• 09 Jun 2017 10:06 AM | Matt (Administrator)

    Written by Tessa Johnson in the Dorthan Brook School Library & Media Center Blog:


    I'm here at Dynamic Landscapes in beautiful Burlington, Vermont today and yesterday (which was rainy and less beautiful).  There is so much great information here and inspiring student projects.

     

    Yesterday I attended a presentation panel about Book Battles and a variety of ways do host them.  I am excited to do a Dorothy Canfield Fisher Book Battle with my 4th and 5th graders next year! 

    In the afternoon I went to a fun workshop about "Putting the Creative in STEM" where we played with Spheros, Dash, and a basketball that can provide feedback to help you improve your game!


    This morning I attended a presentation by Diana Laufenberg about how help kids determine what is true in this age of alternative facts and truthiness.  There was a great discussion about what it means to be a kid these days and from that I came away with several ideas include in my digital safety lessons. I just finished an eye-opening presentation on copyright and the Creative Commons.  So much to know and so much knowledge to share!


    On deck for the afternoon is info about Vermont Online Library, Red Clover books, and putting it all into action! 


    UPDATE:  The Red Clover presentation was excellent and full of creative ideas by Beth Redford and M.C. Baker.


    Tiny little rock penguins to accompany the book Penguin Problems, by Jory John.  Art project by M.C. Baker.

    M.C. Baker had a fun "marbled box" project to go along with Daniel Finds a Poem, by Micha Archer.  The box is a beautiful place to keep your words or poetry, and the project is so easy and fun!


    Art project by M.C. Baker.

    This is the box I made!  The rubber bands are holding it together while the glue dries. 

    After the Red Clover presentation I ended up going to a panel discussion called "Empower, Educate, Engage: Combining Data, Stories, and Conversations to Develop Community Partnerships at All Levels," led by Heidi Heustis.  This was panel covered a variety of topics including data collection, identifying key stakeholders, promoting your library, and more; all around the idea of increase awareness about who you are and what goes on in the library.  I came away with a better understanding of the importance of tracking data, communicating with stakeholders, and documenting accomplishments (and data) each year.  

    Posted by Tessa Johnson

  • 01 May 2017 9:13 AM | Deleted user

    April Showers bring May flowers and

    National Poetry Month brings out the importance of poems!


    Poetry, Plain and Simple

    Back in the day I was just another quasi-artsy kid at Sarah Lawrence College (“Where even the squirrels wear black!” was everyone’s favorite quip about the plethora of actual black squirrels on campus). I majored in poetry. Well, I didn’t really major, I concentrated. It was hip, alternative and, hopefully you’ll bear with me here, not nearly as ridiculous as it sounds. Ted Sheu, famed poet from Middlebury, VT, spent a day with us in the library last week and I’m pretty sure it changed some lives. It got me thinking about my outre collegiate days in a whole new way. Not only does poetry matter, it matters a lot.

    How often do kids these days just sit down, let their minds wander and have the gift of time to write stuff down--any old thing that comes to mind--silly, serious, sad, outrageous, whatever? The word “rarely” comes to mind. School is so super-structured, I have teachers tell me that the read aloud students enjoy in the library with me once a week is the only one “they have time for.” (This is fodder for a whole other blog.) Teachers follow a strict writing curriculum which basically forces children to “write what they are told,” as in a “How-To Book,” a persuasive letter, etc. Of course there is merit in these exercises because kids need to learn to harness the power of writing in various forms and practice GUM rules along the way, but there seems to be this idea out there that day-dreamy, from-the-gut mucking around on paper writing has no value. The Sarah Lawrence gal in me feels completely the opposite. Enter our workshops with Mr. Sheu!

    Ted gave every member of every elementary class the opportunity to goof around with ideas on paper. He had some structured activities that gave these budding writers a place to get kooky, to say something unexpected and original, that they didn’t even know they could say. It was so profound, watching literally every single student come to life with this master poet, who makes his living seriously goofing off with school kids, helping them recognize this voice inside they had not met before. What if we decided that not only is it okay to allow time for children to engage in these kind of writing exercises at school, but necessary?

    In this budding era of personalized learning, we are giving students enormous power to figure things out on their own terms. Mastery of concepts and skills can be shown via evidence accumulated over time--ideally, school is losing its “cells and bells” paradigm in favor of a “workshop” model. It sounds like a good idea, right? Well, time spent in a workshop means people are actually digging in, making a mess and ideally entering a state of flow that leads to all kinds of intrinsic learning. Gorgeous chaos? Meaningful messes? Yup. As educators in the 21st century, we have signed ourselves up to facilitate this stuff; it seems to me we have given ourselves the opportunity to let kids write poetry! Awesome.

