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Entries in Odds and Ends (25)

Wednesday
Jul112007

What would Karl see?

In a recent post to the Fischbowl, Karl Fisch (author of the fantastic "Did You Know?" show) identifies Mankato Schools as ones he would like to visit. I am flattered and we would be delighted to host you, Karl. I've always found that school visits (especially it seems as part of an accreditation team) have been real learning experiences for me.

But what would Karl see if he visited the Mankato Public Schools? And more to the point, what would be worth seeing?

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We are, I think, an above average school district for Minnesota. Our 10 elementaries, 3 middle and 3 high schools serve about 7,000 kids in the region. I never really know how to define us when asked if we are a rural or urban district since the "greater" Mankato area is close to 50,000 people but we are surrounded by farms and smaller communities. Mankato itself is a terrific place to live. Small enough you know the mayor, yet big enough to have a large bookstore. The state university and community college are a blessing. As is being about 1 1/2 hour drive from Minneapolis and St. Paul - in themselves the nicest big cities in the country. At least when the temps are above 20 degrees.

One thing Karl might notice is our small class sizes - 21.4 average. If he looks at the finances, he would also know that we are below state and regional average in the amount we spend per pupil each year with an additional operating budget over the state basic formula of only $445 per student, compared to the state average of $796. That means that we run a  tight ship financially, have very little bureaucracy, and plunk most of our dollars right into the classroom. Our superintendent was our business manager for years and enjoys a high level of both staff and community trust as a transparent and approachable leader. We value collaborative decision-making very highly. Our elementary schools have around 400 kids on average and are neighborhood-based.

As of 2006, our ELL population was 6%, our SPED population was 14% and our FRP lunch population is 32%. (Nice numbers until you try to apply for grants based on need.) We are in the enviable position that our student population is growing slightly, unlike many of shrinking neighboring districts or the booming suburban areas north of us.

I am always proud of how well our buildings, some dating to the 1920s, are maintained. All our facilities are clean, safe and in good repair - which demonstrate respect for our staff and students. Yes, it means putting up with cantankerous custodians who don't want "their" buildings messed with at times, but the ownership these men and women take shows in the spit and polish of the hallways and rooms. Despite some of our buildings having been constructed at a time when electricity was considered something that might be a passing fad so only one outlet was put in a room, we've managed to wire all the classrooms with voice, video and data. And all classrooms have a phone, a TV, and, at minimum, one teacher computer. Most classrooms have at least a handful of older networked student computers and access to either carts of computers or AlphaSmarts.  About 1/3 of our classrooms now have a mounted LCD projector, SmartBoard and speakers - with plans for the same equipment to be added to all the classrooms over the next few years.

We have excellent library facilities - good collections, good spaces, good online resources, and computer labs in or adjacent to each. And of course, excellent librarians serving each building - full time if over 400 in enrollment.  Our secondary schools also contain specialized computer labs for science, writing, tech ed and business ed.

Karl, if you poke your nose in a classroom while school is in session, I can't predict what you see. Plenty of traditional teaching going on - lecture, workbooks, small group work, I'll guarantee. Lots of SmarBoard use in classrooms that have them. What I always see when I visit are excited, busy elementary and middle school kids; bored and restless high school students (which is most likely true in 95% of this country' schools). You'll see a few teachers in every building doing brilliant, innovative things and the others doing a very competent, very traditional job. I am guessing the most important stuff happening is happening unevenly, and possibly invisibly - at least where technology is concerned. Oh, one reason we have a great staff is simply because we always have a large number of applicants for every job we post. Smaller schools in the area serve as our farm teams in a sense.

We have good enough schools. Good enough I sent my own son to them, K-12. And good enough that I have always been proud to say I work in them. Exemplary? Worth visiting? I don't know. Just because I write about our schools doesn't make them better than others - only more "known." We are not high flying innovators with 1:1 laptop projects or lots of online learning or massive numbers of Teachers 2.0.  If we have a fault, it is that we are "good enough," that we don't have to try many new things. We are possibly the text book case of the good standing in the way of the great.

And I have always thought that there really aren't such things as good schools or good school districts, only good teachers. When the state started giving us "star" ratings, I wrote that 5 star teachers can be found in 1 star schools and 1 star teachers can be found in 5 star schools. I think that is still true.

Probably the best thing I can say about our schools is that you get a good feeling walking into them. People - staff and students - are for the most part open, productive, safe and pretty happy. If you can figure out how to bottle that, Karl, it might be worth the trip.

Come over anytime... 

 

Tuesday
Jul032007

Odds and Ends - Day lilies in bloom edition

paulgarden.jpgI actually have all of July at home. First time in I don't know how long I've had a entire month that did not require getting on an airplane. I may have to sneak across the border into North Dakota just say that I was at least out of state. We have a "destination" wedding up in East Grand Forks soon. That may be my chance.

