A blogging journey

With the tremendous growth in blogging and social networking in 2007 it is always great to acknowledge the quiet achievers – bloggers who have followed the “clarion call” to 21st century-style knowledge sharing long before newbies like myself started blogging.

So I was happy to see A Blogging Journey, written by Marita, as part of her presentation to her new network of Teacher Librarians. Marita has left my system of schools, to join another group in the northern part of Sydney. Our loss, their gain!

Maybe it’s time for more people to share their journey – not the famous ones, but the ones who always make a different where it counts – right there in their own school! Thanks very much Marita. 🙂

Back to the future! with Library SKILLS

Many of us are all to familiar with the ‘shoestring’ approach to school library resourcing. What is even worse is the lack of understanding of the purpose and role of a school library, and the work of a teacher librarian. Actually, I think some teacher librarians (library media specialists/librarians) also need a wake up call – but that’s a whole different story.back-to-the-future.jpg

However, there is no doubt, based on research, that schools should have qualified staff and appropriate resources. The Ofsted Report (UK) “Good School Libraries: Making a Difference to Learning” identifies factors that make good primary and secondary libraries. There are many school library impact studies, the most well-known being the Colorado Studies. Keep an eye out for one more Colorado Study, the third in a series of studies by the Library Research Service (LRS), which proves that school libraries have a direct link to student achievement. For more links, go to School Libraries make a difference to student learning on the IASL website.

How better to embrace 21st century learning than with a fabulous library centre and learning space that supports literacy, research, creativity, and multimodal/multimedia approaches to learning

Study after study proves that students in schools with well-stocked libraries and highly qualified, state-certified school librarians learn more………Today, only 60 percent of school libraries have full-time, state-certified school library media specialists on staff. With limited resources, school administrators are struggling to stretch dollars, and library resource budgets are increasingly being used to make up for shortfalls in other areas.

A press release from the American Library Association tells us that the US government is taking the research findings seriously.

Seems they are going Back to the Future – strengthening libraries again.

Legislation introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate last month is an essential step forward in ensuring that students across America have the library resources and support they need for a Twenty-First Century education.

[Hello? is anyone else listening?]

The Strengthening Kids’ Interest in Learning and Libraries or SKILLs Act guarantees that students across America will be served by highly qualified, state-certified school library media specialists and will have the library resources they need to succeed.

The SKILLs Act ensures that library funds will be available to serve students in elementary, middle and high schools throughout the nation; that appropriate books and materials will be available for students at all grade levels, including those with special learning needs and those learning English as a second language; and that highly qualified school library media specialists will be available to assist and support all students with their learning needs.

[what should we do to promote similar clear commitments in our own school, town, state or country?]

Citation:

“Legislation Introduced to Ensure Essential Library Resources, Support for 21st Century Education.” American Library Association. 2007.
http://www.ala.org/ala/pressreleases2007/june2007/skillsactpr.htm (Accessed 22 Jul, 2007)

Daily fix – to find your good reading!

criticalcompendium.jpg

Drawing on a huge collection of book reveiws from around the world, the Critical Compendium represents a great mashup – and a nice idea to emulate for your library! or just use it as it is 🙂

Very Library 2.0!

Books to 3D search – good for your soul!

I can’t resist commenting on BOOKS as we continue to skip down the yellow brick road to Web 2.0, Web 3.0 or whatever!

Here is an excellent visual list of the Top 10 Banned Books of the 20th Century. Needless to say, each tells a ‘story’ – and the cultural shifts around some of them have been profound! Books still have a significant place in our world – and perhaps this is why they still figure in Web 2.0 developments that make books easily accessible to buy and read.

5 Alternative Ways to Browse Amazon provides an array of alternative visual search tools for….. well yes, for finding and buying good books. Very good read.

Developments in visual search tools seem to be gaining pace. You will be amazed at what is happening at Space Time, 3D web search, currently in Beta and only available on a PC. But what a WOW! way of searching “at the speed of thought”. “Watch as your information converges in one space at one time”.

But even more interesting for an information professional is the presentation about the Semantic MEDLINE Visualization Prototype which incorporates the semantic web and natural language processing – manipulating information as well as documents to respond to a searchers needs. It connects knowledge from various resources from PubMed and Medline – and natural language processing will summarize and produce a visual network or relationships between the material you are interested in.

Web Crash 2007

Oh, what a great way to make you think! If you don’t visit the faux news site The Onion, on a regular basis, you owe it to yourself to do so at least once a week, or rely on someone else in your social network to do so! I take the latter option for now, and so really laughed when Mike’s del.icio.us posts led me to this video …. 🙂

Facebooking Heyjude

The API rollout continues – Facebook now has a WordPress application feature. So I am adding it to my Facebook account, and writing this post from Facebook, just to see how it works.

I guess it is pretty basic right now – just text – and I can’t see my categories to choose the right tags (this is important for people who are not just doing random ‘thought generated’ blogging). Will putting in a new tag create a new category? Don’t know, so I will put in ‘Facebook’ and see what happens. But really, no complaints -small steps lead to big changes!

Who says….

………..that Twitter isn’t catching on?

Reading Emerging Technology Trends and Diamonds are fuel cells’ best friends. Did you know that researchers have “invented a method to make oxides such as cubic zirconia (zirconium oxide) with extremely small grain sizes, on the order of 15 nanometers. A nanometer is one-billionth of a meter, or the size of a few atoms. At that scale, the crystals conduct electricity very well, through the movement of protons. The material could be used in fuel cells that are based on chemical oxides.”

This is what caught my eye…

There are 180 followers since April 08.

This puts a whole new spin on RSS. I can see the value of joining a twitter feed for ‘breaking news’.

It’s interesting to speculate how twitter might be used in schools? But my speculation drew a pretty big blank – can’t imagine what value it might add right now! Everything I thought of was answered in my mind with another application. You might like to prove me wrong?

What else my schools are doing…besides blogging!

Websites are a powerful information and promotional tool for encouraging enrolments and creating community awareness ……… and ceo.jpgCatholic Education (Parramatta, Sydney) (where I hang out!) is working on the development of a content managed template-based websites for all schools in the Parramatta Diocese that can be customised to suit each school’s personality and needs.

All our schools will have a website that is professionally designed, dynamic and current, easy to manage, but most of all – effective. I have seen some of the work in the pilot schools, and it is ‘right on the button’ web design and effective

The easy-to-use Content Management System (CMS) will allow schools to modify and maintain the content of their website with no fuss and will make updating content, pictures and menus on websites very quick and easy for all staff.

The aim is to reduce/remove duplication of information and processes, and to fully integrate with our central database and intranet which feeds all sites with information allowing for restricted access to “staff only” information. Of course, the first stage will feature all the usual CMS features that makes life easy for school staff – managing text, images, pages and galleries etc. It will also provide RSS feeds to syndicate website content. Cool!

Even cooler will be the additional developments planned further in the rollout – cool stuff like easy upload of audio and video files, Web 2.0 tools (like wikis and podcasting), easy creation of newsletters and automatic delivery of E-News, multi-lingual support, and (not to forget marketing) search engine optimisation and access to website statistics to gauge site effectiveness.

Good one!

.

A poem – our journey

How delightful – a poem from Diane to The Bloggers, who, like her, are on Journeys: exploring life and learning! Thank you 🙂

From Web to webs
strands of thought
drifting
in asynchronous harmony
settling
forming reforming
drifting
into infinite variations
touching mingling
altering
drifting

Facebook – friend or foe?

Facebook has announced that it has hit 30 million active users. Unlike MySpace, Facebook doesn’t pad its numbers with dead accounts: these people log in at least once a month. As you can see by extending the graph below, the number of active users has doubled since the start of the year.

We also have a battle of the DIY networks – for example, Richard McManus tells us that Ning is one that has a higher profile than others described – and this network tool is one that is very popular with teachers.

My problem right now is that I have too many networks! Is this part of why Facebook is taking off? …….. the fact that there are more and more applications that can be plugged into Facebook saving me from acting like a jumping bean?

I’m not yet sold on Facebook – but on the other hand I am pretty tired of skipping from one NIng network to another – and overwhelmed by the fact that I could actually be writing what amounts to a blog on each of my networks. Chills the spine.

I think that Ning is better exploited on specific projects with specific groups and not as a worldwide collaboration platform. But Ning is evolving and fantastic things keep being added. Will we find a Ning IN Facebook eventually, or is there another [r]evolution around the corner? driven by API and widget developments.

We’re told that a major development in the history of widgets occured just this week; the W3C published a draft of the first widget specification. The goal of this effort is to standardize how widgets are scripted, digitally signed, secured, packaged and deployed in a way that is device independent, follows W3C principles, and is as inter-operable as possible with existing market-leading user agents on which widgets are run.

The rise of widgets was caused by several factors including the adoption of RSS, the expansion of the blogosphere, growth of social networks, fashion of self-expression and the democratization of the web at large. I think that “Widgets-R-Us”!!

Read more on the topic at the Evolution of Web Widgets.