SCROLL DOWN TO READ THE POST
Build a manifesto with me (continued)
Please help me edit this manifesto with your blog comments and wiki edits!
You know you are a 21st century teacher librarian if you . . .
- Make sure your learners and teachers can (physically & intellectually) access developmentally appropriate databases, portals, and websites in multiple media.
- Organize the Web for learners. You have the skills to create a blog or website or wiki to pull together resources to meet the information needs of your learning community. That presence reflects your personal voice. It includes your advice as well as your links.
- Make learning an engaging and colorful hybrid experience. You intervene in the research process online while respecting young people’s need for independence.
- Think outside the box about the concept of “collection.” That collection might include: ebooks, audiobooks, open source software, streaming media, flash sticks, digital video cameras, and much more! You lend this stuff.
- Think of your web presence as a knowledge management for your school. This is collection too, and it includes student-produced learning objects, handouts, policies, and collaborative wiki pathfinders to support learning and research in all learning arenas.
- Think Web 2.0. You know the potential new technologies offer for interaction–learners as both information consumers and producers.
- Are thinking interactive service: materials suggestion forms, book review blogs, surveys, online calendars, etc.
- Know your physical space is about way more than books. Your space is a libratory. You welcome media production—podcasting, video editing. You welcome telecommunications events and group gathering for planning and research and social networking.
- Include, and collaborate with, the learner. You let them in. You fill your physical and virtual space with student work, student contributions—their video productions, their original music, their art.
- Expand your notion of searching. You work with learners to set up RSS feeds and tag clouds for research.
- Are concerned that when it matters, your students move beyond information satisficing. They make solid information decisions.
- Are concerned about a new digital divide. Those who can find quality information in all media formats effectively, and those who cannot.
- Consider new interactive and engaging communication tools for student projects–digital storytelling, wikis, podcasts, streaming video as possibilities beyond the mortal powers of PowerPoint. (And you are rethinking what PowerPoint, what presentations should or could be!)
- Consider just-in-time, just-for-me learning as your responsibility and are proud that you own the real estate of one desktop window on your students’ home computers 24/7. (My own website is used as much after school as it is during.)
More in the next post!
Filed under: Uncategorized
About Joyce Valenza
Joyce is an Assistant Professor of Teaching at Rutgers University School of Information and Communication, a technology writer, speaker, blogger and learner. Follow her on Twitter: @joycevalenza
ADVERTISEMENT
SLJ Blog Network
100 Scope Notes
Happy Poem in Your Pocket Day!
A Fuse #8 Production
This Q&A is Going Exactly As Planned: A Talk with Tao Nyeu About Her Latest Book
Good Comics for Kids
More Geronimo Stilton Graphic Novels Coming from Papercutz | News
Teen Librarian Toolbox
Environmental Mystery for Middle Grade Readers, a guest post by Rae Chalmers
The Classroom Bookshelf
The Classroom Bookshelf is Moving
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT