Archive for the ‘Conferences’ Category

MAME Leadership Meeting - March 20

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Hi there, Michiganders! Just a reminder that Saturday, March 20, is our annual Leadership Meeting.  This year, it’s just a single day (no hotel fees!), and the University of Michigan School of Information is our host (no high attendance fees that just go in the pockets of conference centers!).

You can find registration information here.  There are even a few last-minute surprises being worked into the agenda!

Hope to see you there!

Kristin

Guest Blogger Beth Friese Reflects on AASL, NCTE, ALAN

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

If you know @librarybeth on Twitter, then you know the work of Beth Friese, doctoral candidate and thinker extraordinaire.  She’s been on a conference marathon, Tweeting back to those of us unable to attend, and she agreed to guest blog about the intersections between the conferences of AASL, NCTE, and ALAN.

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Imagine this scene: It’s November, 2009. There’s a slight chill in the air. The setting is a conference center in the eastern United States, filled with thousands of engaged and excited educators.

Over several days, these educators attend sessions centered around inquiry, reading, and learning. They talk of 2.0 and research writing, and of the importance of engagement and choice. They talk about meaning, relevance, and meeting the needs of today’s students.

 

In between sessions and informal learning with friends old and new, the educators jam an exhibit hall filled with vendors of books and technology (and the occasional literature-themed t-shirt or umbrella). Lines form down the aisles, fans waiting to have books signed by their favorite authors. Some books are destined for the educators’ own bookshelves, other books for the hands of students they just know will light up from reading them.  

 

After several days of learning and sharing, they headed home to pass on what they experienced, and to continue the conversation, renewed.

 

You may be thinking: “it’s a little late for a recap and reflection on AASL 2009. After all, it’s been weeks since AASL ended!” Yes, this is true. But the conference I’m describing happened in Philadelphia just days ago.

 

Recently, I had the pleasure of attending two conferences, the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) Annual Convention and the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents (ALAN) Workshop, for the first time. These two conferences are held each year in the weeks just prior to Thanksgiving. (ALAN occurs the two days just after NCTE.)

 

As you can see from the description above , there is much we librarians have in common with English, reading, and literacy educators. Yes, we have our differences. Many literacy educators don’t think much about databases or collection development. Librarians might not dwell on content area literacy or phonemic awareness. But, as you can see from the description above, many of the major concerns of these two fields overlap. The conversations are complementary. We are working on many of the same problems: how to cultivate learning in an era of testing, how to engage and inspire students, how to develop (multi)literate young people who can succeed in and improve the world we share.

 

I was thrilled to meet several librarians among the many educators at NCTE/ALAN, but much of my time was spent in the company of incredible, passionate English teachers. During many conversations with English educators I would share the way librarians are their allies, working toward the same goals and ideals.  

 

I was excited to attend several sessions at NCTE. My favorite was a panel featuring incredible educators and inspiring authors Jeffrey Wilhelm, Alan Sitomer, and Jim Burke. I sat with several friends I had met on twitter. We live tweeted the presentations, sharing quotes and insights. Jeffrey Wilhelm gave an insightful presentation on teaching literary devices through making personal connections to students. Alan Sitomer shared poignant stories of students he had reached through his engaged and personal teaching style, as well as those he did not reach. Jim Burke’s presentation focused on the uses of the visual in teaching English, from Google Earth to graphic organizers. All three of the presenters were incredibly knowledgeable, entertaining, and passionate, using personal examples to illustrate their points. I was blown away.

 

ALAN was all about books and authors. This smaller conference centers around young adult authors and their work. All attendees received a box of books written by many of the authors in attendance. Some of the books were different from box to box, so we swapped and switched for favorites. After each author spoke, they (almost) silently signed their books at the back of the room while the next author or panel presented. From Jacqueline Woodson to Sarah Dessen, Lauren Myracle to Lois Lowry, Chris Crutcher to Steve Kluger, who was awarded  the first Amelia Elizabeth Walden Award for Young Adult Fiction at the conference, it was a literature lover’s dream. 

