Welcome

The issues of the teacher librarians and para-professionals in California School Libraries. Please share your concerns, feedback and questions.

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

CSLA at the CUE 2014 Conference


CSLA had a major presence at the CUE Conference March 20-22. In addition to hosting a booth in the exhibit hall, we also presented a special "Digital Citizenship Summit" on Saturday.
This summit provided valuable information for all educators on a variety of aspects of digital citizenship that are crucial for us to model and teach our students. The summit also showcased the special expertise of teacher librarians in this area. Please visit the Digital Citizenship Summit page on our website for links to all the session presentation files.

Here are some of the highlights:

We were very fortunate to have Gwyneth Jones, aka The Daring Librarian, a middle school librarian from Maryland, as our visiting lead speaker. In her session on "Secrets of the Remix Mash Up YouTube Generation" she shared that "Everything is remix; use it for engagement." We all learn by repeating; we can leverage that and help students to be respectful remixers by working with the tools they already love, sharing other engaging tools with them, and teaching them about Creative Commons and attribution. Here's a tweet shared by teacher librarian Sharlene Paxton during Gwyneth's session:
To engage students, we need to be using tools like YouTube and great YouTube channels like Horrible Histories and the History Teachers Channels, while also introducing innovative tools such as Scoop.it for curation, LessonPaths for online lesson playlists, and Flocabulary for engaging learning through rap music. Gwyneth also presented three other sessions during the conference. She generously shares all her presentation materials. You can see the file for this and her three other sessions on her presentation wiki.


The Digital Citizenship Summit also included Pam Oehlman on "Teaching Digital Citizenship by Crafting Quick Flipped Tutorials and Using Existing Resources," Glen Warren on "The Uncommon Core: New Standards, New Literacies, and Student Significance," and my session on ""Inspiring Creativity While Respecting Copyright with Fair Use and Creative Commons."
Pam shared an analogy comparing the pencil to digital citizenship instruction; our kids today need the same careful instruction on using devices as we use to teach kindergartners the safe use of pencils. She shared lots of great resources for digital citizenship instruction, and you can see them reviewed in her presentation file:


All too often in school, Glen shared during his session, we don't ask kids what they want to learn. Instead, we just tell them what they have to learn. One the great things about school libraries, is that we ask them what they want to learn, and we help them connect that to the literacies, including those covered in the Common Core, that they need to learn. Here is a graphic showing how information literacy, which librarians teach, crosses all curricular areas, including personal interest:
Glen advocated for giving students the same kind of 20 percent time  that Google provides, allowing them to pursue their own interests in that time. He also shared how he makes students accountable for their time and has them simultaneously learn and practice information literacy skills. He uses a Google Form to have them submit information about their work, including the questions they asked and the research they did.

In my own session, I focused on teaching respect for intellectual property, on understanding copyright and fair use, and on taking advantage of using Creative Commons material to make that task easier. I also advocated for contributing to a creative society by licensing our own works with Creative Commons licenses and encouraging our students to do the same. Here is the presentation file:

   
If you haven't already joined the Creative Commons community, please do so! By sharing, we all contribute to a more vibrant, creative world. Gwyneth Jones included this powerful message in one her slides from her Friday session on "Marketing Your Program Like Lady Gaga":


I tweeted a photo of the slide during her session, and it clearly resonated with many people, since I got lots of retweets.

Thanks to CUE and Executive Director Mike Lawrence for enabling CSLA to present the Digital Citizenship Summit.
CSLA's exhibit hall booth provided information promoting the summit, as well as information about what teacher librarians do and what strong school libraries can provide. In addition to poster displays and handouts, we had iPads showing clips from the the December California School Boards Association panel presentation by our members Doug Achterman, Barbara Jeffus, John McGinnis, Rick Phelan, and Connie Williams. Visit this page on our website for more information and to see the full recording.

Here is a photo taken by Sue Heraper of President Janice Gilmore-See, 2011-2012 PresidentPam Oehlman, and me, your current Past President, at the booth:

Here's another photo at the CSLA booth, with members Janice, Lesley Farmer, and Joan McCall sharing the Digital Citizen buttons we handed out:


And, we had fun, too! Here's some of our CSLA members at Happy Hour with our guest, Gwyneth Jones, in the front of the photo:

If you attended the CUE conference, please be sure to complete the evaluations for our sessions. There are evaluation links for all the Digital Citizenship Summit on our Digital Citizenship Summit page. You can also visit cue2014.sched.org/ to view all the CUE sessions and complete evaluations for all those you attended. 

(This posting is adapted in part from my postings on Jane Lofton's School Library Journey and the Mira Costa HS Library Blog. Please visit those blogs for some additional CUE highlights.)


No comments:

Post a Comment