Edging Ahead…






         One Teacher-Librarian’s Journey from Print to Web…to Web2.0

January 30, 2009

CETIL – Certificate of Educational Technology and Information Literacy

Blogging Assignment #1: Thoughts on Personal Learning Networks (January 31)

RCopyright © 2009 Clipart Guide.com

Here we go again…

We’ve launched a new initiative at my school, and today’s the first “Face-to-face meeting of the 50 or so participants who are here either to;

  • Reaffirm beliefs about “21st Century Literacy” and learning,  and possibly to find educational “soul-mates” to share the excitement and try new ideas, or;
  • Learn what all the buzz about and come to their own conclusions about the applicability to their own teaching/learning environment, or;
  • Mesh current thinking and practice with new ideas, and hopefully come out the other side with a new set of skills that will buttress, rather than replace the skillset they already have as teachers, mentors, guides, and fellow learners

I hope that I fall in the last category. I believe that in over 30 years in education, I’ve learned some core skills that are still relevant and applicable in today’s world. At the same time, as a self-professed “lifelong Learner”, I need to be constantly open to new opportunities to hone my skills and learn new ones.  The “Personal Learning Network” is one of those.

I’ve always had a Personal Learning Network. In the 70’s, when I started out as a classroom teacher, it consisted mainly of the teacher down the hall, who mentored me in my first year, guided my early efforts to expand my learning horizons, and collaborated with me on my first Curriculum Development Project (for which we won a regional Pro-D initiative award). Later on, when I became librarian-certified, my PLN expanded to include members of my provincial Specialists’ Associaton (School Libraries). When I moved overseas, my PLN expanded again to include the librarians in the Southeast Asia Region, contacts in the American Association of School Librarians, and a succession of emerging electronic communication systems. Email has had the best “legs”, with my address book still containing live addresses for colleages I’ve been in touch with for, in some cases, up to 20 years. Building on that, a group of us launched “SILCAsia” in 2000 to help connect librarians from many more schools throughout the region. With SILCAsia, we developed a ListServe to help people keep in touch, and to bounce ideas off each other. At the same time, I subscribed to a succession of listservs,

And now we’ve got the Web2.0 tools to help broaden our PLN to a worldwide audience. In the past year, I’ve added the following to my PLN Toolbox. Some of these tools are “generic” education and 21st-Century Learning tools, some are specifically related to libraries and Information Technology, and some are specifically related to Writing, which is a developing personal interest which ties in many ways back to my work as an educator and Teacher-Librarian.

  • ABNA – the Amazon Breakthrough Novel Contest (1&2). After getting an entry into the first contest (Dec/07), there’s a Discussion Board where contestants can share writing stories, commiserate about the difficulties in getting noticed/published, and other topics near and dear to closet scribblers’ hearts.
  • Authonomy – a community of unpublished writers who post excerpts to work (usually in the final stages of editing) and solicit feedback from members. By either “Watchlisting” or “Shelving” a title, readers evaluate works. Each week, the 5 top-rated books are reviewed by Harper Collins editors, and some of these receive publishing contracts. The critical review aspect of this site makes it a  great learning tool for an aspiring writer
  • Delicious.com – I’m new to delicious, and just beginning to tag sites for my students, but have already used it for several assigments. The social tagging aspect of sites like this make them powerful and relevant to students’ changing interests.
  • Facebook – my Facebook account has languished as other demands on time intervened, but in our last IBO Extended Essay workshop, we piloted the concept of linking school resources through RSSfeeds directly from Facebook, which kids almost all use. This adoption of the tools that kids already use for social reasons is an area for
  • Google Reader – My RSS feeds from Google Reader now include feeds from a wider variety of sources than other before, including feeds on the environment, on writing and on 21st Century Learning in addition to the things I’ve been following (mostly educational journals) for a couple of years now. I need to reorganize my setup soon to account for this new volume of material.
  • Shelfari - a Library organizational tool billed as “a social network for people who love books” Discussions around titles, genres or literature themes are a great learning tool.
  • Twitter – On Twitter, I’m “rubisr”. I’m only following 25 people so far, and have even fewer followers. I was initially unconvinced by peoples “Tweets” about bathroom breaks, weather, and such, but recently  I’ve begun to find a community of people who are Tweeting things that are really useful to me. It’s a gradual filtering operation that I’m beginning to appreciate.

Which brings me back to the cartoon at the top of this post.  Web2.0 is great – SO great, in fact, that it risks drowning us in data, opinions and just social “chat”.  The questions this all begs are,

  • Where’s it all going to end?  (what’s coming down the pike next year? Next month? Next WEEK?)
  • How will I find tme to keep up with all these new threads in my personal and professional life?
  • How can I most efficiently filter out from all this new background “noise”, to find those nuggets that are worth passing on to the students, teachers and  parents who may be influenced by my work as a school Teacher-Librarian?

January 26, 2009

Are we there yet?

