libr233course

 

233Assignments

Page history last edited by david loertscher 11 mos ago

 

 
 
  First Month Second Month Third Month Culmination
Overview Textbooks Overview2 Overview3 Vision Project
Technology InCommand WebTwo Build VirtualLibrary
Reading Reading1 Reading2 Reding3 Vision Project
Organization Org1 Org2 Org3 Vsision Project
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Assignment 1: The Vision Project
 
Begin building your library media program vision project
 
 Scenario 1: You are interviewing for a new position as a library media teacher at _____ school. The leadership team of the school has asked you to present your vision for their school in a 15 minute presentation. For summer, you will need two versions of this: old and new.
 
 Scenario 2: You are the library media teacher at _____ school but are disturbed by the antiquated practices that are part of the "traditional" program. In your conversations with the principal, you express the desire to change the entire nature of the library media program. Interested, the principal asks you to prepare a 15 minute presentation for the school leadership team concerning the direction in which you would like to move. Again, two versions, please.
The four program areas of the library media program are: 

 

• The Reading Program

 
 â€¢ The Technology Program designed to enhance learning and teaching
  
•The program of Collaboration designed to build quality learning experiences with teachers in an information-rich and technology-rich environment
 
• The Information Literacy Program designed to help every learner know how to learn
 
In addition to these program elements, they all rest on the
 
• Organizational  and infrastructure elements of the library media center/technology infrastructure
    
In LIBR 233, we concentrate on the first two of the above elements. In LIBR 250, we concentrate on the last two elements. Together, these two courses assist you in the building of a total library media program linked to student achievement.  We  will also consider organizational elements
 

 The knowledge base will be constructed by teams of students using wikis at

 
 

 

 We will use the same wiki for the summer term.
 
  You will be assessed on the quality of your contribution to the knowledge base. Quantity is not the import factor, but quality is. However, one would think that you could find at least ten quality articles to add.
 
The final product for this Vision Project will be something that is relevant to you at the moment or in the future. This could take the form of: 
  • A major vision statement concentrating on the first two program elements but also covering the entire four. 
  • An actual presentation for a real or imaginary school leadership team
  • A publishable article for an audience other than school library media teachers

     

In all cases, both the wiki and the final product are to become part of your electronic portfolio as required for graduation for the School of Library and Information Science, San Jose State University. Follow the guidelines from the school to create your project in the form that will be ready for that portfolio.
 
 Readings for this databank will come from national standards and vision documents, the textbooks, and a wide range of professional books and articles. A pathfinder wiki entitled
  

should be used to list and share the best of what you are reading for the benefit of everyone. It is the bibliography. The synthesis wiki is the summary of what you have read. 

 This means that for your ten articles or more, you will list the citation and a brief note about it on the pathfinder wiki and then your longer synthesis will appear on the synthesis wiki.  Why? Becaue the pathfinder wiki stays around, the synthesis wiki gets erased over time.

 
 One great source for professional articles is: "Information Power: Building Partnerships for Learning: Full-Text Research Articles from School Library Media Quarterly" see also on the AASL web site. This is now a periodical titled: School Library Media Online.
 
  Current professional books are reviewed by the instructor for the periodical Teacher Librarian. At: http://www.teacherlibrarian.com/ . The reviews on this site are supplemented with reviews on a wiki at: http://professionalreviews.pbwiki.com/
  
 

Assignment 2: The Diital Learning Commons

 
 Create a The Digital School Library (DSL)/ Digital Learning Commons
 

 During the summer, we will be doing a major experimental construction of a client side digital school library.   We will be collaboratively building three sample school libraries: elementary, middle, and senior high school using the blog software Wordpress.com This will draw ideas from Joyce Valenza's home page and other home pages as we discover site. In addition, each of you will construct your own iGoogle page. And, you will construct a fictitious/sample student iGoogle page. If you wish to create your own school library blog, you may do so by harvesting from the collaborative ones and adding your own content as you wish. You are not required to do the latter actual school site.

 
 For the first few weeks of the class, there will be major experimentation with Wordpress and iGoogle to get you up on the technology so that we can all add to the content. You should start to explore Joyce Valenza's site asap to beging learning how she and her students create this site. It is a messy place, as Joyce describes it, but it works.
 
