That's the problem--"discovery."  If  I didn't have print periodicals, students wouldn't seek them out.  I have a comfortable furniture grouping near the print periodicals and students will scan the shelves for something that interests them.  I know at least some are looking because the magazines are frequently out of order, but I don't have any statistics to prove it.  I plan to continue to get print periodicals as a way to tempt students with reading materials.

Tracy Earnshaw
Coginchaug Regional High School
Durham, CT


On Thu, May 5, 2016 at 10:06 PM, Michelle Luhtala <mluhtala@me.com> wrote:
We've been migrating to Flipster (EBSCO). So far, it's just an experiment (se selected the cheapest magazines). Discovery is the challenge. Our latest strategy was to embed our magazine carousel at the top of our EBSCO Discovery Service (EDS) search results page. Possible distraction, but ...

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On Wed, May 4, 2016 at 3:07 PM, Kathy McNeiece <kmcneiece@hamdenhall.org> wrote:
I let my subscriptions go as well- and no one noticed! 
Flipster is another tablet based magazine- I've checked them out through my local library. 

Kathy

On Wed, May 4, 2016 at 2:27 PM, Carol Ansel <cansel@williamsschool.org> wrote:
I'm in a 6-12 school - when I arrived there were several magazine subscriptions going - I think maybe they had been parent-funded? With a very tight budget I let them all go - next to no one noticed. I put out the old yearbooks in their place - the kids love to leaf through those!

Anyone had any experience with tablet-based magazines? I think EBSCO sells them. For the most part we seem to be talking high-interest leisure titles - the stuff one picks up in a waiting room and browses through. Do kids do that anymore? Yes, there are magazines of teen interest available through researchit CT, but I really don't see them accessing them that way.

Just my two cents

Carol Ansel
Librarian/Information Wilderness Guide
The Williams School
182 Mohegan Avenue
New London, CT 06320-4110




"Today, with our powers of concentration atrophied by the staccato communication of the Internet and attention easily diverted to addictive entertainment on our phones and tablets, book-length reading is harder still" -- Colin Robinson




diane jennings <diane.jennings@somers.k12.ct.us> writes:
I'm in a middle school and my students never take out magazines. I've drastically cut the number of magazines for students and purchased subscriptions that would contribute to content areas. When those come in I look for articles that pertain to projects/units of study and let the teachers know. 

On Wed, May 4, 2016 at 8:46 AM, LaMontagne, Todd (Ellis) <Todd.LaMontagne@ct.gov> wrote:




I am in a high school and I find very few students read magazines!  Even those that you would expect to be very popular such as Seventeen or Sports Illustrated go unread from month to month.  I spent nearly $800 on periodicals for the past two years and I am thinking of redirecting those funds towards books. 
 
Todd M. LaMontagne
Library Media Specialist
H. H. Ellis Technical High School
613 Upper Maple Street
Danielson, CT  06239
 



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Kathy McNeiece
Head Librarian
The Barbara Olin Taylor Learning Commons
Hamden Hall Country Day School

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