Search this site
Other stuff

 

All banner artwork by Brady Johnson, professional graphic artist.

My latest books:

   

        Available now

       Available Now

Available now 

My book Machines are the easy part; people are the hard part is now available as a free download at Lulu.

 The Blue Skunk Page on Facebook

 

EdTech Update

 Teach.com

 

 

 


Entries from September 1, 2009 - September 30, 2009

Wednesday
Sep022009

Today's realization

 

Wednesday
Sep022009

Do you have a library supervisor?

This e-mail came as part of a conversation that followed the guest blog post of Gary Hartzell:

I work for Dr. Barry Bishop whom you may know.  I’m in the Spring Branch Independent School District in Houston.  It’s a mixed district – half of it is very wealthy -George Bush Senior - lives in that part and half is Hispanic, ESL, Title I etc. etc.  I work in one of the Title I schools and would not have it any other way.

Dr. B, we call him is a true visionary – I know it is an overused words these day but he truly is. He knows exactly what a 21st century library will look like & is determined to provide it to our students.  At the last Texas Library Association meeting it was apparent that we were head and shoulders above the other districts in Texas when it came to using Web 2.0 tools.  He battles our IT department daily to open the filters – we have Facebook, Twitter and MySpace and I think we’re about to get YouTube.

He’s always pushing us (well me at least!) outside of our comfort zone.  He gives us just enough nudges and then all of a sudden we can’t remember when we weren’t doing whatever it was that we didn’t want to do in the first place.   He’s introduced Video Streaming, e-books & databases.  When he first came to the district we had just moved to an online catalog on dumb terminals.  The libraries now bristle with computers and technology.  He designed the Library Media Services web page http://library.springbranchisd.com/library-resources/ and took us step by step into the Internet.

When things don’t go well (like the year we lost our processing and ordering department due to budget cuts) he always comes up with solutions and provides the leadership we need to carry on.

When we lost our processing dept. he arranged for review lessons in cataloging (I hadn’t cataloged since library school) & found and introduced us to Marc Magician.

He demands a top notch performance from his librarians – and is equally demanding of himself.   He’s always open to comments and questions – in fact he knows that sometimes I won’t do as he asks but that I always have a good reason for bucking the tide.  I buck the tide often!

On top of all that he is a genuinely nice and honest individual. 

Thanks so much!

Guusje Moore

Wow. How many school librarians today have the services of a library supervisor? Even one (like yours truly) whose job is about 90% technology and 10% library service*? And how many of us are fortunate to work for person who exhibit's Guuje's boss's characteristics? (I have. See What makes a good boss?) Guusje's letter made me feel very guilty for not being a better department head for our librarians. We lost ground last year with budget cuts in both personnel and materials.

Guusje and her fellow Spring Branch librarians sound pretty lucky to have an advocate and leader for their department. But my questions would be how do school librarians that don't have this district-level support still have district-level influence?

Share your success stories...

Oh, and a letter like the one above says as much about the character of the writer as it does the subject. Any chance you want to move to Minnesota, Ms Moore?

* I was actually hired in 1991 as the district AV supervisor as my parking spot sign still reflects...

 

Page 1 ... 1 2 3 4 5