Sunday 25 October 2015

Putting The Whole World Library in His/Her Hands: Mobile Access to Multi-Lingual, Multi-Cultural Books (and so much more)

This week's topic has two components: the idea of world libraries, and
the idea of using mobile devices with world libraries.
As usual, these broad topics could take us in multiple directions. So, I will set some semantic parameters around what I mean to discuss and focus upon in using those terms.

For "world libraries," I will look at a few virtual digital libraries of books/learning resources that could potentially be accessed by anyone, anywhere, anytime--especially to those in developing countries (or remote areas of the developed world) where access to physical libraries and their resources is less likely. Also, I will look at such Internet/Cloud library collections that are purposefully attempting to be multi-lingual or multicultural in order to be more relevant to more people throughout the world.

In terms of using "mobile devices" to access these world libraries, I'll look at the potential of using the various portable smartphones and tablets (and even latest generation laptops) as a way of carrying a whole library in your pocket, purse, backpack, etc. It is one thing to make virtual world libraries exist, but it is another very different thing to ensure that people have the devices and connectivity to the Internet/Cloud to actually use them; so, I'll take a look at those issues as well.



The first attempt to create a world library online that I remember hearing about was
Project Gutenberg. It was, as I recall, named after the Gutenberg printing press because it was trying to emulate the explosion of access to the printed word that that invention created. I think that originally the Gutenberg project was attempting to put all of the copyright-free classics of the Western canon online for equitable access to all people; it quickly developed into a portal to find materials in many different languages. It now includes a mobile site which would greatly increase its usability by mobile device users throughout the world (most of whom do not have/use desktop computers--more on these cell users later). It is free; thus, it is a true world library resource accessible to all.
QR code for Project Gutenberg mobile site

Another valuable world library is The International Children's Digital Library.
This is an amazing multi-lingual and multicultural collection. Its focus on children's literature makes it extremely valuable for use in school classrooms throughout the world. The link I provided above is one level below the home page: its "simple search" shows how quickly and easily students/teachers can find books by length, age level, category, and so on; notice that the search and results language can be changed in two locations toward the top right. The ICDL is free; thus, it is a true world library resource accessible to all.

There are many organizations out there working to bring digital books to students in under-served developing parts of the world. Library For All is one of them. As their mission statement says:
"Library For All is a nonprofit organization that has built a digital library platform to address the lack of access to quality educational materials in developing countries. Our mission is to make knowledge accessible to every person on the planet, allowing individuals the opportunity to learn, dream, and aspire to lift themselves out of poverty." 


Their cloud-based collection of books comes from multiple publishing partners and features home-language resources; the collections they make available are purposely designed to be used in lower bandwidth environments and allow for off-line use; while they don't supply mobile devices, they do analyze what devices are available in the areas they go to so that they can adapt their platform to fit the population's equipment. All of these features make them a valuable world library resource.



Now, it is great that various world library projects are up and running, but how are people going to access them? 



Mobile devices are seen as a great equalizer in terms of putting learning resources in hands quickly and easily as these--and many, many other--news articles, blogs, etc. have touted in recent years...

Cell Phones Could Help Millions in Developing Countries to Read
in Time online, and
Cell Phones Ignite a 'Reading Revolution' in Poor Countries
online on The Verge.




However, the Pew Research Center on Global Attitudes and Trends published a much more thorough examination of which types of mobile devices were used, how many of them existed, for what purposes they were used, and whether or not they were able to access the Internet/Apps/Cloud/etc in various countries throughout the developing world:

The charts contained in the study above definitely provide some reality checks in terms of connectivity issues in various countries.
[Both charts above and below from study linked above and cited in References below]


We simply need more free wifi available everywhere to truly give people equitable access to world libraries, increased literacy skills, and open learning opportunities. I did find it heartening that on page three, part way down, between 10-15% of respondents in most countries said that they had used their mobile devices to access online classes. Yet, there is still a significant issue in terms of cell phones becoming commonplace, but the more useful and interactive smartphones (and tablets) remaining uncommon and unaffordable in developing nations.

Luckily, there are people and organizations constantly working on ways to increase equity of access to mobile devices and the free wifi connections needed to make them functional and useful. Below are just a few ways that these issues are attempting to be addressed.

