To Whom it May Concern (only my curriculum supervisor and principal, I’m sure):
I’ve decided to blog my report from the 2006 New Jersey Association of School Librarians annual conference because, well, for me it has been all about Web2.0, otherwise known as the read/write Web, something I think my students need me to know about. So it’s about time I started blogging. This is my debut!
Because I have immersed myself while here in issues related to what Ross Todd calls “productive pedagogy” and technology that will make learning better for my students, I have not only debuted in the blogosphere here at WordPress, but I now have a del.icio.us social bookmarking account, a Flickr account, and an RSS feed through Bloglines. I can never turn back! Nothing will ever be the same in my life or in my teaching!
Much of this is a mandatory report of the conference, so if you are here looking for great insights into Web2.0 or how to use the read/write Web in education, you are much better off checking out David Warlick, Will Richardson or Wes Fryer (see how much I learned!). This is a way for me to demonstrate to my district how to use the new Web as a communications & collaboration tool. No brilliant use of the tools or seminal thinking. Just a start, that first leap of faith.
I attended the three-day annual conference of the statewide professional association for teacher-librarians in New Jersey. Following are snapshots of the workshops and events I attended:
Sunday, October 29, 2006:
- Workshop title: Webfeeds 101: How Bloglines Can Make You Look Brilliant
Presenter: Alice Yucht, retired teacher-librarian, technology consultant
Length: 1 hour
In this one-hour presentation, Yucht presented information on how to use RSS feeds to manage online resources for students and teaching faculty. This was a useful presentation of an important online tool to manage the sometimes overwhelming amount of data available on the Web that can be useful for students in learning and faculty in teaching and for professional development. RSS stands for Real Simple Syndication and, simply put, allows users to subscribe to a Web-based aggregation service that pulls from pre-selected Web resources and deposits them in users’ accounts on a regular basis. It’s like having a personal Web go-fer. Updates are regular posted to an account hosted on a Web-based server. In this way, e-newsletters and information are not clogging email inboxes but hosted on a remote web site to be viewed by users at their convenience. The services also allow tagging with keywords of resources so that aggregated information can be saved and “pushed” electronically to faculty. I am going to take Yucht’s advice and subscribe to an RSS feed on a service called “Bloglines.” It will enable me to more efficiently manage the overwhelming amount of data for students and teachers.
- Workshop title: Read/Write Web Tools for Student Projects
Presenters: Sophie Brookover, Senior Teen Librarian, Camden
County Library; and Shayne Russell, middle school teacher-librarian.
Length: 1 hour
This workshop was a presentation of a handful of a vast array of online tools that allow students and teachers to publish to the Web and conduct collaborative work on the Web. The three tools selected for presentation were Flickr, a photo-hosting Web service; del.icio.us, an online bookmarking service; and Classroom Blogmeister, a school blogging service. The presenters showed the various ways in which these social networking sites can be put to use in a community of learners, both with youngsters and among professional colleagues. These are but three among a vast array of tools that can be used to foster collaborative learning. Each of these tools allows various levels of security so that pictures of children and their writing are not posted to the open Web. They are excellent examples of the new ways that educators are finding to put the read/write Web to authentic use in learning and teaching. As the presenters noted, these tools represent the positive side of social networks that can be put to productive use with students.
- Workshop title: T + C = SA (Technology & Collaboration = Student Achievement)
Presenters: Jackie Gould, teacher-librarian, and Donna Armstrong, technology support teacher,Clearview
Regional
High School, Mullica HillLength: 1 hour
The presenteers demonstrated uses of technology in learning centered in the school library. Alternatives to traditional research paper were presented with special emphasis on classified students. Interesting uses of templated Web sites. RD libraries are fairly advanced in uses of technology for student presentation.
- Presentation by YA author Lois Duncan
Length: 2 hours
This acclaimed longtime author of young adult novels talked about her life as a writer for young people. She is a popular writer of suspense novels for young adults, including I Know What You Did Last Summer and Killing Mr. Griffin. It is always fascinating to hear an author talk about her life and work and this was no exception. It makes talking to our students about books more informed and personal. Duncan talked about her early experiences writing for true confessions magazines as a way to support herself and her three young children after her divorce. She then moved into writing actual novels and has become extremely popular among YAs who love murder mystery and suspense. Tuesday is Chris Crutcher, another favorite of mine.
report of Monday activities to follow