Archive for the ‘LIS 460’ Category

Tying Up all the Loose Ends…

July 28, 2007

And so ends another semester in my quest to becoming a librarian. Only one more semester to go, and by this time in December, I will be a fully certified school librarian. Oh the tools I will have, and the places I can go. It seems not so far off, but it’s hard to imagine this journey really being finished. This summer semester was a bit overwhelming for me, but so informative and I feel like I took the most away from this semester more than any before. Cataloging was a useful course, indeed, and I will surely use the information I learned there in many of my endeavors as a librarian. LIS 460 introduced me into a world of technology that I before I didn’t even consider to be useful in the educational world. I have so many tools now, so much more knowledge to impart in the classroom.

I used to use my webpage that I designed for my multimedia class as a tool that showcased my technology skills. I’m actually too embarrassed to even post that link here, and would much rather show off my innovation project, creating a wiki for a school. I’m sure in a year or so, I’ll be shocked that I thought this was something worth presenting to the world, as technology is so fast to change. Maybe this will look as juvenile to me in a year’s time as my multimedia project does now. Despite that, I hope to remain on the cutting edge of technology, and services like Twitter, and RSS feeds, and podcasts, and everything we studied to help students learn this semester, will help me to stay on the cutting edge of what technologies are available. Hopefully I will continue to consider how to use them in the classroom and to best benefit my students.

I wondered what the fate of this blog would become once this course was over, but I’m thinking I might continue to use it, as a professional blog. I have a blog that I keep for fun, and one that’s more of a weekly (sometimes monthly…) update of my life. This blog would serve me well professionally, and as it’s already begun with my thoughts on technology in the school media center, I can’t think of a better place to continue…

Texting Education

July 18, 2007

Tonight while I was making dinner, I got a text message from one of my students this year.  I was surprised for a few reasons.  1) I forgot that I had given out my cell phone number to a few students that I thought would actually keep in touch… 2) She had some how managed to get a picture in the text message that was not taken through her phone, but with a disposable camera on the class trip.  I baffled for a few minutes at how this was possible.  I concluded that she may have actually sent me the text message online, and the picture was on her computer. It’s the only thing that possibly makes sense to me.  That, and she doesn’t have a phone with picture capabilities (as of June at least…), so how else could she get a picture on there?  My students amaze me long after I have stopped expecting it.

My students may not have been tech-savvy, but they certainly know how to work their phones… Cell phones were one thing that my students did NOT lack.  As many of my classmate’s have mentioned in their posts, twitters, and Skype conversations – cell phones are not usually allowed in school, so using them in the classroom would be difficult.  However, I really like the idea of using text messages to send out reminders, updates, etc. to the entire class/school.  Had I thought about it this year, I probably would have sent text reminders for assignments that were due, or forms that needed to be returned to school.  I could have sent homework assignments via text messages instead of having my students copy it down off the front board every single day.  I think incorporating technology this way makes the homework assignment a little bit more fun for the students.  It involves something that they are interested in, and they understand.  Like the teacher in Messaging Shakespaere,  I needed to find a way to motivate my students who were not performing to their ability; however, I didn’t have the inngenuity to utilize technology in a way that the students could relate to. 

I think text messaging could be revolutionary in the library.  If I were a student, and I got a text message at 8 in the morning, reminding me that I had a library book that was overdue, I’d be much more inclined to put it in my bookbag and bring it to school than if I just got a slip of paper at the end of the school day (or even worse – the beginning of the school day!), which ends up getting lost in the shuffle of the rest of my papers in my bag and forgotten about… until I get another notice telling me that my book is now REALLY overdue.  Students could text short book reviews to the library, the library could send updates for upcoming events, new releases, etc. 

 Obstacles come about of course with restrictions of having cell phones at school, but if the texting does not need to take place during educational hours, than this should not be an issue. Cell phones are extremely accessible these days,  and I’d say most, if not all, of my students had or had access to a cell phone on a daily basis. 

I wonder…. if there is a program that allows a user to send a message to both cell phones and email addresses (or some online program – like Twitter) - at the same time, because this could be a solution for those students who do not have access to a cell phone.  Students could choose the medium in which they receive the updates/reminders… whether it be text messages, twitters, or emails – so they can stay as connected as possible. 

Another thing I thought about when I was reading the Campus Cells article was how this could revolutionize school safety.  The first thing I immediately thought was the tragedy at Virginia Tech this year.  If campus alerts could have been sent through text message about the shooter on campus, maybe lives could have been saved. Schools can use cell phone technology for safety (as mentioned in the article) but also to keep students alert and aware of potential dangers on campus. 

 I was going to write an tech encyclopedia entry on Dodgeball – which is a text messaging service that alerts your friends where you are so they can come meet you – but I took it down because I really didn’t see it’s place in the school media center.  And while I still don’t think there really is a need for that kind of technology in schools,  I do think the idea of mass texting information and updates is one that students and schools can really benefit from!