Innovative ways to deliver wifi Internet to where it doesn't exist:
https://www.youtube.com/user/ProjectLoon (for various videos including the one below)

The BRCK is kind of like a backup generator for creating share-able wifi hotspots in underserved and remote areas. It is very portable and very durable, and for a cost of $250, I think it would be affordable for aid organizations or government ministries to purchase to support people. 
BRCK TEDtalk video below



And, to conclude, Mozilla has been spending the last few years trying to develop 
a very affordable $25 smartphone that they would deliberately market to developing countries. Although their motivation is most certainly to make big money by selling to unsaturated markets, the cheap price will also help people around the world get in on accessing a wealth of digital knowledge.

With all of these efforts discussed in my blog today, we may very soon see a time when all people around the globe have an affordable world library in their pockets that is powered by freely-provided or affordably-purchased wifi connections. Fingers crossed...





References

BRCK. 'BRCK: Rugged, Portable Wifi Hotspot & Battery Extender'. N.p., 2015. Web. 27 Oct. 2015.

Google: Project Loon. Project Loon: Scaling Up. April 17, 2015. Web: YouTube. 27 Oct. 2015.

H., Victor. 'Mozilla Signs A Deal To Make The World’S Cheapest Smartphone: $25 Firefox OS Device With 3.5” Screen And HTML5 Apps'. Phone Arena. Feb. 23, 2014. Web. 27 Oct. 2015.

International Children's Digital Library. 'Simple Search'. Web. 26 Oct. 2015.

Library For All. 'Homepage'. N.p., 2015. Web. 26 Oct. 2015.

Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Project. 'Internet Seen As Positive Influence On Education But Negative On Morality In Emerging And Developing Nations'. March 19, 2015. Web. 27 Oct. 2015.

Project Gutenberg. 'Online Book Catalogue—Overview'. 2003–2010. Web. 26 Oct. 2015.

Rayman, Noah. 'Cell Phones Could Help Millions In Developing Countries To Read'. TIME.com.April 23, 2014. Web. 27 Oct. 2015.

TEDtalk and BRCK. Tedtalk: Meet BRCK: Internet Access Built For Africa. June, 2013. Web. 27 Oct. 2015.

Toor, Amar. 'Cellphones Ignite A 'Reading Revolution' In Poor Countries'. The Verge. April 23, 2014. Web. 27 Oct. 2015.

Wauters, Stephanie. 'Smart-Phone (Icon)'. Noun Project. Web. 26 Oct. 2015.







Sunday 18 October 2015

Help Myself to Help My Colleagues Find On-line Pro-D

Thoughts Going in 2 (or more) Directions...
Looking for a Focus...
For this week, the Inquiry Blog assignment pulls me in two directions... The first is to focus on a digital "professional collection" in terms of creating a Library Digital Learning Commons website of some sort that houses learning links for teachers (and students), and that contains examples and tutorials on using apps, etc to enhance learning in the classroom (all of which is a goal I'm slowly building towards). The second direction my mind is going in is related to becoming a conduit for connecting fellow teachers to on-line course work as pro-d. Since I know that I mirror colleague curiosity and trepidation about this realm (even though I've liked taking LIBE/LLED courses online), I pushed myself to go exploring in this second direction. So...

The Question to Focus On
How can we as Teacher-Librarians lead the way in teaching, or pointing the way toward, meaningful ICT professional development on-line for our colleagues?

The True Confessions Component
Yikes! A daunting question up above. One which makes me nervous as I feel new to the whole realm of online pro-d myself (beyond UBC T-L courses). I have participated in two math webinars (three years ago) and, truth be told, did not love the format...maybe just because I'm geezerific, maybe because the particular moderator/teacher wasn't as effective as others, maybe because I just wasn't used to it—I'm not sure. 

Similarly, I was part of a group participating in a sort of digital teleconference/webinar (two years ago) with John Mighton at the CISCO building in Vancouver, that gave me a rocky intro into online pro-d: we started nearly half an hour late due various technical difficulties getting synced audio and video. Mighton is the originator of JUMP Math, and is the author of The End of Ignorance, which I had read—and really appreciated—as pro-d to increase my math instruction skills for my grade 4 classes. Watching video footage of his math teaching in the classroom using scaffolded questions and kids scrawling answers on individual whiteboards had transformed my lessons into something I (and the kids) thoroughly enjoyed. [Oddly, I couldn't find the particular videos of Mighton teaching kids that I once viewed; only pieces of them within other videos; I did stop searching after 15 min., though]  I was really looking forward to learning alongside John Mighton, but the tech difficulties were really tedious to sit through.

