All posts by John

AASL Recommended App: Pixel Press Floors

pixelLast June, the American Association of School Librarians (AASL) came out with their 25 Best Apps for Teaching & Learning. The apps were chosen because they foster innovation, creativity, active participation, and collaboration.

This week we highlight the app Pixel Press Floors. This is a social gaming/problem solving app that inspires kids to create, and literally draw their own video games! The best part is they can then share them with their friends to play and critique.

The app is FREE for iOS devices and AASL recommends it for Intermediate and Secondary students. Check out the promo video below:

Kids who are under-connected to the Internet

bustle...“What’s it really like to do your homework on a smartphone you’re having to borrow from your mom, but she needs it for something else? Are you really able to do your research paper?” – Victoria Rideout

Many U.S. schools have improved their internet connections, but for many kids, home is still a major hurdle for learning as assignments go online. With so many 1:1 schools, where do these under-connected kids turn to complete their school work? That was one of the questions examined in a report by the Joan Ganz Cooney Center when they surveyed 1,191 parents with children ages 6 to 13, considered lower-income or “low- and moderate-income families.” The results aren’t promising. Most families didn’t have any internet access, and those that did usually only had mobile, and it was slow.

It seems that the digital divide is being addressed in schools but have we only gone part-way?

Read the whole article now.

Image credit: http://tinyurl.com/kh96ovf, licensed under CC BY 2.0

 

Education Portal can help you use Minecraft at school

Tired of hearing all the buzz about Minecraft in schools and want to join the fun? Look no further than Microsoft’s new Minecraft Education Portal. Full of resources and starter lessons, the site gets you into the game quickly and simply.

Looking for inspiration? Check out this story about how a California educator mixed Minecraft with Spanish History. The article details their quest and is especially helpful because it talks about the challenges they faced as well as the enthusiastic play!

Need more? Check out this video about the Minecraft Education Portal:

Google Cardboard: accessible Virtual Reality

Want to engage your patrons with Virtual Reality but can’t afford a $600 Oculus Rift? Enter Google Cardboard, an inexpensive way to give a Virtual Reality experience without the high cost. Simply put, Google Cardboard is a housing made of cardboard that turns your phone into a virtual reality (VR) viewer. With many selling for $15, Google Cardboard can be accessible for many libraries. But why limit yourself? Google Cardboard also offers blueprints so you can build your own! Why not hold a makerspace activity allowing students or patrons to build their own?

Need more ideas? Check out LITA’s article about five ways to start using Cardboard in your library or check out this video about how McDonald’s Sweden is launching a promotion that invites kids to turn Happy Meal boxes into Virtual Reality viewers:

2016 Minnesota Book Award winners

The dust has settled, the winners have been announced!

 

Children’s Literature

“Red: A Crayon’s Story” by Michael Hall

What happens when a crayon suffers an identity crisis? Hall’s witty children’s adventure follows the colorful chaos that unfolds when a blue crayon mistakenly ends up in a red wrapper.

Hall is also the author of “My Heart Is Like a Zoo” and “It’s an Orange Aardvark!”

General Nonfiction

“No House to Call My Home: Love, Family and Other Transgressions” by Ryan Berg

In his debut book, Berg writes about his years as a caseworker in New York for homeless LGBTQ teens. He offers a view into the little-discussed lives of teenagers cut off from their homes, trying to find themselves on the streets.

 

Genre Fiction

“The Grave Soul” by Ellen Hart

Hart returns with another tale of restaurateur and private investigator Jane Lawless. Lawless’s newest case is tied up with a haunting nightmare, and deep family secrets that just won’t stay hidden.

 

Memoir & Creative Nonfiction

“Water and What We Know: Following the Roots of a Northern Life” by Karen Babine

Babine’s essays tell the story of the Minnesota landscape through water, from Lake Superior to the soil of an apple orchard.

 

Minnesota

“Minnesota Modern: Architecture and Life at Midcentury” by Larry Millett

Millett traces the roots of the mid-century modern architecture movement and where you can see surviving examples of it in Minnesota. The book includes original photography from Denes Saari and Maria Forrai Saari.

Novel & Short Story

“There’s Something I Want You to Do” by Charles Baxter

In Baxter’s short story collection, ten interconnected stories are tied together by the title phrase, which characters repeat throughout the book. The cast of Minnesota characters confront obsession, fears and the power of small decisions.

 

Poetry

“Beautiful Wall” by Ray Gonzalez

In his fifteenth poetry collection, Gonzalez travels to the Southwest to reflect on the desert landscapes and the border conflicts that have flared anew.

 

Young People’s Literature

“See No Color” by Shannon Gibney

Gibney’s powerful coming-of-age novel follows 16-year-old Alex Kirtridge, an all-star baseball player and a bi-racial adoptee in a white family. When she discovers letters from her biological father that her adopted parents kept secret, she has to come to terms with her identity on and off the baseball diamond.

 

The Minnesota Book Awards is a program of The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library.