[CASL-L] AASL Hotlinks – April 2013
IRENE KWIDZINSKI
kwidz at sbcglobal.net
Mon Apr 1 09:06:14 PDT 2013
FYI
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: American Association of School Librarians <aasl at ala.org>
To: Irene <kwidz at sbcglobal.net>
Sent: Mon, April 1, 2013 11:08:25 AM
Subject: AASL Hotlinks – April 2013
AASL Hotlinks – April 2013
Email not displaying correctly?
View it in your browser.
Forward this email to a friend
Volume 12, Issue 1
April 2013
Advertisement
In This Issue:Association News
Education News
Resources for School Librarians
Grants & Awards
Partnership News
Member Spotlight
Association News
________________________________
School Library Month Video Contest Extended
AASL has extended its School Library Month 2013 student video contest
“Communities matter @ your library.” Contestants are urged to let loose their
creativity and use humor, drama, music and/or special effects to illustrate how
the school library program fosters a sense of community in their school.
Submissions for the video contest will be accepted through April 16, and winners
will be announced April 30. Contest judges will select three winners from all
entries received.
Disaster Recovery Preconference Workshop at ALA Annual
AASL has added a complimentary disaster recovery workshop to its preconference
line-up taking place at the ALA 2013 Annual Conference. The half-day session,
“Beyond Words: How to Recover from a Disaster in Your Library,” will take place
from 12:30 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Friday, June 28 in Chicago. Funded by the Dollar
General Literacy Foundation, the “Beyond Words” preconference workshop will help
attendees evaluate their school library program’s current disaster preparedness
plan to identify gaps and build solutions to overcome them. This session is
complimentary, but pre-registration is requested.
Take the KQ Readership Survey
The Knowledge Quest editorial board is seeking your input. As your
representatives, the board strives to steer the journal in directions that align
with the needs of the AASL membership. Your feedback will help the board better
serve your professional reading needs. It will take approximately 15 minutes to
complete.
Thought Leaders Discuss the Benefits of School Librarian Mentorship
AASL presents the newest set of podcasts in its 30 Second Thought Leadership:
Insights from Leaders in the School Library Community series. The just-released
30 Second series focuses on the March/April 2013 Knowledge Quest issue,
“Mentoring Through Partnerships,” and explores the question, “How does taking
the time to mentor others benefit a school librarian?" Those offering their
insights include:
* Toni Buzzeo, a career school librarian, AASL member and professional and
children's author.
* Ann M. Martin, an educational specialist in library services for the Henrico
County Public Schools in Virginia and a past president of AASL.
* Lisa Perez, an AASL member and network library coordinator for the Chicago
Public Schools Department of Libraries.
back to top
Education News
________________________________
Survey Finds Teachers Unprepared for Common Core
A recent survey from the EPE Research Center reports that nearly half of
teachers feel unprepared to teach the Common Core, especially to disadvantaged
students. The report finds deep wells of concern among teachers about their
readiness to meet the challenges posed by the Common Core in English/language
arts and mathematics.
Race to the Top Grants Not Worth Cost
A news item in the Columbus Dispatch finds that about 80 districts and charter
schools across the state of Ohio have backed out of the Race to the Top grant
program since the state received Race to the Top funding. In addition some
districts that have received money for years are reconsidering taking part in
the program, partly in response to costs but also because of new teacher
evaluations tied to the grant money.
PARCC Guidance Finds New Tests Will Take 8-10 Hours to Complete
According to guidance released by the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness
for College and Careers, new tests being designed for students in nearly half
the states in the country will take eight to 10 hours to complete, depending on
grade level, and schools will have a testing window of up to 20 days to
administer them. The consortium also created a planning tool that schools and
districts can use to gauge their technological capacity.
Idaho Partners with Khan Academy
Idaho will become the first state to partner with the Khan Academy to provide
free, online access to math, physics, and history classes, according to Reuters.
The state will launch the pilot program in 47 schools through a $1.5-million
grant from the J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation.
T Is for Transmedia Report
Produced by the USC Annenberg Innovation Lab and the Joan Ganz Cooney Center,
this paper provides a guidebook to transmedia in the lives of children age 5–11
and its applications to storytelling, play, and learning. Building off of a
review of the existing popular and scholarly literature about transmedia and
children, it identifies key links between transmedia and learning, highlights
key characteristics of transmedia play, and presents core principles for and
extended case studies of meaningful transmedia play experiences. One of its
goals is to put the design recommendations before media makers in the hopes that
the principles will reinforce the good work people are already doing and
encourage others to bring play and learning to the forefront of their transmedia
projects.
