Good Grammar Counts, Period: Resources for Teaching Grammar By Lauren Barack - 10/01/2009
Good grammar is important, but how do you inspire kids to watch their Ps and Qs (and commas and ellipses)? It’s easy, according to Jeff Rubin (pictured), who breaks into song, a little ditty called “Punctuation, Punctuation,” sung to the tune of “Frère Jacques.” That’s just one example of how to teach younger students the basics, he says.
More
Back-to-School Resources: Sites to ease the transition for teachers, parents, and kids By Gail Junion-Metz - 09/01/2009
At the Intersection of School & Home—Parent Corner school.discoveryeducation.com/parents Some kids look forward to the start of school—others are less than thrilled about it. On this site designed to help parents encourage their children, start at the “MotivationStation” for articles on various issues from academic performance to fitting in at school.
More
The Next Big Thing: Is Your Library up to 21st-Century Speed? By Christopher Harris - 09/01/2009
Libraries of the future will primarily manage digital repositories of information rather than warehouse physical books. A more functional method geared toward easy browsing will replace the Dewey Decimal system. And computers will surpass human librarians in the ability to answer even the most complex reference questions.
More
SLJ Reviews the Dell Latitude 2100/Netbook By Jeffrey Hastings - 09/01/2009
Though the burgeoning netbook class of computers arguably began with the One Laptop per Child educational initiative, look around and you’ll see just how far the little laptops have come. You’ll find them serving as second computers in urban cyber-cafes and suburban kitchens, tucked in the briefcases and gloveboxes of mobile professionals—even connected to park-based WiFi in r...
More
STEM to Grow in Libraries: Research project to get science content into media centers Lauren Barack - 09/01/2009
School librarians searching for a better way to broaden their science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) resources for K–12 students may soon have some innovative help. Marcia Mardis, an assistant professor at Florida State University, is embarking on a three-year project to build an RSS-like feed that she says will search Web sites and online libraries, pluck specific images and o...
More
Site of the Month: First Day of School Icebreakers By Kathy Ishizuka - 09/01/2009
www.teachersfirst.com/firstday.cfm Ah, the first day of school. For students, educators, and parents alike, it’s a remarkable occasion, loaded with excitement, anticipation, and, yes, sometimes even a tear or two. To help get things off to a good start, the Web site TeachersFirst has created “First Day of School Icebreakers.
More
Pen Ultimate: For kids who take part in National Novel Writing Month—the acid test for would-be authors—it's no guts, no glory By Lauren Barack - 09/01/2009
Kathleen Kohl was penning 2,000-word short stories at 12 years old and by 13 set her sights on writing a novel. In a move gutsy enough for any would-be writer, much less a teenaged one, Kohl last year signed on for National Novel Writing Month, an online contest, of sorts, that challenges all comers each November to complete a 50,000-word piece of fiction over 30 days.
More
A 2.0 Toolkit: A hand-picked set of free Web programs to take to school this fall By Shonda Brisco - 08/01/2009
Regardless of the subscription databases that are available in your library, there's always a sense of professional satisfaction when you're able to access and utilize free software programs to create an entirely new way to engage your users or fulfill a need. For some librarians, 2.0 tools have become a major component of their instructional day, virtually a "must-have" within their profession...
More
Face-to-Face Goes Web 2.0: Enhance in-person events with these social tools By Steve Hargadon - 08/01/2009
Every year, right before NECC, I hold a free, one-day event for educators interested in using 2.0 tools called EduBloggerCon. This unique conference is organized by the attendees (the 2009 class pictured), who, using a wiki, sign up to lead a discussion of their choice. Sound like chaos? It’s not.
More
Sticky Standards: AASL requires permission to use 21st-C standards sparking backlash Lauren Barack - 08/01/2009
The American Association of School Librarians’ (AASL) decision to require permission—and potentially a fee—to commercially use its Standards for the 21st-Century Learner (bit.ly/lWd9B) has generated ire among its members. “At first I was annoyed, but now getting mad,” posted librarian Beth Frise on Twitter.
More
Get Ready for Google Wave By Christopher Harris - 08/01/2009
Over the past few years, Google has changed the way we search. Later this year, the search giant is going to reinvent how we communicate and share online with its new Google Wave application. To get a good feeling for what Google Wave’s about, imagine that your email program got a bit hungry and ate your instant-messaging client.
More
SLJ Reviews the MSI Wind Top All-in-one touchscreen PC By Jeffrey Hastings - 08/01/2009
Among the scads of curious new computing permutations out there, the MSI Wind Top is among the most interesting multitasking mongrels I’ve tested to date. Reminiscent of the second gen Apple iMac, the Wind Top is a beautiful machine with its PC innards neatly hidden behind a stylish, 18.5-inch diagonal, 6:9 widescreen WXGA display that’s under two inches thick.
More
My First NECC: The big tech show still resonates for two first-timers Kathy Ishizuka - 08/01/2009
NECC, the big National Educational Computing Conference, has come and gone, but attendees, both in person and virtual, are still basking in the glow of all that sharing (bit.ly/dbGY5). School librarians Keisa Williams of Monarch Academy, a K–5 charter school in Oakland, CA, and Melissa Techman of Broadus Wood Elementary School in Albemarle Co.
More
Site of the Month: Library of Congress Teachers’ Page Kathy Ishizuka - 08/01/2009
www.loc.gov/teachers Most of us know the excitement that primary sources can bring to teaching. Photographs, maps, correspondence, and other original records that have survived from the past spark the imagination, and a staggering 13 million of these items have been digitized and made available online, thanks to the Library of Congress.
More
Met Any Good Authors Lately? Classroom author visits can happen via Skype (here's a list of those who do it for free) By Kate Messner - 08/01/2009
At 7:25 am on the last day of school, five avid fifth-grade readers hustle into the library of Chamberlin School in South Burlington, VT. They shrug off backpacks and pull out advance copies of The Brilliant Fall of Gianna Z, my middle-grade novel about a Vermont girl who’s convinced her school leaf collection project is ruining her life.
More
Library Media Specialists Represent at NECC Kathy Ishizuka - 07/10/2009
NECC, the National Educational Computing Conference, drew more than 13,500 attendees despite a depressed economy, including many library media specialists, who continue to have a presence at the largest ed-tech event in the country.
More
Test Drive: SLJ reviews the Lenovo ThinkCentre M58p Desktop PC By Jeffrey Hastings - 07/01/2009
Wow, I can’t believe I’m kicking it old school and actually reviewing a desktop PC. It seems like years since I’ve looked at any computing device that wasn’t a mini-netbook or some eco-friendly, Webcentric, Linux-based thingy. So what’s been going on with desktop computing while my eyes have been off the ball? Apparently, the same evolutionary forces that have spaw...
More
Summer Fun: Web Resources By Gail Junion-Metz - 07/01/2009
Exploratorium Sport Science www.exploratorium.edu/sport/index.html Here kids learn not only about baseball, cycling, surfing, and the like, but also the fascinating science behind each sport, from how bicycle gears work to how the angle of a baseball bat can determine a foul ball or a home run. Created by: The Exploratorium Museum, San Francisco, CA.
More
Control Your Content with APIs By Christopher Harris - 07/01/2009
Step right up for a behind-the-scenes, all-access tour of the Internet. Today we’re headed down to the basement to peer at some of the plumbing that makes the behemoth possible. In a physical incarnation, this would resemble a massive tangle of pipes leading not just from your computer to the Web, but between sites as well.
More