Getting Over Myself (speaking of ending ignorance...)
However, in the end, it was exceedingly cool to be sort of face-to-face with an educator I respected while he was thousands of kilometres away in Toronto. And do a few tiresome tech difficulties really undermine the amazingness of being able to do that; do they eliminate the benefits of connecting to a personal learning network that would have been impossible not so long ago? No, definitely not. In the end, everything eventually ran smoothly. I was glad to have been a part of it. And with the rapidity of tech advancements in this era, there is every chance that the flaws of a few years ago have already been mitigated...


So...this week, I decided to get over myself, and began to look into what sort of online—preferably free—pro-d is available currently available. I have heard of things like MOOCs (Massive Open Online Courses), but didn't realize just how many of them were out there! I figure that as a T-L, becoming a portal to such pro-d info for my colleagues has some value: everyone is busy, and so everyone can appreciate a middleman who points out a course of possible interest. And who knows, I just might find something for myself, too! Posted below are a few finds...

A Few Good Finds for Online Pro-D


What I really liked about Class Central (above image) was that it was laid out simply and started with offerings current to the date of searching and expanding out into the future, rather than being yet another list of various MOOCs, etc, that were amazing, but already over. On one level, we could simply send the link out to colleagues to do their own searches through the offerings, or, even better, we could scroll through looking for topics that suit individual staff member interests, or school pro-d goals, and send info about those specific courses.

A site called Edudemic also was useful for online pro-d suggestions using ICT tools. Its "9 Places to Find High-Quality On-line Professional Development" article led me to the TeachersFirst website.
If a colleague was tentatively interested in using blogs, I would definitely send them there; then, once they had chosen a blog tool, I would make sure I learned all about it, send them a video link showing how to set up accounts, and then sit down with them to set it all up together.

TeachersFirst also offers a wide variety of live online pro-d in their "OK2Ask" section (pdf schedule of coming events attached here). The description in the picture here sums them up nicely: OK2Ask® from TeachersFirst
This site also has an archive of how-to "courses" that walk teachers step-by-step through how to incorporate technology in their teaching. The information is presented in bite-size chunks, which is non-threatening. The interface is relatively low-tech looking, uncluttered, and not full of flashy distractions—perfect for those colleagues nervous but curious about using more tech in class. One particular example: I read through the course called "Blog Basics for the Classroom," and found it to be a great intro.

Another possibility found via Edudemic was the Intel Teach Elements site. I could see a small group of colleagues choosing a self-directed, self-paced course together on a topic of mutual interest. It would especially lend itself to our district's After-School Collaboration Sessions pro-d, where teachers interested in a given topic meet together for four to five sessions throughout the year (and receive two set lieu days in recognition of the time devoted to extra pro-d).


Closing Thoughts
There is an amazing variety of useful coursework to be found out there in the ether...best if we Teacher-Librarians decide to be a guide towards finding it for colleagues.

Besides pointing out the above online courses available to my colleagues, I plan to continue investigating uses for various apps, and suggesting/demonstrating uses for them in my colleagues' teaching. Sometimes teachers come to us wanting support with incorporating tech tools, but if we can anticipate good options and approach them with an idea already fleshed out...well, that tends to get quicker buy-in. Investigating the new curriculum documents and planning ahead with how to help teachers' pro-d transitions--and how to incorporate 21st Century Literacies into that curriculum--is a big goal for this year and next year. I would like to create some grade-by-grade links for teachers showing how to use interactive communication tools to meet curriculum content goals, in much the same way the new curriculum documents provide digital audio/video examples in the "Competency Illustrations" page of the Communication tab, as in these two items:

A)
Blog: Perfect School, which could be used to further support the imagined colleague I mentioned earlier who wants to start using blogs.

B)
Retelling Little Red Riding Hood, which simply shows how using the iPad camera to record students' oral language learning can show not only what they know, but make visible their confidence, their memory strategies, their voice modulation, and so much more--all in a format that can re-played for deeper assessment purposes, or that can be shared with a parent to deepen their understanding of their son/daughter's skills or challenges.



References

BC Ministry of Education,. Competency Illustrations: Retelling Little Red Riding Hood. 2015. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Curriculum.gov.bc.ca,. 'Building Student Success - BC's New Curriculum'. N.p., 2015. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Curriculum.gov.bc.ca,. 'Communication Profiles: Communication Competency Illustrations: Blog: Perfect School'. N.p., 2015. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Intel,. 'Intel® Teach Elements'. N.p., 2015. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Jumpmath.org,. 'JUMP Math :: Home'. N.p., 2015. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Learning, Class. 'Class Central'. Class Central. N.p., 2015. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Lepi, Katie. '9 Places To Find Great Online Professional Development'. Edudemic.com. N.p., 2013. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Mighton, John. The End Of Ignorance. Toronto: Vintage Canada, 2008. Print.
Ncte.org,. 'NCTE Framework For 21St Century Curriculum And Assessment'. N.p., 2015. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Teachersfirst.com,. 'Teachersfirst - Ok2ask®: Free Online Professional Development For Teachers'. N.p., 2015. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.
Teachersfirst.com,. 'Teachersfirst: Blog Basics For The Classroom'. Web. 18 Oct. 2015.


