Thursday, August 29, 2013

NEW SCHOOL YEAR: FREE Posters For Your Classroom!

Are you ready for the new school year? I return to work on Tuesday, but I know a lot of you have already begun the 2013-2014 school year. Those of you who are new teachers will benefit from that tab at the top, so take a look and let me know what you would like to see here. Here are a few more posts to make your year great:
10 Places to Find Back to School Templates

15 Sites for Classroom Management Templates and Forms

20 Places to Find Award and Certificate Templates

22 Resources to Teach About September 11

24 Places to Find Bulletin Board Display Ideas

40 Ways to Obtain Information on Grants and Grant Writing

136 Interactive Educational Games By Subject Area

Holiday Resources From September to June

Icebreakers for the Start of the School Year


This particular post will be added to the FREE page listed at the top of the blog. Links with a * indicate those I found from Joyce Valenza's super post here.

9 Steps to Create a Classroom Poster Using Google Docs


40 Retro Library Posters- my post from last year


*288 FREE Classroom Posters- from the Busy Teachers; contains infographics, posters for all grade levels


*Big 6 Posters- from Franklin/Chow


Brainy Betty's Free Posters- includes posters for orchestra, band, track


*Common Sense Media- digital literacy posters


Free Classroom Posters- from Teach With Me, covers math, science, alphabet, much more

Free Mini Posters- from Scholastic; 4 posters

Google Image Search- millions of results for large images; different worded search here

*Jan Brett's (author) Classroom Signs- animals on the posters; for younger grades; about 20 posters


Make Your Own Classroom Poster- use any photo-editing program
Motivator- create your own motivational poster


Peanut Free Classroom Posters- from Allergy Free Table

Poster My Wall- choose from their poster designs and modify them or start from one of their templates. Downloads are free, but the better quality downloads cost $$

Printable Classroom Signs- from Freeology; about 4 pages includes quotes from famous people


Poster Street- 12 posters for younger grade teachers

Science Method Printables

Southern Poverty Law Center- provided by a partnership of Teaching Tolerance, the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES) and Facing History and Ourselves.


TeacherVision Posters- 233 pages of posters cover grades K-12 (they tell you the grade)


*Turn a Quote into a Masterpiece

Monday, August 26, 2013

Thank You to My Fellow Media Specialists




Now that the summer has come to an end, I wanted to take a moment to personally thank the media specialists who contributed guest posts the past two months. Hope you all have a wonderful, successful school year!





  • Mary Alice Anderson  (who was my teacher for two online courses I took)
  • Debbie Alvarez
  • Arlen Kimmelman (incoming President of the NJ Association of School Librarians)
  • Tammy Langenberg
  • Linda Lindsay
  • Natalie Lorenzi
  • Julie Spang
  • Valerie Stein

Last Guest Post of the Summer: You Already ARE Your School's Technology Coach

It’s not a new discussion (see “For Further reading” below). It’s certainly not a discussion with an easy resolution. Just think of all the titles you, your school, your district, and the public struggle to figure out what to call you: school librarian, school library media specialist, teacher-librarian, technology “tech” coach, instructional technology coach (or just instructional coach), peer coach, classroom tech coach, 21st Century technology literacy coach, technology integration coach, or facilitator or coordinator or resource or support or leader or...


Without a doubt our own identity crisis only adds to the confusion. Earlier this year I created an infographic illustrating the overlap of a school librarian’s role with that of a classroom teacher.



So I decided to try my hand at creating an infographic to attempt to decipher the roles of school librarian and technology coach.  

Before I did a search for icons to use from http://www.iconarchive.com, I thought I might use photos. I did a search on http://search.creativecommons.org/ focusing on Google Images and typed in “cool librarian.” Most of the resulting pictures included books. Then I used the same site to do a search for “tech coach” -Texas. (Try the search; you’ll see why I omitted ‘Texas.’) Most of these picture results included computers.

Herein lies the predicament #1. As my photo search reminded me with a metaphorical slap to the head, school librarians are historically, traditionally, perpetually perceived as the keeper-of-the-books. Nevertheless, school librarians are equally, if not differently, qualified to be technology coaches.