 

There was so much for teacher librarians to learn at NCTE and ALAN. There was also so much for teacher librarians to add to the conversations. I was honored to present with middle school English teachers and academics at both of these conferences. I discussed using graphic novels and nonfiction in visual and media literacy instruction, and as a way to help students learn to use images effectively in their own compositions. It would be wonderful to see more librarians at NCTE/ALAN next year.  Although I would love to bring an all-teacher-librarian panel to Orlando, I think Wendy Stephens is onto something with her suggestion that librarians present with other educators, in this case English teachers. Proposals for NCTE are due January 13th (by mail) or 20th (electronically). ALAN Proposals are due January 4th.

 

I left the conferences inspired to continue learning from and contributing to discussions with literacy educators. I was reminded once again that we are all in the field of education together, working to support the literacies and learning of all students. Disciplinary boundaries may feel insurmountable at times, so too may the classroom and library walls that seem to keep us apart. But, as this week showed me, the conversations in the different rooms are so similar. Tearing down the walls, and the listening and talking that results, is worth it. Imagine how our strength and resolve can be multiplied when we work toward the transformation of learning together. 

 

Beth Friese

Doctoral Student and Instructor

Department of Language and Literacy Education

University of Georgia

twitter: librarybeth

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Thanks, Beth!

By the way, Beth and I are some of the many folks convening for the upcoming holiday book club over on Teacher Librarian Ning. Check out the details and sign up here!

When Backchanneling Goes Bad

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

Our school district continues to adopt new 2.0 tools and give students a greater online voice.  A lot of excitement comes with the introduction of these new ways to share what we know.  As we roll out these tools at the elementary level, we spend a lot of time talking about online safety and etiquette.  Digital Citizenship, after all, is one of the key ideas of the NETS*S.

And unfortunately, danah boyd’s recent audience hadn’t gotten the Digital Citizenship lesson when, at Web 2.0 Expo a few days ago, the conference organizers placed a large Twitterwall displaying live Tweets prominently behind her onstage.  Unable to see what others were saying about her and her content, she felt the audience slip away from her and into their own cycles of negativity, a sort of mob mentality focused directly on her.

Backchanneling, or the process of giving live commentary on a face-to-face presentation, it was used to great effect at the SLJ Summit this fall and has, for me, been a real benefit.  I like hearing the Big Ideas emerging from other sessions and feel it gives me a more holistic sense of the value of the conference.  And in LibraryLand, the Tweets tend to be thoughtful, if not plain old complimentary.

So danah’s experience (you can view her keynote here, though the Twitterwall is not represented in the video) shook up many of us, and we engaged in a passionate impromptu conversation on Twitter.  Buffy summarizes both danah’s experience and our conversation on her blog.  Please take a look. 

And after you have, take a moment to think about these questions (Buffy also has some thoughts for you to consider):

  1. What Web etiquette lessons have we not yet taught well enough in our K-12 environments so that this can be minimized in the future? 
  2. The audience that Tweeted most likely had their real names affiliated with their Twitter account, so we can’t really chalk up this behavior to the oft-referenced idea of online anonymity.  How can we help our students recognize, as Steve Dembo often says, that their online life is their “New Permanent Record”? Could this situation be a teachable moment for our students to practice empathy?
  3. Many of us, in some point in our careers, will sit on a conference planning committee.  How did the physical placement of the Twitterwall screen play into the outcome danah experienced? Would moving the Twitterwall so it no longer shared the stage with the keynote have changed the tone of the experience?
  4. Before this month’s AASL conference in Charlotte, the AASL Forum listserv had a passionate discussion of live blogging or Tweeting from sessions.  Some saw it as a way to compliment the speaker, other speakers found it rude and a sign of inattentiveness to the moment.  I have to say that in my session in Charlotte, someone sat right up front and was clicking on her cell phone the whole time.  The nerve! I thought, in my best Nathan Detroit accent.  It was only afterwards, when I skimmed the Tweets tagged #aasl2009 in Twitter, that she had thoughtfully Tweeted what she saw as my most meaningful ideas.  It really helped me see where my presentation had resonated.  But if such behaviors hinder you as a presenter, should you have the right to request that people close their laptop lids and put their cell phones away?

Oh, yeah.  And Happy Thanksgiving. :)

 
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