Monday 12 October 2015

Let the PLN-ing begin...! But, "Slowly, slowly, slowly," said the thoughtful sloth.

Creating a Personal Learning Network can be a bit daunting, because every time I make a foray into education forums, blogs, etc, I see so many amazing ideas, so many new and different apps, so many intriguing voices, SO MUCH _______________. I have an ideas file folder in my email with links that I may never get back to to explore them further.

So, I'm thinking the key (for me, and for others?) may be to start small, with a narrower focus. As a kind of portal to possible items of interest, I've made an account with Edutopia and started to explore within it. There may well be better sites, but as a start, it will do; I do appreciate the simple clean layout with Topic, Video, and Conversation menu buttons at the top; the breakdown of grade groups one level in is also useful.


Although the link below, on Edutopia, about augmented reality apps didn't relate directly to me and things I would use...
...it was interesting--but more importantly, it reminded me about last year when some of my staff saw a bit of a novelty augmented reality app in a workshop that really wowed them...I meant to approach them with ideas for using Aurasma this year. 

Anyway, using Edutopia as a start linked me to a curated blog post (a potential PLN connection) which reminded me of a way to connect with colleagues (my main PLN) in my building—and it wasn't overwhelming, which was a great way to get started PLN-ing...

I used Aurasma a few years ago to create a treasure hunt-style interactive experience at the Stō:ló Nation site near my school (as a follow-up field trip after the Gr 4 Longhouse visits). It has since become a standard part of my grade 4 SS unit on First Nations cultures, and a cornerstone in my attempts to stick to Place-Based Education. Aurasma is an app (linked to the online site) that allows you to make a video clip that will be triggered to appear when the iPad camera scans over a chosen trigger object, scene, etc in the real world. I've meant to use it in more ways within the school; now, I've been reminded to do just that.

In terms of creating a PLN, I like being in this LIBE 477 class and being given a mini-PLN--in the Bears group. That narrows my focus to make it manageable; with only four or five people to follow, I can pursue all of their ideas and links more thoroughly; and then choose to venture outside of the group when necessary or when wanting even more variety. And when venturing out, it is definitely best to have a specific search topic in mind and to stick to it...stop clicking on other interesting-sounding things!

Following the same narrow group on Twitter has been a great way to get started as well; I've added a few others to my following list, but not too many. Just dipping my toe in. [During our last strike, I was very active on Twitter, under a now-defunct account, following many people, and interacting a fair bit, but more for educational/political purposes—so, I know it can be very useful and rewarding.]

I saw a retweet in my feed of something that sounded interesting from an educator guru named Catlin Tucker, so I tentatively followed her for now. That led me to this very interesting post:

This tied in nicely with my re-invigorated thoughts about augmented reality apps. I can see using ThingLink as a great alternative to traditional elementary Library research presentations on animals...imagine snapping a photo of the animal, then attaching clickable icons to the image that opened up info on its adaptations such as claws, eyesight, tail, etc...? This video explains the process: How to Thinglink!

The final element of starting to create a PLN that I'd like to discuss is the the idea to "Share everything (or at least something)" that Richardson implores us to do in his eBook, Why School? Sharing and soliciting feedback is naturally a great way to hone your skills...so I'm trying to get on with it. I often share ideas for possible collaboration with my staff in formats like those down below. Now, I'll put a couple of them out there in their rough, unpolished way for fellow classmates reading my blog.

Chris' audio/video clips (3-4 min each; created with Puppet and Screenchomp apps) about using an app for math instruction and teacher/parent connections:

Does anyone have any similar or different tech ways of accomplishing the skills or goals I mentioned in the above clips? I'd love to hear them.

Let the PLNing begin...!





References

Aurasma. https://www.aurasma.com: HP Aurasma, 2011. Web. 11 Oct. 2015.

Carle, Eric. "Slowly, slowly, slowly," Said the Sloth. New York, NY: Philomel Books, 2002. Print.

