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Entries from May 1, 2010 - May 31, 2010

Thursday
May202010

The life-long role of libraries

This graphic, http://www.minitex.umn.edu/Communications/Director/ shows the journey of a student from pre-kindergarten through the K-12 educational system and either into the workforce or on to a higher education institution. Along the way, school, academic, and public libraries are all available to provide services to the student and parents in support of learning and information literacy. This graphic was developed after attendance at various P-20 meetings where it seemed important to show that libraries play an important role throughout the life of students and adults. Minnesota libraries collaborate in sharing services and resources. Once in the workforce, information continues to be available through the public library for lifelong learning and recreation activities.

Though the file on the website is a pdf file, it was made as a Powerpoint and I have both Windows 7 version and version 97-03. As a Powerpoint slide, you may want to customize it to your local situation. Please contact me if you want the Powerpoint slide.

Bill

Bill DeJohn, Director of Minitex
University of Minnesota
15 Andersen Library
Ph: 612.624.2839
E-mail: w-dejo@umn.edu
  • www.minitex.umn.edu
  • Well worth sharing, fellow librarians...

    Thursday
    May202010

    Anticipation, anticipation ...

    This is worse than waiting for Christmas as a kid.

    According to FedEx, my iPad was in Anchorage as of 6PM last night.

    In the meantime, I've been reading up...

    iPad Starter Guide (Thanks, Kathy Schrock!)

    and

    โ€œ20 Amazing iPad Apps for Educatorsโ€ by Samantha Miiller

     So, sing along with me and Carly Simon and Heinz ketchup...

    We can never know about the days to come
    But we think about them anyway, yay
    And I wonder if I'm really with you now
    Or just chasin' after some finer day

    Anticipation, anticipation
    Is makin' me late
    Is keepin' me waitin'

    And I tell you how easy it feels to be with you
    And how right your arms feel around me
    But I, I rehearsed those lines just late last night
    When I was thinkin' about how right tonight might be

    Anticipation, anticipation
    Is makin' me late
    Is keepin' me waitin'

    And tomorrow we might not be together
    I'm no prophet and I don't know nature's ways
    So I'll try and see into your eyes right now
    And stay right here 'cause these are the good old days

    (These are the good old days)
    And stay right here 'cause these are the good old days
    (These are the good old days)
    (These are the good old days)
    (These are the good old days)
    (These are.....the good old days)

    Wednesday
    May192010

    Teachers shouldn't have to be technology superstars

    Since when has the world of computer software design been about what people want? This is a simple question of evolution. The day is quickly coming when every knee will bow down to a silicon fist, and you will all beg your binary gods for mercy.  - from Bill Gates interview spoof

    A couple days ago I listened to a very enthusiastic teacher/techie explain how he built a "roll your own" content management system for teaching online classes. Discontent with Moodle, he created a stew of a half dozen free Web2.0 apps and a little HTML and Java coding and, voila, he had system he loved.* And I sat there thinking, 'What teacher in his/her right mind would not only refuse do this, but be able to keep from running screaming from the room at the thought of having to do this?"

    Let's face is - teachers should not and cannot be expected to be technology experts in order to use technology well. It's like asking good drivers need to be good car designers or good cooks to be good farmers. I don't think so. I want my teachers thinking about teaching and learning, not technology.

    Nathan left an interesting response to my last blog post in reference to creating a program that uses mobile computing devices systemically in schools. He observed:

    We've brought in a ton of iPod Touches in Special Ed with Stimulus money this school year. Monday we visited another school that was hosting a site visit, to check if we were missing anything. The key thing I came away with that day is it is ALL about great instruction. The 7th grade math teacher we observed was inspiring...and made me wonder if we had anyone that dynamic in our district to really extract all that technology has to offer in the classroom. To be fair, they might not have another teacher like him in their district. I felt good knowing we weren't behind the curve and ahead of pretty much all the other districts there, but worried that we might not have the players to pull it off. The Yankees do well because of Mark Texiera and CC Sabathia win games...not the grounds crew, the GM or the owner.

    But here's the thing, Nathan, - teachers should not have to be the instructional equivilant of Texiera to be able to use technology in the classroom effectively. The technology should be transparent (simple, intuitive, powerful) enough that any teacher who is open to new, or even enhanced, ways of teaching would quickly and willingly use the "stuff." Period.

    And it is our job as librarians and tech integration specialists to evaluate technologies with this in mind. We should review and reject the junk that is overly complex, time consuming and just plain badly designed. And keep it away from our hard working teachers.

    And yes, I've been beating this drum for a long time. ('Tis a Joy to be Simple, 2001)

    * If this fellow spent as much time on course content buidling as he did on creating the CMS, it must have been a terrific course!

     

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