What I’ve learned from attending (many) workshops and reading (even more) testimonials is that what makes a great technology coach is relationships. Period. While it helps to be aware of...
… the differences between information literacy and technology literacy,
… and that technology troubleshooting is part of computer literacy,
and it is invaluable to remember that …
... no matter what, our focus should always be on student learning,
the bottom line is trust. People in the role of technology coach must be perceived as peers and partners not penalties and punishments. School librarians and technology coaches both exist to make the teachers look good and be more effective not to report back to administration that so-and-so is a resistant technophobe or an old dog who won’t learn new tricks.

Herein lies predicament #2: Consider a school librarian’s effect: If we’ve done our jobs well in collaborating with a classroom teacher and planning/supporting a lesson, the classroom teacher shines, and the school librarian is invisible. (Unless we’re co-teaching, naturally.) The very nature of our jobs jeopardized our own opportunities for widespread, school community acknowledgement of our technological talents. Even the job title some librarians prefer - ‘specialist’ - pigeonholes us. Technology coaches don’t use the term ‘specialist;’ they use coach or facilitator or coordinator or resource or support or leader or...

We already are our schools’ technology coaches. In addition to being the keeper-of-the-books and all that entails, is there anything in this list or on the infographic that you do not do? (If there is, you should be doing it!)

provide access to information
align standards
assess online resources
collaborate at all levels
create digital content
develop and implement digital literacy curricula
promote digital ethics
serve multiple grades
provide in-house resources
collaborate on lesson plans
model lifelong learning
apply multiple modes of contact
facilitate eLearning
create rubrics
provide in-context teacher technology training
train staff and students to incorporate technology
teach by standards
participate in strategic planning
implement pre-assessments
implement post-assessments
remediate students
provide teaching staff P.D. training
recommend technology infrastructure
provide support staff’s P.D. training
manage video-conferencing
provide Web access to resources
participate in troubleshooting


What you can do... If you know you do all of these things, or could do all of these things, but your school district is jumping on the trendy technology coach bandwagon...

Show the infographic to your administrators Get your board-approved job description to include the things you really do, not what they think you do Work with the willing: work with the teachers with whom you already have trusting relationships and ask them to help you entice the doubters by touting their own successes with your services Make sure you’re on your district’s technology committee and strategic planning committee Volunteer to present at department meetings and board meetings Stay up-to-date on school technology through journals, blogs, workshops, conferences, etc., and then share what you learn with your colleagues and administration.


At the very least, ask questions:
  1. If staff development has no time to implement technology coaching now, how will this differ or enhance the P.D. staff receives from the current model?
  2. If the library media center (i.e., school librarian) researches, acquires, maintains and trains on digital content, is a redundant but separate system being created or will the educational technology coach(es) and the school librarian(s) be working in tandem? What is the role of the school librarian as we see it vs. how administration sees it?
  3. Is the educational technology coach a district position or a school position?

Don’t be shy. Don’t be passive. We help ourselves to help others when we help others know about how we help. Or as Douglas Adams wrote in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, “Zaphod marched quickly down the passageway, nervous as hell, but trying to hide it by striding purposefully.” Stride purposefully; you already are your school’s technology coach because you are a school librarian.

For further reading:

Beglau, Monica, Jana C. Hare, Les Foltos, et al. International Society for Technology in
Education.Technology, Coaching, and Community. Eugene, OR: ISTE, 2011. Web. http://www.isteconference.org/uploads/ISTE2013/HANDOUTS/KEY_81724011/Coaching_Whitepaper_digital.pdf.

Cofino, Kim. "Libraries & EdTech: Like Peanut Butter and Jelly!." Always Learning. Edublogs.org,
Hamilton, Buffy. "Do I Really Have to Leave the Role of School Librarian To Do the Work of a
School Librarian?." The Unquiet Librarian. Wordpress, 12 April 2012. Web. 28 Jul. 2013. http://theunquietlibrarian.wordpress.com/2012/04/02/do-i-really-have-to-leave-the-school-library-to-do-the-work-of-a-school-librarian/.

"ISTE | NETS for Coaches NETS Project." ISTE | NETS for Coaches NETS Project. International
Society for Technology in Education, 2011. Web. 29 July 2013. http://www.iste.org/store/product?ID=2595

"New Jersey Study of School Libraries." NJASL. New Jersey Association of School Librarians, n.d.
Web. 2 Aug. 2013. http://njasl.org/NJ_Study.

Pentlin, Floyd. "Who’re you gonna call? The “school librarian”." AASL Blog. American Association of
School Librarians, 17 January 2010. Web. 28 Jul. 2013. http://www.aasl.ala.org/aaslblog/?p=913.