Hunt, Christopher. (A Message To Teacher Colleagues About Using Screenchomp As A Math Teaching Tool; Created Using Shadow Puppet.). 2015. Web. 12 Oct. 2015.

Hunt, Christopher. (A Screenchomp Video Created As An Example For Teaching Subtraction, A Tool For Students To Demonstrate Mastery, And As A Resource To Send To Parents.). 2015. Web. 12 Oct. 2015.

Jayne, Clare. 'Tech Toys (And Tools) For Learning'. Edutopia 2015. Web. 11 Oct. 2015.

Richardson, Will. Why School? How Education Must Change When Learning And Information Are Everywhere.. 1st ed. TED Conferences, 2012. Web. 10 Sept. 2015.

Screenchomp. http://www.screenchomp.com: TechSmith Labs, 2011. Mobile application.

Shadow Puppet. http://get-puppet.co: Shadow Puppet, 2014. Mobile application.

Thinglink. How To Thinglink!. 2015. Web. 12 Oct. 2015.

Thinglink. 'Thinglink - Make Your Images Interactive'. N.p., 2013. Web. 12 Oct. 2015.

Tucker, Catlin. 'Catlin Tucker On Twitter'. Twitter. N.p., 2015. Web. 11 Oct. 2015.


Sunday 4 October 2015

The Cult of The Book: Fostering a Reading Culture in Schools (w/ ICT Support?)

I have always been foremost occupied as a Teacher-Librarian with the goal of creating a culture of reading within the school. Volume and variety of reading is the best method for increasing student reading skills, knowledge, empathy, escapism, connection, and--of course--entertainment. Most people have heard of the many studies showing the benefits of reading and access to books as indicators of academic success, but I found a study (link embedded) that was unique in its focus on using voluntary book club-style reading, discussing, and recommendation groups as a beneficial mental health therapy (LivHIR). Instead of having to read self-help books, the participants read books of their choosing and talked about them with others.
The conclusions were as follows:

The study found that Get into Reading helped patients suffering from depression in terms of: their social well-being, by increasing personal confidence, reducing social isolation, fostering a sense of community and encouraging communication skills; their mental well-being, by improving powers of concentration, fostering an interest in new learning or new ways of understanding, and extending their capacity for thought, verbalised and internalised; their emotional and psychological well-being, by increasing selfawareness, enhancing the ability to articulate profound issues of being, and making possible a shift in internal paradigms (or the telling of „a new story) in relation to self and identity. The study also established what literature works, why it works and how it works. Our findings thus offer a preliminary evidence-base for the efficacy of an inexpensive and humane psychosocial intervention, which will inform the development and design of the intervention, as well as the choices regarding outcome measures, in the design of a future RCT.  (p. 81)

At any rate, in this hectic era, when self-regulation is a major educational topic, reading for extended periods certainly provides a calm and reflective period for the body to relax and for the mind to be released from worries and stresses. Fostering a reading culture is thus a very important thing for a school Librarian to focus on. But, HOW?

How do we convince more kids to read more books more often? Below are some things I've been trying over multiple years to accomplish that fundamental goal.

Of course, having a very wide variety of items available helps: 
something to suit every taste. That is a beginning. Making sure they can find the books that interest them is vital: you might have it, but if they don't know it, they might leave with nothing. So, good signage is important, as are occasional Library walk-and-talk tours or orientations. Kids don't always read signs with words, so using picture cue cards to catch their attention works well (as I've found since experimenting last year).

This link should allow me to share the pic cue cards I created using Creative Commons pictures and icons:

Students will read so much more if they can find what they want--fast. Creative cataloguing is a technique that improves patrons' abilities to find materials. Almost all Library software will allow you to manipulate fields for Call #, Location, and Subject. This allows you to create a user-friendly OPAC. It may not be an official Dewey subject you use, but if you can anticipate a topic kids want, and then create a subject list for those items, it's just one more way to be sure the books make it into readers' hands (you can teach more effective subject searching another time). I don't want the computer search system sending kids on a wild goose chase. If you keep all the Junie B. Jones (or whatever) in some sort of easy-access bin section, don't catalogue its call number as FIC PAR; instead, input the call number as JunieB/Bin #4 (or something). Be sure as well that the location field also gives a specific spot for the searcher to go to (often, for me, this is a repeat of the special call number--if it says it twice, more chance it gets noticed). For example, since my Graphic Novels are all on two display shelves, giving them call numbers such as 741.5 KIB is useless--they aren't over in non-fiction. So, the call number says "Graphic Novel shelves," as does the location field. The Graphic Novel shelves have large prominent signs on them, and when the student arrives there, the shelf labels clearly show where Amulet (etc) normally lives.

