Monday, December 28, 2015

Mock Caldecott 2016

This fall we've been reading LOTS of picture books to prepare for our Mock Caldecott election that took place right before winter break.  Our list of books is here.

We had fun reading the stories together, discussing theme and story and the illustrations.  It's a wonderful thing to have a collection of shared literature to refer to and discuss.  In the end we voted. It's clear that this group loves a funny book, they're 6th graders after all.
Winner: I Yam a Donkey by CeCe Bell
Honor Books: The Bear Ate Your Sandwich by Julia Sarcone-Roach and Red, Yellow, Blue with a Dash of White too by Charles George Esperanza.
You can see what other Mocks have chosen here.  I can't wait to see and share what the committee chooses!

Thursday, December 17, 2015

This Year in Books

https://www.goodreads.com/user/year_in_books/2015/7280091?utm_medium=email&utm_source=yyib_2015_12

This year my goal was to read 100 books.  I did it! Click on the picture to see the books I've read.  I abandon books I don't like right away so my books are all rated pretty high.  I find books to read by reading the blogs in the sidebar and from the Goodreads groups Mock Caldecott, Mock Newbery and Mock Printz.  There are some fantastic books for gifts on this list so click the link and see what you like.  What was your favorite book of the year?

Thursday, December 10, 2015

AASL Reflection

I was lucky enough to attend the AASL this year in Columbus, OH.  I'd been to a couple of other national conferences so I knew the energy and focus that was going to be required as well as the fun and excitement I was going to experience.  I learned more than I'll ever be able to implement.  Here are my main take aways:
The opening session was presented by Heidi Hayes Jacobs who challenged us with the question,
"What decade are we preparing our students for?" 
There were a few things that she implored us to do:
  • Sign up for Twitter (find me @SaraCoo08365060) s to connect with other professionals and read about current happenings.
  • Have students view and create quality media as part of their learning and sharing all the time.
  • Carve out space at school for a green screen (I'm going to paint a green wall in a library corner), recording room and Skype area.
  • Have students create their own websites where they can store all of their work.
Her talk was inspiring and left me wanting to get back to school and get started!

In the break out session "Be a Research Rockstar!" Sarah Scholl and Sarah Wein (I'm going to do a research project on the most popular librarian name and my hypothesis is that Sara(h) is the winner) walked us through their collaborative research project,


Challenge and Change using Guided Inquiry.  The website has the presentation slides and the handouts that will give you an idea of this exciting research project that led kids through finding, researching and awarding a notable person who has faced challenge and changed the world around them.   It was obvious that the project led to deep and meaningful learning for the kids involved.  The presentation was a reminder of the importance of collaboration between teachers and librarians and a reminder to create research projects that go deeper into Bloom's Taxonomy instead of "research" being questions the students can easily find the answers to in an online search.

Joyce Valenza presented on leveraging your library with evidence.  I am going to try these two ideas this year:
  • Have students film (with and iPad or their phones) "their" library.  The students walk around the library filming their favorite sections and telling about what the space means to them.  These can be posted online, shown during staff meetings, sent to administrators and politicians.  
  • Create a "focus group" of students and prepare questions for them to answer about the library.  Film the discussion and use it to implement change in the library based on their discussions.
THe exhibit hall was filled with vendors and lines for free books.  I enjoyed getting to know librarians from around the country as we waited in line.  I brought home a whole suitcase full of free books, signed books and ARCs.  It was invigorating and meaningful.  I'm planning on going to Phoenix in 2017, hope to see you there!


Thursday, December 3, 2015

Lessons in the Library

Last week I collaborated on a unit for 6th graders studying censorship.  They had all read the book Americus and were mostly in agreement that book censorship was a bad idea.  When I attended the American Association of School Librarian (yes, that's a real thing and yes it was awesome) conference in Columbus at the beginning of the month Heidi Hayes Jacobs encouraged us to create lessons around current events and since there has been much controversy about

A Fine Dessert we decided to have the kids read the book and decide if the book was appropriate and worthwhile for elementary schools.
I first read this book over the summer and thought it was beautiful.  The story takes us through four generations of families making the same dessert, blackberry fool.  I showed the book to our Home Ec. teacher and thought it would be perfect to read with her classes before making the dessert with the class.  Then at the beginning of this school year I read it aloud to my Mock Caldecott Group and I felt uncomfortable during the slavery scene but I quickly moved onto the next book in our stack to read that day.  Soon thereafter I started to read about the concerns online and I looked back over the book and agreed that in my opinion slavery was glossed over and made to look pleasant and should have been left out of a book with this cheerful tone. 

So, that is how we ended up analyzing it with the 6th graders. 
Here's what I learned from that.  It IS indeed our job as teachers, librarians and parents to protect kids from harmful ideas.  Not in the way we usually think of with books about controversial topics but when the books are telling lies.
After I read the book aloud to the kids (something all kids love and we stop doing much too early!) and we discussed the issue of how slavery was presented, we had the students talk in their groups and vote.  About half of the groups decided that the book was an inaccurate portrayal of slavery and should not be read to young students who might then think that slavery was okay.
What shocked and saddened me were the groups who decided it should stay with the justification that at least one group in each class gave: it was a "gentle introduction to slavery". Oh no. 

