K-12 Online Conference 2009

A free conference for all K-12 educators will begin shortly. All sessions in the K-12 Online Conference 2009 are conducted online and if you cannot attend in real time (all session listings are GMT, AEDST is 11 hours ahead of GMT) as many sessions seem to begin around 11.30pm AEDST, links to presentations will be available at the K-12 Online Conference 2009 wiki.

k-12 online

The first session begins this evening and the conference runs for several weeks, wrapping up in January.

 

Pru Mitchell’s ‘Open and Social’ SLAV conference presentation

In October, Pru Mitchell, the Senior Education Officer at educaton.au delivered an interesting presentation to the delegates of the SLAV ‘Skills for School Libraries v2.0’ conference.

View more presentations from Pru Mitchell.

Pru discusses the idea of mass innovation and creativity and shows the tools that can help establish these skills. Well worth viewing and considering.

Reading for Life

Reading for Life is a website run by the UK’s National Literacy Trust, ‘an independent charity that changes lives through literacy’.

Reading for life

There are pages for readers, practitioners and families and adults.  The site explains what is contains:

What’s On the Site

The Reading for Life website features information and resources, including reading ideas for individuals, families and practitioners.

  • Projects – literacy programmes to provide inspiration and support for your work
  • Wikireadia – a shared resource for professionals supporting reading
  • Reading ideas – practical ideas for different audiences including children and adults
  • Reading garden – a toolkit to help you create outdoor reading spaces
  • Teachers TV Reading Week –  Information about programmes broadcast on the digital channel for everyone who works in schools

Reading for Life looks like a great site to support all things reading. Thanks to Helen Boelens for alerting Bright Ideas to Reading for Life.

eSchool News

eSchool News is a US publication for K-20 educators. Currently they are offering free subscriptions for interested teachers. Click on the image below to register for newsletters to be delivered to your inbox.

eSchool news

Although US oriented, there are plenty of interesting articles such as the recent article entitled School libraries key in teaching information skills: Annual AASL conference explores the changing role of school libraries in the 21st century.

Thanks to Helen Boelens for the heads up on eSchool News.

Google Lit Trips with Camilla Elliott

SLAV Professional Development Coordinator, Head of Library & Information Services, Mount Lilydale Mercy College and thoughtful blogger Camilla Elliott, presented this excellent session at the recent SLAV Seeing Things Differently conference:

Last Friday I presented a session at the SLAV Seeing Things Differently Conference on using Google Earth in the classroom, with a particular emphasis on the Google LitTripsof Jerome Burg.  A wiki containing links and video resources assembled for the session is on my Linking for Learning wiki.

Camillas google earth

With so many resources available for Google Earth,  a bit of sorting is required. This collection of specific resources will help anyone getting started.

Google LitTrips uses the Google Earth application to bring a story to life.  It facilitates a level of interactivity with the text that suits the visual learner particularly but also enables a team approach that provides shared opportunities for learning.  Jerome Burg has put an immense amount of work into Google LitTrips since I first blogged about it in August 2007.  Under Google LitTrips Tips he has  added comprehensive instructions for use in the classroom that can be applied to any use of Google Earth across geography, history, science …. it’s endless.

On the resources wiki is a link to Tom Barrett’s 24 interesting ways to use Google Earth in the Classroom slide presentation which is full of ideas.   Thomas Cooper is also there taking a social justice perspective with his Expeditions LitTrips site which is part of his Outdoor Culture and Technology course.  So many different ways of using and engaging tool to learn and create perspective.

Jerome Burg needs a word of thanks for putting his years of experience as an English teacher into this project.  The instructions and lesson support he offers makes all the difference to the use of Google Earth in the classroom.   Use the free version of GE or purchase Google Pro with added features and flexibility for using on a school network.

Thank you to Camilla for sharing your wonderful and innovative work.

SLAV conference notes – Keynote Dr Mark Norman

The School Library Association of Victoria conference Seeing Things Differently was held on Friday 13th November at the National Gallery of Victoria. Prolific blogger and teacher librarian Lisa Hill took notes from the keynote by Dr Mark Norman, and has kindly agreed to share her notes. In Lisa’s words, “just bear in mind that as they were written ‘live’ they’re not a considered response; they’re more like notes taken in a lecture theatre than a coherent report.”  

Dr Mark Norman is the author of a number of books in my school library: Birds in Suits, The Octopus’s Garden, The Great Barrier Reef, Sharks with Attitude, and Living in the Freezer and we love them all.  He’s passionate about the idea of encouraging children to escape into reality, and while he acknowledges that kids are fascinated by the Lord of the Rings monsters and fantasy creatures, he thinks the natural world is intriguing for kids.  He showed us some wonderful slides of deep sea animals that are ugly grotesque and gross, but they’re beautiful too.