Guest Blogger Info
Arlen Kimmelman, Ed.M., M.A., NBCT
President-Elect, New Jersey Association of School Librarians
School Librarian, Clearview Regional HS (NJ)





Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Guest Post: Cultivating Diversity in Your Library

According to the latest census, minorities now make up about 37% of the U.S. population, and we’ll be a “minority-majority” nation by 2043. Yet the Cooperative Children’s Book Center (CCBC) calculates that 90% of books published over the last two decades are written by or about caucasian Americans. With so few books out there representing minority cultures, what’s a librarian to do? Plenty, according to Dr. Katie Cunningham, Assistant Professor, Manhattanville College in this must-read blog post by publisher Lee  & Low Books: “It is librarians who are the scholars of children’s literature and should be seen as tremendous resources within school and local communities.”


So how can we cultivate diversity in our libraries?
Talk the Talk

We librarians love to talk books--we do it everyday. There are some books where race and setting and culture are an integral part of the story. If I were book-talking Duncan Tonatiuh’s picture book Dear Primo: A Letter to My Cousin, I might say:

Two cousins, Charlie and Carlito, have never met; one lives in the U.S. and the other lives in Mexico. Through their letters to one another, they discover that even though they do things in different ways, they are more alike than different. Would I hand this book to a kid from Mexico? Most likely. What about a kid who’s never traveled out of his or her hometown? Again, most likely yes. Spanish-speaking children will be thrilled to see Spanish words sprinkled throughout the text, and non-Spanish speakers will likely be excited to learn some Spanish words. But aside from the obvious cultural connections, I’d also hand it to a teacher who’s planning a lesson on letter-writing, or a unit on North American geography. I’d talk it up to the grade-level team who is teaching about communities, family, or transportation.
But other books that feature diverse characters have nothing to do with race. We’d never open a book talk about Katherine Patterson’s Bridge to Terabithia by saying, “This is the story of two white kids who...”

The main character in Mike Jung’s Geeks, Girls, and Secret Identities is Vincent Wu--superhero fan and all-around nice kid. Here’s how I might book-talk this one:
Vincent, president of the Captain Stupendous Fan Club, has been noticing lately that his favorite superhero is less than super--he’s losing battles that should be cake, and now his bumbling performances are threatening the safety of Copperplate City. Vincent is determined to help, but stumbles when he discovers that his favorite superhero is actually Polly, his secret crush. Race doesn’t factor into this funny, charming middle grade sci-fi tale at all. Would I hand this to a Chinese-American kid? Yes, if he or she likes humor, sci-fi, and a bit of romance of the non-mushy variety. Would I hand this to a Chinese-American kid who asks for historical fiction recommendations? No. This book isn’t for all Chinese-American kids, just like Bridge to Terabithia isn’t for all (or only) white kids. Geeks, Girls, and Secret Identities is for kids who love this genre, or for readers who gobble up graphic novels and are willing to branch out to stories with more text.

Digital Curation Many teachers would like to use more diverse literature in the classroom. But with a brand new class each year, it’s easy to fall back on read-alouds and literature circle picks that have worked in the past. As librarians, we can make our colleagues aware of the lack of diversity in children’s literature and invite them to be advocates of variety. One way to do this is to make resources easily available to them. I use Livebinders (www.livebinders.com), a virtual collection of resources formatted much like a physical binder with tabs and subtabs. I can imbed my binders in the library link of our school’s homepage, or share the link with staff only. Here’s an example of one binder I’ve started to put together that contains resources for teaching middle grade books about the immigration experience in the U.S.: http://www.livebinders.com/play/play?id=821829 . For each book, I’ve created a tab for authors’ websites, any teaching materials or curriculum guides, interviews, book trailers--anything that teachers might use with their students.

As Dr. Cunningham reminds us in the aforementioned Lee & Low interview, “It’s time for teachers, parents, and librarians to take stock of the the books they are reading aloud and putting in children’s hands and critically question whether the books they read represent our increasingly diverse society.” As librarians, we can begin with our own teetering to-be-read piles. What’s in yours?