We need to avoid gentle introductions to things that are horrible and unjust.  We need to avoid lying to children and ourselves about things that make us uncomfortable.  We need to talk more about these issues and not ignore the uncomfortable feelings.  We need to listen to each other.


Thursday, September 24, 2015

September Book to Read

I read all the time.  Sometimes I'm reading a young adult book, every once in a while a book aimed at actual adults, occasionally non-fiction in either of the previous categories but I'm always reading something.

There are books that I love but I'm not sure how to tell anyone else about them because I'm not sure how to put into words what I loved about them without telling the whole story.  This is why I don't write book reviews.  I just like to be able to hand someone a book and say, "Read this!" and have them believe me, read it and love it.  Luckily, I have the perfect job in which to do this.  I love almost every single thing about being a school librarian and this is one of the best.  Handing books to kids.  There's a Judy Blume quote that I love, "Librarians save lives: by handing the right book, at the right time, to a kid in need."  It applies to anyone sharing books of course, not just librarians. Teachers and especially in middle school-other kids...but it's a part of my job that I enjoy tremendously.

So, this book.  Goodbye Stranger is by Rebecca Stead who wrote When You Reach Me and then won the Newbery.  Goodbye Stranger is an important book.  It's a book that shows how easy it is to make mistakes with friends both old and new and how difficult it is to navigate this whole growing up thing.  

I think it would be a perfect book for a mother/daughter book club.  You could read it together, aloud or each on your own.  You could talk about it or even have a journal back and forth about the book.

I recently saw this post on the Growing Book by Book blog about a family dinner book club.  I think this book would be PERFECT for that kind of a discussion.  I'm hoping to launch the idea at our school.  We could wear cat ears and eat cinnamon toast and drink milkshakes while we talk about the temptations to push our own personal boundaries and values to create a connection with someone else.  I'll let you know if I pull it off!

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Symbaloo

I had a lot of fun putting together my ideas about how to find new books to read, order and share for the NMLA conference this month.  I also put together some resources for becoming a school librarian that I got to share with a group of brand new UNM student teachers at Bandelier Elementary School.  Here is my Symbaloo from both presentations.  I love having all of my favorite resources and links in one place.  Let me know if you have any questions.  Thanks for stopping by.







Friday, February 20, 2015

Genrefy (It's not really a word but it works)

I first read about this idea in this  School Library Journal article about ditching Dewey.  The idea greatly intrigued me because I was spending my days as an elementary school librarian constantly walking kiddos to the "books about tanks" or the "cat books" or the "princess books".  When I read in the article that they had organized the books in their library to be more user friendly I immediately loved the idea and when I love an idea I have to tell everyone about it (case in point at the moment).  Everyone I talked to about the idea was horrified. 
Horrified. 
Why, they asked, would you get rid of a perfectly good system?  The only reason I could think of is the most important reason, because it will be easier for the kids (who are the reason we have the library) to find the books they want.
I prefer to call my system genrefying because I'm not ditching Dewey. I love the Dewey Decimal System.  People think I'm joking when I talk about how much I love it. 
But, it's a system that only works for those who know how to use it and no matter how often I taught it and we sang the song the kids didn't live the system like I did.  So they might know where to find the cat books but not the dinosaur books and the numbers didn't mean anything to them.
Now that I'm at JMS and I have more time in the library with the books but the students have MUCH LESS time in the library with the books I have started the process.
I cannot explain to you how excited I am about this.  I know that it is going to increase circulation and make finding books MUCH easier for the students.
Here's what I'm doing:
I bought colored labels to stick on top of the existing spine labels, we started with the As and we are moving through the library. I'm sticking labels on the books that get returned too so there are some colored labels scattered throughout the shelves. 
I made a sign that lists our genres:
Sports
Horror
Humor
mystery
Classics
Action Adventure
Realistic Fiction
Historical Fiction
Fantasy
Science Fiction
and covered each genre in it's corresponding color. 
This will be slow going (until standardized testing closes my library for 2 months and then I'll have no patrons to speak of) and I'll make mistakes but I'm so thrilled to have started!
I'll keep you posted!

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Reading Goals

This year my goal is to read 100 books.  I count ALL the books I read. So, if I read aloud to my 6 year old daughter, I count it.  If I read something for work, I count it.  A book is a book!  I am so curious to see if I reach my goal mostly because I've never kept close track of every single book I've read.  I'm going to try to do that via Goodreads this year.  I've been ok in years past at keeping track of the books I read for pleasure but not so much the books I read aloud to kids.  This will make it easier for me to suggest books to friends and parents that their kids might like.  What's your reading goal?