    Okay, so now I sound like I am promoting some kind of writing free-for-all in school (admit it, it sounds fun, doesn’t it?) where kids can do whatever they wish, spelling and GUM rules be darned. I am not. A writer cannot possibly harness the power of all he or she wishes to say without a good understanding of basic writing skills. We all know that, basically, writing is rewriting. And students need to be taught all of this, often explicitly. But, that does not mean there can’t be a time for the poet in each of us to come on out and let our voices sing or laugh or cry or proclaim. It’s been going on since ancient times. It is a very human thing, poetry. It’s an art form that gets at all the things in our hearts that somehow or other never come out just right, until the poet does it for us, and we breathe a sigh of relief. It’s a celebration of expression where rules get broken because we humans often become most aware of our power when we break barriers that have been set. The world needs artists, no doubt. It needs poets to keep our voices heard in the noise of the 21st century, in the vacuum of cyberspace.

    What I am proposing is this: let’s have a time where we “Drop Everything and Write.” (Credit goes to poet Geoff Hewitt for this--he refers to it as DEW). Everyday. Let’s give these kids notebooks just for this sacred time and let them have at it. Let’s give them time to develop their voices so they know who they are as they are given the ever popular “voice and choice” that is becoming the mantra of personalization in public education. And I am going to one-up myself here: let’s then build in some of that “must-do” writing time for students to rewrite poems until they are saying that thing that is in their hearts. Let’s develop that in our students. Imagine the intrinsic motivation that might start to run rampant in each of them? It could happen. It should happen.

    I think we can all agree we are living in some pretty precarious times. We keep talking anxiously about preparing students for life in the 21st century. They are going to need to know what they are about, what they think, how they feel. They are going to need their voices. Enter a serious commitment to poetry: reading it, discussing it, writing it. I honestly believe poetry changes lives. It certainly did mine all those years ago. It gave me the courage to stand up and be a teacher librarian, actively promoting every child’s right to read, investigate and think freely. Talk about a powerful agenda. It is most likely worthy of a poem. It seems life in the library has brought me full circle to my undergraduate days, some of which may have seemed questionable in terms professional pay-off. Well, they weren’t. Libraries change lives, as do the poems housed on their shelves. Let’s work hard to promote the poets in our midst, our students. I am pretty sure they have things to say we have never heard before.

    *Many thanks to Ted Sheu for an incredibly inspiring day at Danville School during National Poetry Month 2017.

    -Kristen Eckhardt, LMS

    Danville School

    Danville, VT


  • 07 Apr 2017 2:46 PM | Deleted user

    Oh, how I wish this platform would accept my copied and pasted essay instead of leaving you with a URL to copy and paste! Here is April's edition:

    https://docs.google.com/document/d/1W0X8RAdiivigbfHg7iZM5tc4bsYF0bPd

    QfRpvaRRmVE/edit


    Thanks for reading,

    Kristen Eckhardt, LMS

    Danville School

    Danville, VT

  • 20 Mar 2017 3:04 PM | Deleted user

    I missed February, but here is an installment for March.

    https://docs.google.com/document/d/1b0hTTX8Bs_vsBMDUt8SXQ19CTdWHVXA8lESQeVh-DwQ/edit

    Best,

    Kristen Eckhardt, LMS

    Danville School

    Danville, VT

  • 23 Jan 2017 12:58 PM | Deleted user

    Again, with the copying and pasting to get a look...but here is this month's musing, nonetheless. Happy New Year!

    Kristen Eckhardt, LMS

    Danville School

    https://docs.google.com/document/d/1j5BvJuFftUbuME7lvLUUws14u2v6RxRATypzLQu0OZ4/edit?usp=sharing

  • 06 Dec 2016 1:15 PM | Deleted user

    Here is the latest from the Danville School Library. Happy Holidays!

    Kristen Eckhardt, LMS

    https://docs.google.com/document/d/1CXP_Ea1Hy5ku0EHhCKzodMXrh_8NwosqW-CVU8-8Hm8/edit

  • 08 Nov 2016 10:09 AM | Deleted user

    November's Blog from Danville School (this site will not take my C&P attempts--sorry that you have to C&P the link yourself!)

    https://docs.google.com/document/d/1hKhirYHlY9DoC57GlDPPxxVcVKbZ0WvdxKiX39uw9a8/edit?usp=sharing



  • 12 Oct 2016 9:23 PM | Matt (Administrator)
    Vermont Librarians’ Statement on Information Literacy Across the Lifespan details the importance of information literacy to lifelong learning and responsible citizenship and discusses the role of librarians. This statement can be shared with your administrators and/or school board, or used in any other way that helps you promote the importance of strong school library programs and properly staffed school libraries. The cover letter template is editable so that you can tailor it for your intended audience. Download the statement and the cover on the Advocacy page.


  • 03 Oct 2016 8:51 AM | Deleted user
    The doc has fun pictures, so copy and paste the shareable link for a trip down Memory Lane:


    https://docs.google.com/document/d/1fZ6uN2rS-4GKZ54rYaD5FyN5Eylb9zdFcyrcuIeWo4U/edit?usp=sharing

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