Tag Archives: school libraries

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!

Join us for VR Training in November

Come learn how to have this much fun with VR at your school!

Maybe you’ve heard the news CMLE has VR kits to loan FOR FREE to our school library members!

Apply here!

Come to our training event on Tuesday, Nov. 5th and learn how to use the headset devices!

Training will be held from 9-3 at our location: 570 1st St. SE St. Cloud MN 56304. We are inside the cmERDC building and have a large classroom to use.

We’ll have two sessions but feel free to stay for both of them in order to really get a feel for using the headsets. The first session will be from 9am-12pm and the second from 1pm-3pm. CMLE will provide lunch from 12-1pm. (And if you’re here in the morning and have a book you’re reading that you’d like to tell us about, we will happily record a quick Book Bites podcast episode with you!)

If you can’t make it to the training, you can definitely still reserve the headsets for use at your school (provided you are a CMLE member school library) and you should still Apply Here!

At this training session, you will learn how to operate the devices, find lessons that line up with your curriculum, send the VR/AR content to the devices, and use the headsets effectively in your library, media center, or classroom.

Visit our page to find out more information about the VR kit loan program, including instructions and links to additional materials.

And if you apply ahead of time, you can definitely pick up your VR headset kit at this training event! You’ll get to keep the kit (each kit has 8 headsets) until schools close for winter break.

Please RSVP below if you plan to come to this training. Email any questions to vr@cmle.org 🙂

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). We would love you to send your thanks to @US_IMLS and with @MnDeptEd for providing this great program we can share with our members!

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.”