cwilliams11

portal for educators, librarians, & media specialists

Archive for Education

Endings and Beginnings

The end of another school year leads to thoughts of re-designing blogs, wikis, and websites. Naturally, there is the standard sprucing up; links to prune and backups to save.  Any school year brings changes and growth.

In anticipation that some sites fall to the wayside, this school year I’ve developed the habit to save content and alternative links to multiple online storage sites.  There’s been a burst of semantic tools and I am now a fan of grid design. Perhaps due to my aging Boomer cohorts, I am increasingly aware of accessibility issues. There are goals to improve my writing, posting and social networking skills, even as microblogging and more management of feeds and life streams comes to attention. There are new practices and techniques on others’ sites to test, implement and tweak.

Less concrete components also enter my end-of-school-year reflection regarding online presence. Trends, policies and discussions impacting the future of library service and knowledge work keep shifting.  Recognition of new roles and specialties for knowledge workers within the emerging collective cognitive network or eventual web4.0 has entered consideration; the need to develop work skills for enhancing global social intelligence and collaboration.

With thanks to input from so many online contacts that I value and appreciate, these and additional ideas will be incorporated into my mission, principles, goals and objectives for a fresh start next school year.

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Participating in the National Conversation

The White House North Lawn in the 1860s, durin...

Image via Wikipedia

Take a small step to move from bookmarking to social bookmarking.

Posting and reading public Diigo highlights and sticky notes added to the Education page of the White House Website is a way that educators and citizens can weigh-in on issues that matter.

Diigo

White House: Education

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AASL’s Knowledge Quest Jan/Feb 2009

“Knowledge Quest,” American Library Association, September 27, 2006.
http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/aasl/aaslpubsandjournals/knowledgequest/kqweb.cfm (Accessed February 24, 2009)
Document ID: 202714

“Doing Honest Work” is the title theme of this month’s Knowledge Quest, the Journal of the American Association of School Librarians. In many cases, the enclosed articles written for school librarians are also open letters for other educators. The depth and breadth of coverage is an inspiring call to action, with too few solutions for harried working media specialists and teachers.

The issue also includes additional resources and related links for follow-up.  The problem then becomes that harried working media specialists and teachers have little-to-no time to review multiple resources and additional information.

Media specialists, teachers and students  already have numerous  duties, new applications, methods, models and tools to learn.  Are media specialists being asked to translate the professional duties of a subject specialist, academic librarian, and apply the same type of in-depth knowledge and coverage across every subject taught in a school? Can we truly handle more lists of ideas and duties even if they are wonderfully informative, factual and much needed?

Well, I’m certain many of us will try!

Does it need to be said that media specialists do not have scheduled classes; we have to basically beg and cajole over-burdened teachers to collaborate?

If media specialists are to be taken seriously in a school environment, we  need ways to systematically, with authority, insert higher standards of 21st Century skills into all classes.  (I’ll repeat the important point that we need authority to do our jobs.)  In my mind, that means media specialists should focus on the role of “master teacher” and have primary responsibility for delivery of professional development within our area of knowledge.  We need to first assist teachers to become more competent and effective with the technology and information to skillfully use what is in place, available to them at school and in their homes.  Retrieve the learning aspect of technology use away from the IT departments. Yes, that would take collaboration and agreements between numerous educational associations, unions and accreditation bodies.

Let us set “honest work” missions, goals and objectives for school library media specialists. Back at you, AASL. There’s a project for you.

Info-fetish presents additional considerations on the topic in Peer-reviewed Monday (plus 24 hours) – has anyone tried out this Delphi method? Posted on by Anne-Marie.

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Pumping Productivity

The “education lite” mapThe Networked Teacher” by courosa has been in circulation around the net (I wish he had added students as a category) but I gravitate to the in-depth information provided by the Mindjet Blog: Mindjet: Mapping your social networks for maximum productivity online. February 9, 2009 @ 10:30 am.

Also note: Brian Solis Online – Social Map on Flick:

Brian’s “Social Graph Central” pointed me to Loic LeMeur’s video on YouTube. It is dated April 1, 2008 so there will be additional services that have come on the scene since then, but it is still a very good introduction to creating a map of your social network as a personal learning (and sharing) environment.

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New Twines Created

Martin Luther King, Jr.
Image via Wikipedia

To honor families during African American History Month, I have created a new space at Twine to collect and share tools to inspire digital history projects: Family Stories.

Family Stories was started with 25 links to sites that show examples, lesson guides, or tools for the creation of online collaborative projects such as timelines, mapping, oral histories and digital slideshows or scrapbooks.

Twine is used for organizing, finding, and sharing information. Twines can be used for your personal interests and projects, or with groups and teams. Creating a Twine takes just a few seconds. Then you can invite others to join.

A second Twines that I’ve started is Brain Matters: Research Implications for the Education and Training of Teens.

You are invited to join in to build these collections, to locate other interests or to create your own Twines!

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Create Content

One of my goals for 2009 is to create content instead of merely gathering links to pass-along. As a starting measure, the intent is to post a lesson, mashup or project each month that provides a new and useful experience for others. There I said it. Now, to make it real.

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Welcome Back!

Our building has a lot to celebrate with this new school year. We’re bigger and better!

There are more classrooms; new faculty, staff and students plus increasing test scores to brighten our educational lives.

That includes 20 new computers in the school’s media center. Whoo hoo!

Posts will continue to be few and far between as tasks pull me in other directions into September.

It is a good time to explore previous posts and pages!

ADDED: Started FAQs under the Training Page. This will be a gathering spot for all the head scratching “how do I” and “can you find” responses worth keeping.

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