marry a respectable Indian doctor who will uphold her family’s traditions. But when a famous Indian actress chooses Mystic Elegance to provide her wedding trousseau, Lakshmi finds herself falling for the actress’s sexy chauffeur — all-American Nick Dunbar — and her powers seem to desert her just as she needs them most. As Nick draws Lakshmi into his world, however, new dreams awaken in her, and she begins to uncover deeper, startling longings in her mother, her friends, her fiance, and even herself. But choosing between Nick and her fiance seems an impossible task, like intuiting the very nature of true love. Is it instantly recognizable or does it need time to grow? And how can she possibly know for sure?”

Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford
“In 1986, Henry Lee joins a crowd outside the Panama Hotel, once the gateway to Seattle’s Japantown. It has been boarded up for decades, but now the new owner has discovered the belongings of Japanese families who were sent to internment camps during World War II. As the owner displays and unfurls a Japanese parasol, Henry, a Chinese American, remembers a young Japanese American girl from his childhood in the 1940s—Keiko Okabe, with whom he forged a bond of friendship and innocent love that transcended the prejudices of their Old World ancestors. After Keiko and her family were evacuated to the internment camps, she and Henry could only hope that their promise to each other would be kept. Now, forty years later, Henry explores the hotel’s basement for the Okabe family’s belongings and for a long-lost object whose value he cannot even begin to measure. His search will take him on a journey to revisit the sacrifices he has made for family, for love, for country.”

AASL Recommended Apps: Wolfram Alpha

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. “

“Wolfram Alpha is a credible source for instant expert knowledge and computation, using algorithms and data to compute answers and generate reports for you. This app is so much more than just having an encyclopedia in the palm of your hand, it really is like having someone who will look up what you are wondering about and interpret the available information.”

Their website is seriously impressive and offers information in the areas of math, science and technology, society and culture, and everyday life.

Platform: iOS & Android
Cost: $2.99
Grades: 5-12

This video on the Wolfram website goes into detail explaining how to compute answers, provide practice problems, and other ways the app can be used in the classroom. There are several teacher reviews of the app to read on Common Sense Education. This article from Make Use Of gives a variety of suggestions for ways the app can be used for learning, including using their “Random” button to find new and unexpected knowledge.

Watch this video (1:20) to see how the app works. They also explain how Wolfram Alpha is different than a Google search.

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.

Reading With Libraries Episode 410: Kid’s Books, From Kids!

We had some extra-adorable guest hosts join us this week!

Hello! Thank you for joining us on Reading With Libraries! We’re so glad you could be here to enjoy our book group podcast.

You can get our show notes here! Check it out for links to all kinds of useful resources, and links to the beverages we enjoyed today.

We are the Central Minnesota Libraries Exchange, and we support libraries of all types: schools, publics, academics, and special libraries and archives.

Letting kids choose their own reading materials can be an important way to increase literacy and encourage a love of reading! This week our Guest Hosts are Charlotte, Liam, and Theo, along with their mom Molly. They range in age from about two years old to about eight years old, and they all have very enthusiastic opinions about the books they like to read and the ones they brought to share with us!

Become a full book group member on Patreon! Click here to be part of the “inner circle” of this book group, and get access to behind-the-scenes info and photos. Support levels start at $1/month – and you get a postcard from Official Office Dog Lady Grey! More swag is available at higher levels of support; check it all out today.

We love doing this, but podcasts aren’t free to create; so thank you so much to our book group members who have joined us. We love having you as part of the team.