Behind the Times.

July 6, 2007

I feel so very lucky to be taking this course at Simmons.  When I was reading someone else’s post (Elisabeth’s, I think.) and she mentioned how she created a wiki for another Simmons course, something really struck me.  Rutgers does not offer any kind of innovative technology course.  Sure, they have a multimedia production course, and you learn how to play with flash and make pretty webpages…. oooh.  That’s it though, and there are no other tech requirements besides the basic IT course (read: HTML coding – and that’s it.) and multimedia.  We touched on blogs, social networking (but only to talk about censorship really), and second life SO briefly in my YA class that I don’t even remember what the assignment was, or what we learned. (Clearly, I didn’t learn much.) There are no other online options (or even on campus as far as I know…) to expand technology knowledge for school media specialists.  When I read the description for this course, I jumped on it as soon as I could, and I was worried that I hadn’t acted fast enough – there were only 3 WISE seats!  I was sure that other students would be dying to take this course, it seemed so innovative to me at the time!  But, from Rutgers as far as I know, it was just me and MaryRose who even tried to get into the class.

So, after 3 weeks of this course, I realize that this is the type of class that should be mandatory for school librarian’s today.  Yes, it’s great that I can build my own website, but really, there are programs that build webpages for you these day, and all you have to know is how to point, click, and type (and maybe upload a picture or too.) Nothing so challenging that a student couldn’t do it him/herself. Media specialists should be at the cutting edge of this technology, we should have to know technology terms, and we should be the ones pushing students into realms of undiscovered technological depths – whether through wikis, podcasts, blogs, social bookmarking/networking… there is so much. 

Today I feel overwhelmed that there is so much out there for me to learn, and it never will end, I fear (and hope…) But strangely, it’s reassuring because I know that when I have my own library and I have a wiki up and running, or students doing podcasts on the school’s website, I’ll know that I’m giving them the best media services that I possibly can. 

Meta-blogging

July 1, 2007

This blog will be a metablog – a blog about blogging.

As I was reading Richardson’s chapters on weblogging, I could definitely relate to what he described when someone first responded to something that he had written online. I remember the first time I realized that people I didn’t know or were not connected to people I knew were reading my blog. It wasn’t getting that many more hits per day, or any real attention, but it was out there, and it was easily searchable and findable. I was really proud, even though I hadn’t done anything out of the ordinary. A friend of friend of mine got a book deal off of his fictitious blog, Anonymous Lawyer. It’s this potential that blog’s have, to reach the right person, that my blog just might come across the screen of the right person, that sparked my interest in keeping up with my blog when I might have let it lapse long ago. What started as an easy way to keep all my friends informed without having to tell the same story over and over has become so much more. I’m always a little surprised when I am talking to someone and they mention something that was in my blog, but it’s a good feeling. It’s out there to read, so I want people to read it.

I think this kind of quasi-fame that can be found through blogging is something that would really appeal to young writers, especially of the late elementary – high school age. As soon as students are capable of higher ordered thinking, they can start creating and generating ideas about things they are interested in and posting them online. I remember in my class this year, I tried to use posting reviews on Amazon.com as an incentive to get my students to finish reading a book and creating a review to put online. They really liked the idea that their post would be online for anyone to read.

I think there are some dangers with having students blog freely online in a school related setting. I wonder how content and appropriateness could be monitored, or even if it should be monitored? Are there student-friendly blog hosting sites that maybe filter out more questionable content so that it could be more appropriate for school. And if a site like this does exist, does it also limit who can access the material that is posted (like friends only subscriptions). I have some reservations when it comes to students posting freely on the internet. Not because I believe they should be censored, but I worry about exposure of too much identity. I find that most children/young adults can find their way easily around the limitations that are set up age wise (i.e. Myspace – putting in an older age). So if they will find a way to do it anyway, do limitations even matter?

Digital Divide

June 21, 2007

I’ve been thinking a lot about the lack of technology that my students are exposed to.  I wish that I had the resources to show them all the cool things they could do online, the tools I could use to push their education to the next level.  The digital divide that separates the haves from the have-nots is something I’ve been studying since my first course in my MLIS program.  In my very first course at Rutgers I studied the information seeking behavior in low-income areas and how the lack of technology affects the way they get their information. 

 I see a lot of my students using myspace (scariest thing this weekend when my 11 year old student posing as a 15 year old, friend requested me… even though I’ve changed it so you can’t search me by name.  That kid has some good researching skills…. he should be a reference librarian!), so they have exposure to the Internet, but they don’t have a clue how to use it.  With all the restrictions on social networking programs in schools (understandable, but unfortunate) it’s hard to really explain or broaden their limited knowledge of what they can do on the Internet. 

 What I am wondering is how I can get past all these restrictions – financial (both in my school and in my student’s lives), censoring what can be accessed at school, and the limits that are ultimately placed on my students because they do not have Internet access or resources to get online at home.