So Dr Norman wants us to see things differently – to look around us more than we do.  He’s a very entertaining speaker, and a great role model for kids becoming interested in science.  He says we have to get our eye in – because sometimes we can’t see things because we’re not looking in the right way.  He himself thought he had failed in his first research project on the Great Barrier Reef because he failed to see movement of camouflaged octopi.

Dr Normans’ books for kids are all based on his research but they’re not dumbed down.  They’re predicated on the idea that the visual is critical to not only engaging interest but also providing information that is critical to  understanding.  There’s a narrative behind the photos too: he told us about one photo that took ages and ages to get because the octopus kept squirting ink to avoid the photographer.  The creepy details of these creatures behaviour is of course very appealing to kids and these real stories can compete the silly stuff kids see in the popular media: the important thing is to have this information in kid friendly language.

At Black Dog books, Dr Norman learned to

  • play with stereotypes
  • space and place
  • time

The Shark Book, Fish with Attitude: challenges the stuff about sharks being a terrible threat to humans: gentle giants like the whale shark and tiny little sharks in the deep that never get near humans.  We are much more of the threat than they are to us.  Koala the Real Story challenges the lack of detail about some that we think we know a lot about. Koalas have huge noses because they need to sniff out which of the leaves they eat are the least toxic.  (This book is due for release soon).  He adds jazzy facts to his text comparing the scale of the koala embryo and its mother to a human child and multi storey buildings.  Let’s call creatures silky instead of slimy; let’s recognise the engineering feats of the house fly.  (Hmm, not too sure about that one!) There are many stories to tell about these creatures…

Place and scale can be explored and you’ll find living creatures anywhere, even places that seem like sterile concrete deserts.  In the inner city, planting a few native plants and the creatures will come.  Get to know your local creatures and then build on that. Another new books is about the Deep, down through the different layers of our oceans, exploring the most common creatures on our planet that most people don’t know about because we can’t go deeper than 6km into the deep.  These books involve complex visual literacy, including scales to show how deep the creatures are, graphics, text and striking background.  Another forthcoming book explodes the myth than penguins and polar bears live together: these will be vertical books, not horizontal…

Loved his suggestion that an ovenight sleepover or a twilight activity at school can introduce children to their local creatures that only come out at night!

Interesting aso to compare the local area: the time scale at your own place during the indigenous period, and during pre human history.

Design and accessibility for weak readers includes non linear narrative, side bars, strong graphics and making information available in multiple ways.  The Octopus’s Garden even includes DVDs showing film without a narration, which draws kids back to the book including the fact files in the back of the book which can be read by adults interpreting the books for children.

Kids and Climate Change: inevitable that it will affect us but Al Gore’s book was focussed on the problem and not enough on the solution.  We need to give kids the idea that they are part of the solution.  The narrative that’s needed will empower children so that they do what they can…

This entire presentation was given in a darkened Cleminger Theatre: it was a rivetting slideshow featuring the amazing creatures that Dr Norman talked about.  This post can’t possibly convey the power of the visual images that he stressed were so important – you had to be here!

Thanks Lisa for your note taking and sharing. Great to revisit this fabulous presentation. It certainly made one think seriously about ‘seeing things differently”.

 

Connect and Web 2.0

Russell Blackie from the Victorian DEECD’s eLearning Unit presented the following information to the recent SLAV conference; Skills for School Libraries V2.0.

There are some familiar tools there for readers of Bright Ideas and some nice new ones you may not have tried yet. Did you notice that Russell used Edublogs.tv to host his presentation?

Thanks to Russell and SLAV for making the presentation available to the wider school library community.

AASL conference 2009

The recent American Association of School Librarians conference held in Charlotte, NC. from 5 – 8 November resulted in many tweets and URLs to follow up for anyone interested.

Thanks to Joyce Valenza for sharing these links.

 Thanks to Buffy Hamilton for these links.

Thanks to Donna Baumbach for this link.

There are probably more links out there from the conference, but these ones will keep you busy for a while…

New perspectives on reading and literacy

Don’t forget that the SLAV Conference, 13 November 2009 is fast approaching. SLAV, in partnership with NGV Education and Programs present:

Seeing things differently: New perspectives on reading and literacy at NGV International, 180 St Kilda Road, Melbourne

Places are still available for this very exciting conference which addresses issues of visual literacy, multimodal literacy, graphic novels, use web 2.0 to engage students with reading and story and features the knowledge and skills of the NGV Education staff. Here is the registration form:

http://www.slav.schools.net.au/downloads/07conference/13Nov09.pdf

Don’t miss out. Register now! See you there!