Teens Now Cell-Mostly Internet Users
A recent Pew study finds that smartphone adoption among American teens has
increased substantially and mobile access to the Internet is pervasive. It notes
that one in four teens are “cell-mostly” Internet users who say they mostly go
online using their phone and do not use some other device such as a desktop or
laptop computer.
Math and Science Educators Feel Unprepared
A report from the National Survey of Science and Mathematics Education finds
fewer than half of elementary teachers feel “very well prepared” to teach
science. It also reports that a lot of teachers don’t feel well-equipped to plan
instruction that meets the needs of students at varying levels of math and
science understanding and many don’t place a high priority on asking students to
explain and justify their method for solving a math problem or to supply
evidence in support of a scientific claim.
Supreme Court Upholds First-Sale Doctrine
In a 6-3 vote, the US Supreme Court affirmed consumer rights and libraries in
the high-profile Kirtsaeng v. Wiley & Sons, Inc. case by ruling that goods
lawfully made overseas are protected by the first sale doctrine. It affirmed the
rights of libraries to loan materials regardless of where the items were
manufactured (PDF file).
Algebra I and Geometry Curricula Curriculum Study
A report from the National Assessment of Educational Progress finds that the
drive to get all students to take college gateway courses has succeeded, but
students taking Algebra I and Geometry classes are getting considerably less
substance than their course titles would suggest. This report looks at the math
course-taking patterns of America’s high school graduates to examine the content
and challenge of Algebra I and Geometry courses in our nation’s public high
schools.
back to top
Resources for School Librarians
________________________________
New AASL Webinar Envisions Library Spaces for 21st-Century Learners
Building learning environments that empower 21st century students will be
explored in “Envisioning New Library Spaces,” a new webinar from AASL. Presented
by Margaret Sullivan, the webinar will provide attendees with observation skills
to help them conceptualize the future of their school libraries. The webinar
will be offered at 11:30 a.m., 12:30 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. Central on April 2,
allowing school librarians across the country to attend at their convenience.
Common Core Webinar Available in eCOLLAB
The archive of the recent webinar, “Join the Common Core Conversation,” is now
available online in eCOLLAB. Presented by Kristina Holzweiss, the webinar
introduces participants to professional social networking using Edmodo and
illustrates its use in establishing nationwide connections. AASL members can
access the webinar via eCOLLAB by logging into the AASL website using their
ALA-provided website login. Nonmembers who wish to view the webinar and other
archived professional development can receive access to eCOLLAB resources with
an annual subscription of $199 per year.
E-Book/E-Reader Guidance
E-books and e-readers continue to confound school librarians, whether they are
running a high-action BYOD high school program or an elementary school library
with interactive white boards. It is clear that everyone needs to get up to
speed quickly on how to purchase, manage, and deliver electronic books to
students and faculty. AASL’s Essential Links to e-books and e-readers can
provide some guidance. If you’ve got a great go-to blog or an article that makes
electronic books make sense, please add it to the listing.
Assessing Deeper Learning
A post on the Partnership for 21st Century Skills’ blog examines how to assess
deeper education. It notes, “today’s most effective teachers drive students
deeper into the content being studied by preparing them to be investigators and
problem solvers able to transfer what and how they learn across the curriculum
and into outside-of-school life situations. They focus on learning rather than
grades or test scores.”
How to Spark Creativity
A blog post and video from TED Prize winner Sugata Mitra explores how to spark
creativity, curiosity, and wonder in children. He writes, “Unlocking the power
of new technologies for self-guided education is one of the 21st century
superhighways that need to be paved. Profound changes to how children access
vast information is yielding new forms of peer-to-peer and individual-guided
learning.”
Learn the Basics of Financial Education for Financial Literacy Month
April is Financial Literacy Month, making it a good time to visit
www.mymoney.gov, the U.S. government's website dedicated to teaching all
Americans the basics about financial education. The site includes resources for
youth, teachers, parents, and caregivers.
Sharing Wordless Picture Books Article
Reading Rockets’ free article “Sharing Wordless Picture Books” offers tips on
how to bring wordless books alive. Sharing wordless books can build important
literacy skills, including listening skills, vocabulary, comprehension and an
increased awareness of how stories are structured. The article is available in
English and Spanish.
Template for a Parent Survey for Schools and Districts
Survey Monkey has teamed up with the Harvard Graduate School of Education to
design a parent survey to better assess key areas such as parental support,
child behaviors, parent engagement, parent self-efficacy, school climate, and
school program fit. Schools and districts can adapt the survey questions and
administer the surveys online or via pencil and paper without authorization from
Harvard or Survey Monkey.
Keep an Eye on Eye Health!
Millions of people living in the U.S. have undetected vision problems and eye
diseases. To bring attention to the importance of early detection and treatment,
AASL is working with the National Eye Institute (NEI) to celebrate Healthy
Vision Month. Held each May, Healthy Vision Month encourages all Americans to
get a dilated eye exam—one of the easiest and most important things you can do
to protect your vision. Here are a few ideas:
* Place NEI materials in your library where students and faculty can see them
and learn about the importance of taking care of their eyes.
* Encourage students to learn about Healthy Vision Month by giving away free
educational materials including posters and coloring pages.
* Work with teachers and advisors to incorporate eye health in the school’s
curriculum for the week to teach students about Healthy Vision Month and the
importance of getting an eye exam. The Healthy Eyes Toolkit can help.
* Promote Healthy Vision Month by displaying eye-related books in the library
along with fun and educational materials.
* E-mail the NEI Healthy Eyes Bulletin to your listserves and colleagues to
help them learn more about taking care of their eyes.Technology Counts 2013
Report
Technology Counts 2013, the 16th edition of Education Week’s annual report on
educational technology, tackles how school districts are working to incorporate
more multimedia into classrooms, upgrade online professional development, and do
a better job using data to improve student achievement. The report finds that
even though nearly every school in the country is now connected to the Internet,
not all of them have the kind of connections that allow teachers and students to
make full use of digital learning tools.
back to top
Grants & Awards
________________________________
ALA Leadership Institute
The ALA is now accepting applications for Leading to the Future, a unique
four-day immersive leadership development program for future library leaders
offered by ALA in Chicago, Aug. 12–15. Led by ALA President Maureen Sullivan
with ACRL Content Strategist Kathryn Deiss, this inaugural Leadership Institute
will include a structured learning track as well as the opportunity for
individual development and is limited to 35 participants. Applications are due
by May 10.
Pearson Foundation Launches 2013 Read for My School Campaign
The Pearson Foundation launched the 2013 Read for My School campaign sponsored
by LeapFrog. The Read for My School campaign is a special We Give Books campaign
that gives students and school communities the chance to earn books for their
school libraries. We Give Books and LeapFrog will donate 150,000 new children’s
books to public elementary schools across the country through April 5!
Green-in-Action Awards from Green Education Foundation
The Green Education Foundation is sponsoring awards for projects that tackle
environmental education. Interested applicants must submit an application, along
with photo projects, videos, artwork, essays, or a project description
highlighting their work. Winners will receive $250 for their classroom or group.
Deadline is April 30.
Google Science Fair 2013
Google is looking for projects that will change the world through its Science
Fair 2013 competition. To enter, interested students must register (with
parental consent) and enter their project details into the Science Fair
dashboard. Young scientists ages 13–18 can win an assortment of prizes,
including LEGO kits, magazine subscriptions, scholarships, and the grand prize
includes a $50,000 scholarship and a trip to the Galapagos Islands. Deadline is
April 30.
The Awesome Foundation Grant
The Awesome Foundation funds projects that bring communities together.
Submissions are reviewed and $1,000 fellowships are distributed monthly. Some
chapters also routinely contact applicants for interviews before awarding the
fellowships. Anyone can apply.
School Turnaround AmeriCorps Competitive Grant Program
U.S. Department of Education Secretary Arne Duncan and Chief Executive Officer
of the Corporation for National and Community Service Wendy Spencer announced a
competitive grant program that will provide $15 million in public funds over
three years to reinforce and accelerate intervention efforts in the nation’s
lowest-performing schools. The new School Turnaround AmeriCorps will support the
placement of a dedicated cadre of AmeriCorps members in persistently
under-achieving schools. A notice of intent to apply must be submitted to CNCS
by April 2. Applications are due April 23.
Beacon Society’s Jan Stauber Grant Applications Due May 1
Teachers, librarians, scout leaders, and Sherlockian literary societies have
until May 1 to apply for the Beacon Society’s major funding project, The Jan
Stauber Grant. The grants provide up to $350 to fund the development of programs
that will introduce young people to the stories about Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s
fictional detective. Completed applications are to be returned to The Beacon
Society, c/o Elaine Coppola, 103 Kenny St, Fayetteville, NY 13066, or
emcoppol at syr.edu.