 Older stuff we put on the digital school library - all of this is up for grabs as we begin to design a learning commons digital library
 
 

The main web page/title screen

 

  Teacher Tools: A button for teachers (containing two major sections: READING and ENHANCING LEARNING THROUGH TECHNOLOGY.

 

Student Section:Many school library media centers have websites that serve themselves, teachers, and students. You might think of such a website as a digital school library. Some schools have a school website and the library is one of the clicks off the website. In this class, you should create the DSL with the school as a click off it. For example, it might be titled "The Lincoln Digital School Library." This semester, you should construct four pieces if you do not already have them in operation:

 

 

There should be three parts to the student part of the page:
 
 
 
  • Tools - links to tools that help a student be successful in their classes and in the school. For example, word processors, graphics packages, tutorials on how to write a term paper, tips on using the digital camera to link pictures into a web page, In other words, link learners to the actual tools and/or helps for using them to succeed. Even information literacy tip sheets might be here.
 
 
 
 
  • Resources for personal space, collaborative space or outer space: This is the section linking learners to online databases and various search engines - the place where they will search for information they want. The section may link them to specific databases such as Electric Library or InfoTrac or SIRS; links to encyclopedias, dictionaries, etc. Hopefully meta-search engines to search multiple databases might be included. This section also contains the link to the school library catalog and other library catalogs. It also links to various search engines such as Yahoo, Google, and Dog Pile among others. There might also be links to a section listing the 15,000 best websites for middle schoolers. A good meta search engine to look at is http://google.scholar.com. This specialized Internet search tool is designed to help teachers and students efficiently locate Internet content that can be used for educational purposes.
 
 
  • Push technology section - this is the area where administrators, teachers, library media teachers, and parents are trying to get to the learner with announcements, links to classroom web pages/assignments, advertisements (such as good books to read), etc. There might be a "web site or book of the day" or connections to the living yearbook of the school (the latest pictures of the football game or other school event) . This section would be a place each student could add resources for their personal space so they keep up to date on what they need to be doing.
 
 

Another area of push technology is the listing of student assignment and collaborative units currently being done in the LMC These are the collaborative units you are doing with teachers including any of the following features: At least one button that links students in a particular class to useful resources for that class including carefully selected Internet sites and any clicks to electronic resources in the school library collection; A section of general helps for kids in school such as school term paper guides, helps in citing materials; links to online dictionaries and encyclopedias, useful tutorials, etc.; A section that leads kids to Internet sites or school databases that help them personally such as information about sexual harassment, where to go for various kinds of help, what to do in case of emergency, local organizations that can be helpful. The page might contain lists of good books to read (perhaps recommended by the students themselves) and certainly a few you recommend, movie reviews (done by the kids), links to sports, etc. This part of the website is required of every student in the class. You will receive a major grade reduction without this section.

 

 
 

 

 
The objective here is not quantity, but quality.
 
 
 
You will be organized into groups by type of school (elementary, middle, high school). Use these groups and your connections on Blackboard to help each other build your websites. Help each other find school library web sites that are already good and incorporate the best of those ideas in your own site.
 
 
 
If you already have a school library web site, transform it into more of a digital library and refine it, add to it, develop it further - note for the instructor where you started and what developments and refinements you have made (a very short essay/log will suffice)  
 
In previous semesters students have used free website-building tools available from a number of providers. While these could be used, it would be best to use the web construction tool used by your technology folks such as Dreamweaver or Adobe GoLive. There is a learning curve on these, but they are accepted within the industry and will have the depth you need to start a real webpage. You will need a place to upload your web site. This could be a free service, a low-cost service, or a school district site. Before constructing your site, you should have decided on a web construction tool and have a place arranged to serve it out. For those who cannot do this, it would be best to partner with another student in the class and help build their digital school library.  
 
Another good help is Anne Clyde's guide to building school library web pages at
 

 

http://www.iasl-slo.org/creatingweb.html

   
A good start is to look at web pages constructed by school librarians around the country. Try Peter Milbury's site for linking school library web pages at 
  

 

 

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