Birthday:
December 3
Birthday:
December 3
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Hometown:
Olympia
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I am the teacher-librarian at River Ridge High School in Lacey, Washington...and needing to become more savvy about the new trends in our field!
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Greetings Sarah,
I'm Mike McQueen, teacher librarian and founder of http://www.GettingBoysToRead.com. Like many school districts, we are in a financial crises. Our school board recently proposed to eliminate ALL 20+ middle school teacher librarians and also cut all 90+ elementary schools to half time. Since we are the biggest district in all of Colorado, we worry this will cause other districts to follow suit. We launched an online movement and are going to do our best to put up a good fight.
If possible, please visit our Facebook page and "Like" us http://www.facebook.com/SupportSchoolLibraries . Adding a positive comment and sharing with your friends would help our morale as well. The board finalizes the budget soon so your timely support would be greatly appreciated!
Sincerely,
Mike McQueen
Teacher Librarian at McLain HS
Lakewood, CO
I'm a teacher librarian & recently started a community based blog for getting boys to read - http://GettingBoysToRead.com. Please send me a friend request if you'd like to network, share ideas, and learn more about getting boys to read.
Sincerely,
Mike McQueen
LET'S NETWORK HERE TOO (request me as a friend):
My FACEBOOK Profile
My TWITTER Profile</</body>
My husband and I are in the process of building our home. Since he's in the construction business himself we are trying to save some money by doing it mostly on our own and just calling in the sub-contractors as needed. With that said, we've done a lot of research to find the cheapest subs around, which sometimes means not using the ones he usually calls on. On top of this, we've just signed our 30 year mortgage loan. Talk about research...we went through TONS on paperwork to compare banks and lenders to try to find the best one. It's a little scary trying to make such huge decisions, but research is definitely necessary. While this isn't necessarily "fun" research, it is practical.
I think this posting thing is the way to go...even though I am super lame at it (but am trying to learn). You are using blogs, right? This is what they do for flicker and such- leave messages and comments for each other. Yes, they would have to be monitored. My issue is still (and this is probably jsut all teachers) the sense of caring about it. Be wary of the electronic portfolios...I agree with Chelsey.
The CBA holds some promise in that we have a chance to show the teachers and students our stuff and to get them (teachers, at least) invested in an outcome that both has some autonomy (form) and some top-downness (components). I would like to see some enhancements to the function of the CBA - portfolio building? history night?
Chelsey talked the other day about portfolios not fulfilling their promise - simply being yet another thing to have to do. What about creating a Ning (whatever that is) for your school and have students post their research (CBA's or whatever) and then they could "write on each other's walls. Hmm... it has promise, though I can only imagine what they might write on their walls. Ample oversight, of course (by the TL...?)
Sharyn
I think a big part of it is finding ways of connecting projects to students...and that means getting in the curriculum planning stages with teachers. I feel pretty savvy about what my teachers do, but I still have the fish reports AND the way out there research that kids definitely don't get connected with. I think that it is better to at least be involved with the fish reports to try to strengthen them rather than just throwing them out. I like to see students to real world (a weird phrase that I am not a huge fan of) end products- letters to the school board, presentations to younger students, editorials for the school paper. I think putting that context into their projects will help.
I wonder if you could post your lesson to your TL page so that others can "borrow" from you (citing their sources, of course!)
Did you refer to steps of the Big 6 in later projects with students as "adding the flour and sugar" etc to keep them engaged and in the process?
I tried to post a comment to your question about real world research skills but the page was closed to posting, so... I think people use research skills all the time, but they never call it that. Rather, they call it finding the best deal on a car, deciding how to vote, figuring out what to cook for dinner based on what is in the fridge, and finding child care, a new job, directions to the airport, the best treatment for a disease.
I read an article recently in Newsweek in which a biology professor tried to capture the attention of her non-science major students. They yawned their way through class, seeing biology as a lab requirement that had no bearing on their career choices and lives. She convinced them of its importance when she talked about enrolling one's ill relative in a clinical study to get the newest treatments. (Sanfeliu, 6/16/08, )
Information literacy is like Life Science - nobody knows they need it until they're using it (or lacking the skills to use it). I love your idea of talking to people at the swimming pool, grocery store, etc, to find out how and when they do research. I think you will net some interesting and quite convincing examples.