Pearson Foundation Announces Student Digital Storymakers Award
The Pearson Foundation and digital publisher, Atavist, have announced the
details of the first annual Digital Storymakers Award—an award that recognizes
excellence in original student nonfiction narrative that blends, text, photo,
video, interactive maps and other rich media features. The award is open to high
school, college, and graduate students, including those studying journalism,
graphic arts, writing, photography and documentary video/film, who create a
nonfiction, multimedia narrative. The 2013 grand prize is $5,000 and publication
in the Digital Storymakers App. Story submissions are due April 15.
back to top
Partnership News
________________________________
Jumpstart’s Read for the Record
The Pearson Foundation and Jumpstart announced that Penguin’s children's book
Otis, by New York Times bestselling author Loren Long, has been selected as the
official book of the 2013 Jumpstart’s Read for the Record campaign, an annual
reading celebration that highlights the need for high-quality early education in
America by mobilizing adults and children to set a record for the largest shared
reading experience. Jumpstart’s Read for the Record will take place on Thursday,
October 3. As in years past, record breakers will be able to help set a new
world record by reading the book for free at We Give Books
(www.wegivebooks.org), the free digital reading initiative created by Penguin
and the Pearson Foundation.
Día! Diversity in Action 2013 Celebration
The Día! Diversity in Action 2013 Celebration is only a month away—have you
registered your library or school’s program yet? Register your Día Celebration
in the 2013 Día National Program Registry to build a national database that
showcases all types and sizes of Día programming and receive free bookmarks,
stickers, and buttons! Visit the Día website at http://dia.ala.org to learn more
about how you can celebrate diversity and connect children to a world of
learning through books, stores and libraries. The celebration is intended to be
year-round, culminating on April 30.
Guide to Leverage Mobile Learning
The Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) released “A Guide for
Administrators” to help school administrators consider the many implementation
issues around leveraging mobile learning in schools. The guide, which was
developed based on the shared experiences of pioneering schools and districts,
industry experts and leading scholars, provides key information and tips to
educate and support administrators interested in implementing mobile learning.
IT Leadership Survey
The Consortium for School Networking (CoSN) K-12 IT Leadership Survey finds that
80% of school district technology leaders predict flat or declining IT budgets
for the upcoming year. The top challenges facing IT leadership include budget
and resources, the transition from teacher- to student-centered culture, and
breaking down silos within districts. The top three priorities for district
technology leaders in the current school year are implementing Bring Your Own
Device (BYOD) strategies; preparing for the 2014-2015 Common Core State Online
Assessments; and increasing broadband access.
2013 Whole Child Virtual Conference
Join ASCD for its third annual Whole Child Virtual Conference May 2–10. This
free, online event offers presentations from leading authors and experts and
discussions on how you can improve and grow your schools. ASCD's Whole Child
Virtual Conference provides a forum and tools for school sites and districts
around the world working toward sustainability and changing school cultures to
serve the whole child.
back to top
Member Spotlight
________________________________
Laura Ingram Featured in IMLS Blog
Librarian Laura Ingram's state-of-the-art library at Elizabeth Forward High
School in Elizabeth, PA, was featured in an IMLS blog post. The newly revamped
library features a café, beanbag chairs, separate studios for video and audio
recording, a small performance space, various laptop and desktop computers, and
flat-screen TVs.Its part of a growing movement in Pittsburgh and around the
country by educators to use digital technologies to create more opportunities
for experiential, hands-on learning.
Liza Perez Receives 2013 Technology Administrator of the Year
Lisa Perez, network library coordinator for the Chicago Public School Department
of Libraries, was named the 2013 Technology Administrator of the Year by the
Illinois Computing Educators. Each award winner will receive a commemorative
plaque, paid conference fees for ICE Conference, and a one-year’s free
membership to ICE. Awards are presented annually at the Illinois Computing
Educators Conference at Pheasant Run Resort and Convention Center in St.
Charles, Illinois.
back to top
AASL Hotlist
Envisioning New Library Spaces
A 21st-Century Approach to School Librarian Evaluation
Join the Common Core Conversation
(Clicking these links will first prompt you to log in to the AASL website.)
________________________________
AASL Calendar
April2: Webinar - Envisioning New Library Spaces
16: School Library Month Video Contest Submissions Due
26: Election Polls Close
________________________________
Latest AASLblog posts:2013 AASL Candidate Videos
Ideas for Using AASL Best Websites: Learn It in Five
Subscribe to AASLblog via:
Copyright © 2013 American Association of School Librarians, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this e-mail because you are a member of the American
Association of School Librarians (AASL).
Our mailing address is:
American Association of School Librarians
50 East Huron StreetChicago, Illinois 60611
Add us to your address book
unsubscribe from this list | update subscription preferences
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://mylist.net/archives/casl-l/attachments/20130401/09882f9e/attachment.html>
More information about the CASL-L
mailing list