Guest Blogger Info
Natalie Dias Lorenzi is an elementary school librarian in Fairfax County, Virginia and the author of Flying the Dragon, a middle grade novel for children (Charlesbridge, 2012). This fall she’ll be presenting at the Virginia Association of School Librarians (VAASL) Annual Fall Conference in Williamsburg, Virginia and at the American Association of School Librarians (AASL) 16th National Conference in Hartford, Connecticut as part of an author panel called Rising to the Global Challenge: Literature as a Tool for Creating World Citizens. Learn more at www.nataliediaslorenzi.com or follow Natalie on Twitter @NatalieLorenzi

Wednesday, August 14, 2013

Guest Post: On My Mind

Addressing a statewide group of media specialists, my former principal said, I have two simple wishes for my school--that when the students wake up in the morning they want to go to school, and when the staff wakes up in the morning they want to go to school. * He also talked about the importance of technology, staff development, and media specialists partnering in the school and beyond. Scott Hannon wanted the media center to be a place where kids wanted to be, where things were happening; joked that something was wrong if it was too quiet. I was fortunate to work with him; I miss middle school as I hear about exciting possibilities for today’s media specialists and for our students.

And, something is on my mind. Why are so many people still entering the field because they love books? One administrator told me she would not hire that person. I love books, too. That is not enough for today’s media specialist. Why do I read comments such as, I didn’t know technology and advocacy were part of my job. Do you mean I have to learn how to use all of this technology?

A soon-to-be media specialist now teaching third grade knew the teachers she worked with did not know how to access electronic books for their iPads. She knew the current media specialist would not help. She saw this as an opportunity to provide staff-development sessions; she recognized that staff development is always an important role.

Why, moving towards our third decade of Internet access in the schools are so many media centers lacking enough technology for even one class to do 21st century research? Why are there concerns about giving up shelving for more technology? Why are so many educators, including media specialists, not aware of the wealth of free database resources provided to their schools by their states? Why are still discussions about when to close for inventory? Technology has long made that unnecessary. A university professor said it well. I've visited many media centers; the thing teachers dislike the most is when the media center is closed at the end of the year for inventory.

The other day I caught a bit of a public radio discussion about accessing information. A panelist shared a discussion between two children. A boy said, I go to our school library and they only let me check one book out. His friend replied Why don’t you just steal? Why do people who want students to read put up barriers? It saddened me to hear this public dialog from non-educators. Perhaps the public airing will do some good. It saddens me that after many years of profound change in our careers I still hear about media centers that are unwelcoming and underutilized. It’s a wonderful opportunity for a new media specialist to make change.

When I discussed plans with Scott he often said, Do what’s best for kids. Along those lines, a few lost books are the cost of doing business. Teach responsibility, but fight problems that are worth fighting.

A few other nuggets of wisdom from administrators and other educators have stuck with me for years:
1. If people see you doing clerical tasks that's what they will think your job is. (Yes, some of it needs to be done; some does not.)
2. It's all about relationships.
3. We want a media specialist to help us with technology. We can take care of the literature.
4. Just do it; that’s why we hired you.
5. You can have any kind media program you -- or you and principal -- want to have!

Now nearing retirement as the district Superintendent, Dr. Hannon said,  It’s just a pleasure coming to work every day . . . and trying to do good things for all of the students in the district. **

I hope that all media specialists love going to work every day, are good things, and making your media center a place where kids – and teachers -- want to be.

* Dr. Scott Hannon, Minnesota Educational Media Organization Conference, October 1996
**Winona Daily News, July 12, 2013)
Winona Area Public Schools begins search for new leader
Winona Daily News, July 12, 2013
http://www.winonadailynews.com/news/local/article_75d9c1b0-eaab-11e2-8af3-001a4bcf887a.html
_________________________

Guest Blogger Info
Mary Alice Anderson, Online Instructor, School of Education
andersonmary@uwstout.edu
University of Wisconsin - Stout
http://www.uwstout.edu/soe/profdev/primarysources.cfm
http://www.uwstout.edu/faculty/andersonmary/index.cfm
http://maryalicea.wordpress.com
Internet@ Schools NEW Media Center Columns

Friday, August 9, 2013

Trying a New Look: A Work in Progress

I hope you didn't think you had reached the wrong page. You are on the correct blog; it's just going through some changes. I downloaded a copy of my old template, (At least I THOUGHT it had been saved) only to discover that it was nowhere to be found on my hard drive. EEEKS. I am still trying to tweak some HTML code on this template, as well as trying to decide if I really like it. Anyone out there have a similar experience trying to change their template? Feel free to comment below, since misery loves company. Thanks.

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