Try this experiment: go to the Sardis Elementary catalogue via the link below and look up Dork Diaries books, and Frog Girl, and Same Same But Different to see examples of how I use the fields just discussed.    
The OPAC, your catalogue search tool, isn't exactly ICT, but having online access to it can likely increase its use as an interactive communication tool. With a switch-over to the Destiny program last January, our Library catalogue is now online 24/7. Thus, students can access it from home, and once I have time to investigate it further, I believe they will have the ability to write reviews and recommendations to post for peers (does anybody out there have knowledge/experience with this?) Those peer-to-peer suggestions will help to foster reading culture. My "old-school" version of this was the use of "Book Review Bookmarks" in my former Library assignment. Kids could take a 3x5" card from the check-out desk and fill in title, author, call number fields, plus write a review on it, then hand it in when returning the book. During assemblies, several reviews were chosen from the pile and read out; the reviewers got to visit the Library afterward to choose a free book. Periodically the review pile was "retired," which meant that those reviews got slipped into book pockets inside the covers of their books for other browsers to discover. I keep meaning to bring this idea to my new Library....

Reading really engaging stories to students in 
fun and interactive storytimes provides them with connections to new favourites that they will later see and borrow; if they like Book A that you read, then knowing that author has more titles will create a run on that shelf. Reading with voices, occasionally using puppets or props, and other elements of showmanship can also associate reading with fun, which promotes more reading for pleasure. I learned a lot (good and bad; to do, and not to do) from the public library's storytimes in the early years of my boys' lives.

My latest endeavour to build a culture of reading started when I was back teaching in Grade 4 classrooms. A few years ago, 
I initiated Mr. Hunt's Reading Extravanganza Challenges. These were lists of fabulous books that students could choose to read (or not); if they completed a list, then they got their names entered into an end-of-term draw to win $25 Chapters gift card (I got administrator permission to use my classroom budget to purchase these).  Since taking over my new Library position, I've wanted to expand the Challenges to the entire school: however, at just over 500 kids, it could get insanely expensive to hand out gift card rewards. In my old (inner city) school, I always used the proceeds from the Scholastic Book Fairs exclusively for purchasing year-end books (one for each of our 250 kids) and Book Review Bookmark give-aways; in my new school (not impoverished), the book fair proceeds are significant enough to fund a fully stocked Freebie Cart that I can use as rewards for completed Challenges. 

To see the Challenge lists (that I recently Tweeted about, too) follow the link below: 
http://sardis.sd33.bc.ca/library-news   (see the downloadable files towards the bottom of  page)

Thus, in February, I unveiled the program with a wide variety of book lists: various picture book lists, special collections lists (like ABC, First Nations, etc), graphic novels, various non-fiction, poetry, and various short and long fiction Challenges. There are now 24 different lists organized into three genre binders. The lists are available, viewable and downloadable, on-line on the 
Library News page of the school website. PAC parents made a display about them in the foyer last spring; I'm now going to get them to add a post and links to their Facebook page to spread the news far and wide (and to catch those who haven't seen my info in school newsletters).  A key element of this program is to try and encourage family members to read with their kids in working through the lists; to at least encourage some discussion of the books, students are to get each item on the list checked of/initialed by an adult, as well as a final signature. In only four months, 76 completed Challenges were handed in, which means 76 free books were chosen! I have been meaning to sift through the pile and do an analysis of what grade levels are doing them, which genre of lists are most used, how many students completed more than one, and so on.

Also, I am now attempting to build a parent 
Twitter following (as a result of taking this class) in order to share news about the Challenges, to make book recommendations, and share other reading-related news. Hopefully, increasing my use of ICT tools will help to build an ever-stronger culture of reading within my school.

I suppose I shall end things here...this has gotten rather longer than I intended (again);
I'll leave out reminiscences about the Books For Babies  (a borrowed idea from a colleague, plus built on a program by the local hospital) and the adult-and-child Book Club programs I used to do and have been planning to one day start up again....



Works Cited

LivHIR: Liverpool Health Inequalities Research Institute: The Reader Organization, with University of Liverpool, and National Health Service (Liverpool),. An Investigation Into The Therapeutic Benefits Of Reading In Relation To Depression And Well-Being. Liverpool (England): The Reader Organization, 2010. Web. 4 Oct. 2015.


One of the covers of the Reading Extravaganza Challenges binders: