Category Archives: Children’s services

Best Prep Technology Integration Workshop for School Library people

This sounds like it may be an interesting program this summer! Remember: we have a scholarship available for up to $300 to help you attend training.

“Dear ITEM Members: Each summer, Best Prep offers their Technology Integration Workshop. This is a week-long workshop open to K-12 educators. What makes it unique is that each participant gets to be paired with a business so you can learn about the world of work where many of your students will be headed in the coming years. I encourage you to check out this great professional development opportunity, especially if you are looking for something unique to add to your professional development portfolio.

Mary Mehsikomer, CETL Technology Integration Development & Outreach Facilitator Minnesota E-Rate Coordinator for Schools TIES 651-999-6510 Mary.mehsikomer@ties.k12.mn.us

Here is info from the BestPrep website:

BestPrep’s Technology Integration Workshop positions technology as an essential part of the curriculum, providing the resources, strategies and knowledge to help educators integrate new technologies into the classroom. At this four-day professional development opportunity, educators learn how existing and emerging technologies can enhance lesson effectiveness and student engagement. Educators increase their technological literacy through first-hand and hands-on experiences including an impactful job shadow with a business professional.

Spend four days learning how to make your classroom come alive with the use of technology. Participants strengthen their technology integration skills, learn new technologies and witness current career and technology skills in the business world. Through presentations and breakout sessions, participants gain knowledge that is applied when modifying a unit plan to be used in the upcoming school year. The job shadow provides a glimpse into today’s workplace, an unparalleled experience. As part of their experience, each attendee creates a technology infused unit plan available to the public for viewing and use.

Find out more about the Technology Integration Workshop on this flyer and watch our short video from last year; it highlights the keynote speakers, breakout sessions and all that our educators learned.

2018 Summer Pen Pal Program

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This sounds like such a fun program for libraries working with kids!

If any CMLE members want to participate, but may not be in session or need a summer location – let’s talk about us hosting something here at HQ if that can help you participate. Connections are so fun, it can really help your community members to have a more positive connection to the library!

“For the 2017 Summer Reading program I coordinated a pen pal program among Children’s/Youth Services Departments across the United States.  We had approximately 50 libraries sign up. We are doing it again this summer so I’m sending out this google form and the below description to see if other libraries are interested in participating this summer.

Google Form https://goo.gl/forms/zZMYkWXhjxuf2RB23

Children are encouraged to participate every time they visit by drawing pictures and writing general letters about what it’s like to be a kid where they live. We’re not looking to do one-on-one exchanges between children, because there’s no guarantee of continued participation and we don’t want any kids getting heartbroken because of someone else’s inability to regularly participate. In the case of my library I have a bulletin board space where I hang the letters and pictures we receive and place a mailbox for our patrons to place the letters/cards/pictures they want to send.  I periodically gather those items and send them off to other participating libraries.  We also kept track of where we got letters from on a map with flag pins.  This year I’ve proposed the option to libraries about whether they wish to mail freely or have an assigned partner library.

Please fill out the google form if you’re interested in participating, and please feel free to email me if you have any questions.

Thank you!

Shana Shea
Head of Children’s Services
860-285-1917
Windsor Public Library
www.windsorlibrary.com

 

Fight for School Libraries

We are fans of school libraries. This, of course, is not even a teeny bit radical – literally every single person should be in favor of good school libraries, because we all benefit from well educated students and graduates! Plus, as we are in the profession, we have an added emphasis to want all our libraries to be good for the communities they serve!

Check out this article from American Libraries magazine: Fight for School Libraries: Student success depends on them

“Libraries constitute an ecology of educational, research, and community services. In this environment of inter­dependency, we, as a family of libraries, must embrace advocacy for school libraries as foundational to the success of our collective work for students who love to read, as we prepare them for college, career, and life.

We must all fight the closing of school libraries, the reductions in professional staffing, the erosion of budgets for resources and technology, and the consequent weakening of the librarian–teacher partnership in the classroom. We must advocate for the federal funding that supports network access in schools. We must continue to document and demonstrate the powerful link between student success, educational enrichment, and well-supported school libraries.

We all want students who know how to look for information, evaluate sources, organize research results, present ideas and conclusions, and document their work. These are lifelong skills. They strengthen communities and promote civic engagement. They enrich lives. They transform learning. They enable public libraries and academic libraries to be more effective.

School libraries are about reading and understanding, about critical thinking and problem solving. They are about research and writing, the ability to evaluate sources, and the exploration of diverse perspectives and experiences.

School libraries are about active learning, the ability to analyze, synthesize, and work collaboratively. They are about information skills in context and about a shared information vocabulary. They are about working online, using technology appropriately, and making good choices.

School libraries are about innovative technologies and creative spaces. Through school libraries, students understand issues like privacy, confidentiality, intellectual freedom, open access, fair use, and how these relate to their work as learners. Students view libraries as a positive and essential part of their lives.

The American Library Association’s American Association of School Librarians (AASL) National School Library Standards for Learners, School Librarians, and School Libraries provides integrated frameworks essential to these and other core competencies. The Common Beliefs are:

  • The school library is a unique and essential part of a learning community.
  • Qualified school librarians lead effective school libraries.
  • Learners should be prepared for college, career, and life.
  • Reading is the core of personal and academic competency.
  • Intellectual freedom is every learner’s right.
  • Information technologies must be appropriately integrated and equitably available.

Steven Yates, 2017–2018 AASL president, in his January/February column for AASL’s journal Knowledge Quest, calls for expanded and robust collaboration to advance and enrich the work of school libraries, including strengthening relationships with other ALA divisions that work with children and youth, as well as working more closely with the ALA Washington Office. As Yates writes, “these partnerships are built on the belief that we can change the world every day.”

I propose to convene a meeting in Chicago of representatives from across the school, public, and academic library communities, as well as teachers, school administrators, and students. The focus will be on the state of school libraries, the work to demonstrate value and impact, and an outline to expand strategy that builds community-wide articulation, investment, and advocacy.

I am interested in your comments. ­Contact me at jneal0@columbia.edu.”

Skype in the Classroom: Connect with Authors & Storytellers

Skype-for-BusinessYou may already be using Skype in the Classroom – and if not, please try it!! I’ve seen such fun programs using this tool, you will find some very cool things to try for your school.

You may not yet be using the tool allowing you to connect with authors!

“Invite an author in your classroom via Skype!

Literacy is the backbone of success and one of the most important educational initiatives. Every year, Skype in the Classroom celebrates literacy globally in honor of World Read Aloud Day (February 1st this year) and World Book Day (March 1st this year), working with hundreds of guest speakers, including authors, illustrators, and literacy partners. The goal is to inspire students to grow up as readers and become engaged citizens of the global world.

Watch how connecting your classroom with authors via Skype can help broaden students’ minds and imaginations and then browse the hundreds of authors available below.

 

If you want to give this a try, CMLE can give you a mini-grant up to $300 to try out exciting new projects like this one!

Episode 110: Children’s and YA books

Check out our full information page to get all the info on this episode.

Welcome, everyone, to Books and Beverages! This week we are discussing Children and YA books! This is definitely not a comprehensive look at all good books for these ages! We are sharing a few we like, and some resources you can use to find other good books.

We are the Central Minnesota Libraries Exchange, and we support all types of libraries. This is our book group podcast, where we discuss different genres of books each week, while we all sit in our comfy chairs and drink our beverages. And you are, of course, an important part of this book group. So if you do not already have a nice beverage please go get one, so you can join the experience.

There are no “right” or “wrong” books to read and chat about for our book group – we are just here to explore all kinds of books. We love books, and want to talk about them – and we want you to share what you are reading. All of us will take away at least a title or two that we want to read at the end of our time together!

Who is joining our reading group this week? This week our guest hosts are experts in the genre, as they  are book readers and in the targeted age groups for these books. Welcome to Jordan and Grace!

 Beverages

We have guests, we have our genre. We just need our beverages. Fortunately, we all came prepared with something to sip while we talk about our books. Each week we like to connect the theme of our books with our beverages. Each beverage will have a recipe or a link on our episode page, so you can try them yourself!  Obviously, feel free to sip your coffee as you listen, or any other beverage you enjoy. Just join us in celebrating books, and discussing books!

Check out our full information page to get all the beverages we discuss!

This is, as we have discussed in other genres, a huge range of possibilities! We could easily spend an entire episode looking at each of the category breakdowns of this genre, but today will just be giving an overview and sharing a few favorites from each of us.

The importance of diversity in children’s books has been emphasized over and over again. So much research now is showing the lack of diversity of all sorts in books aimed at kids; it really means everyone needs to be deliberate in seeking out books about people who look different than you, live in different places, have different abilities, and all sorts of other things. Reading is a fantastic adventure, and you can really broaden your ideas and your experiences of the world!