But the day lilies are profuse thanks to the LWW's gardening work, the boat's running well, and life is good on the lake. Not a bad month to be home, all said.  

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Nice to see that echoes of the Atlanta NECC are still sounding. I was delighted that a young colleague wrote to me:

And...you know all that "young punk blogger" stuff criticizing ISTE and large conferences?  I need to publicly retract all those statements.  NECC was the best professional experience of my life.

 There may be hope for the world yet.

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John Pederson posted on his Flicker account this photo that just cracked me up:

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John found it ironic. I don't know. I've always said that a thousand words is worth a picture.

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Dave Warlick made an interesting observation about the impact of bloggers on the NECC conference:

It was mentioned that there were almost 20,000 educators in attendance in Atlanta.  They were teaching, learning, conversing, and taking oh so much home with them — and compared to that, we (bloggers) are just a cult. 

Are bloggers what Ian Jukes would call the "committed sardines" who will start the entire school headed in a new direction?

Would it kill the fun if next year attendees agreed to commit to live blogging specific sessions? Seems like some sessions were well-covered and others ignored this year. Organized spontaneity - I like the concept.

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At last, an iPod I can get excited about. A proposed Apple ebook reader using the iPod as a driver. Cool clip - check it out.

ipodbook1.jpg  ipodbook2.jpg

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Joyce Valenza asks that we edit her "You know you're a 21st century librarian if . . . " manifesto wiki.  A great exercise in seeing how well we as individuals are fulfilling our 21st century roles. Get to editing!

Oh, don't confuse this with my "You Know You're a Librarian in 2005" written way back when. 

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 It looks like I'll need to add Andrew Keen's book The Cult of the Amateur: How Today’s Internet is Killing Our Culture  to my reading list. You've got to love a contrarian.

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Brady and I visited the Apple Store at the Mall of America last Saturday to look at the iPhone. Very cool. I picked it up and poked buttons with my pointer finger and got nowhere. Mr "Net Gen" picked it up and had it dancing in seconds by sliding his thumb across the screen. Who knew fatherhood could be so humiliating?

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I've got a call in to register for Virtual World Librarianship - Your Second Life, a course being offered by the University of Illinois this summer. Here's the description:

Avatars! Linden Dollars! Librarianship! Librarianship? What ARE they talking about?
To discover how avatars, Linden dollars, and librarianship relate to one another, join us in a continuing education course on librarianship in the virtual world of Second Life. Second Life is a 3-D virtual world entirely built and owned by its residents, including real life librarians on Info Island.

Week One:  Introduction to Libraries in Virtual Worlds
Week Two:  Second Life 101
Week Three:  Collections, Resources, and Exhibits in Virtual Environment
Week Four:  Reference and Information Services in Virtual Worlds
Week Five:  Managing and Working in a Virtual Library or Department
Week Six:  Skills Needed by 21st Century Librarians in Virtual Worlds

The two-hour synchronous sessions will meet online in Second Life. Asynchronous discussions and weekly assignments will be posted to Forums on Moodle, the course management system used at GSLIS.

Oh, oh. Just learned all sessions are sold out. I'll see if I can be put on the waiting list for next semester. Phooey.

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That's it. Enjoy your July. Hope there are some day lilies somewhere in it.

Tuesday
Jun192007

Odds and Ends - paperspam

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The photo above is a single day's worth of paper spam I've received as a registrant for the NECC conference. Where's the paperless society we've all be waiting for?

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If you are blogging or blog reading NECC, my session has its own tag (Tag=n07s582), thanks to Steve Hargadon's good work assigning tags to all the sessions.  The SIGMS Forum is (Tag=n07s877).  The idea for separate session tags came up in a conference call meeting last week  and it was only hours later that Steve has this information up. Amazing. And thank you, Steve.

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The old gas grill was shot, so I picked up a new one at the big box store - an inexpensive one since I've always felt the fancier the grill, the higher the expectation of the cook. Anyway,  I knew putting the thing together would be a pain in the patootie. And it was. But what made it less so, besides the good but short lived help from grandson Paul, was that all the screws, bolts and other small bits came in a nifty package that clearly identified each piece. Picture above. Perhaps the world is becoming a better place.

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I guess my imagination is limited. Just how does one get creative with a storage locker? Have North Mankato business owners been reading Daniel Pink?

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npr.jpgWhile I was driving into work this morning there was a cute story on NPR about creating the perfect CD mix of love songs for a wedding. (With three family weddings this summer, my ears perk up when I hear "wedding.") But was I hearing correctly when the story's author said he made CDs of the songs for all the members of the wedding party? We teach kids this is illegal. I wonder if NPR will hear about it?

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Off to Virginia Beach and then NECC is a couple hours. Looking forward to seeing everyone. Oh, you will be able to recognize me by my name badge. (Thanks to Marianne Malmstrom, the KnowClue Kid, for making these.)

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