I stepped off the merry-go-round for a month, to spend time with family, reconnect with my “roots” in Canada – and to just savor introducing my eighteen-month old son to family and Christmas traditions I hope he’ll come to value. It wasn’t entirely intentional, but the dial-up account  at my parents’ home in Canada was just no longer up to the task. Even webmail was painfully slow, and web pages poured in at glacial speed, while video was basically inaccessible.  And then I got back and found that two weeks had slipped by without my getting back online. Now I’m really playing catch-up…

I spent much of the fall semester exploring  new technologies encountered at Learning2.0 in Shanghai and had striven to bring new interactivity to our work in ISB’s Main Library.  Returning from Shanghai in September, I had;

  • tinkered with our library blog (adding a couple of social networking options – Flickr feed, promotional title carousel, etc.)
  • launched a Student Writers’ Ning and tried to establish a Skype-video collaboration with student writers in Shanghai. Weekly f2f sessions between student writers at ISB and Shekou were to present students with new opportunities for personal expression, to promote interest in personal writing projects and to provide writers with external feedback from outside our closed community.
  • added a “Gamers” section to my HS Library Club (”Gutenberg’s Intent”) and invited MMORPGers to help me learn about Halo, WOW and the other games they’d rather play than work…
  • worked through an entry-level launch of our new online catalog (Follett’s Destiny, complete with Webpath Express and OneSearch, with one-stop access to 6 research databases)
  • helped prep our “Library Review” committee with background reading to our Main Library review, with key readings from Johnson, Stephens, Todd, Valenza and others currently leading the field.
  • worked at enhancing student interest in library research by buttressing sessions on subscription research tools with Delicious tagging and YouTube Videos (“Guybrarian” – listed 2004, actually 2005, & due for an update)
  • Joined Twitter to connect to like-minded librarians. My Twitter name’s rubisr – the same that I use for most public log-ons.
  • Updated my Second Life account, tweaked my avatar (he still looks like a ’60s dropout, but he’s all mine! – “Sonof Smadga”, if you’re in SL), and joined Chris Smith in a virtual round-table discussion on the state – and the future – of libraries, with Doug Johnson and Diane McKenzie.

In spite of best intentions, though, I was feeling, at semester’s end, farther than ever from achieving a balance between what’s possible and what’s practical in a real-world school library setting. I was less than enthralled with the real change brought about by any of my fall efforts. Specifically;

  • we haven’t really moved our blog forward in terms of functionality, and apparently not really captured student interest with it. A library walkthrough reveals continued prevalence of Google, Wikipedia, games and and social networking sites.
  • the challenges of flaky bandwidth, grainy webcams, and, frankly, sketchy goals have brought the Skype-video project to an indefinite hiatus. The Ning has garnered no new postings since November. Several of my student writers claim they’re working on material – but the Ning’s not what they need at this point, and the Skype sessions just seemed to have no purpose.
  • In spite of enhanced catalog functionality (TitlePeek adds a Google look; WebPath Express links to focused websites), we haven’t seen a change in student propensity for Googling through assignments.
  • Although the social tagging power of Delicious and YouTube is seductive, the research “course of least resistance” is still prevalent in both students – and in teachers. Truth is that a simple Google search still points researchers to adequate resources to meet most assignment needs.
  • My Twitter account has languished – no, it’s truly moribund. I haven’t posted since November. I still have 13 “followers” – but they just haven’t gotten around to dumping me yet.
  • Since stumbling through a virtual seminar on SL, where bandwidth limitations reduced my avatar to a shambling caricature, I haven’t been back. I’m intrigued with Second Life, and all virtual worlds – but realistically, at least from my vantage point in the rice-paddies outside Bangkok, it’s not really there yet.

And so, it’s time to rethink where I’m going with both my efforts to infuse new approaches into our library program, and whether I’m still obsessing over “stuff” (a la Ross Todd, 2008) rather than truly introducing transformational ideas that will connect with kids’ interests and needs.

In the month I was away from RSS feeds and daily blogs, the world has continued to climb that ever-steepening curve of technological evolution tied to educational innovation. Glancing over the Blue Skunk blog, the Never-ending Search, and Tame the Web, to name just a few, suggests that if I had my work cut out for my last semester, I’m now faced with a task of Herculean proportions.  My first inclination, honestly, was too simply say, “There’s no way. It’s just too much.”  But hey, what’s that saying about a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step?

As part of our efforts at ISB to institutionalize (dangerous word, but I think it fits in the purest sense) thinking about learning, we’ve launched a new series of graduate courses leading to either a Masters Degree or a Certificate on Educational Technology and Informational Literacy. One of our first assignments was to develop a blog, and to link it to the online course framework. This is going to be it.

Michael Stephens’ post on “Ten Trends and Technologies for 2009″ looks like a great place to start, particularly with the nuggets he’s embedded in the “What does this mean for libraries?” notes. A few of these include:

  • Investigate what it means to offer a space that feels like “home” where access and information is unimpeded (the Value of the Commons)
  • It’s not the library blog or wiki, or Bookspace, or GoodReads, or Meebo embedded librarian on the results page, it’s people…and connections…it’s about meeting people where they live and providing them with the services they need or want. It’s about encouraging them (The Care and Nurturing of the Tribe)
  • people want to feel connected and welcome. The want to feel that a space – physical or virtual – that they spend time in – belongs to them (The Importance of Personalization)
  • make things easy and useful…Use failures as learning moments to influence the next plan or service. Failure is cool if it doesn’t prevent you from moving forward (The Shift toward Open Thinking)

And so – with those exhortation to guide me, it’s back to the fray!

A little belatedly – Welcome to 2009! (or Gung Hoy Fat Choi, for the internationally inclined)

Rob

Hosted by Edublogs.