Showing posts with label follett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label follett. Show all posts

Sunday, January 27, 2019

Interviews & Author Skyping



Every week is kind of like a circus in the Media Center. We have all kinds of crazy things going on and it is almost always a wide-variety of activities. This week was no different. Tuesday I did book checkout and maker space free build with a Reading class that doesn't usually come to the Media Center. Wednesday I was off campus for a testing training. Thursday I was back at it with my Art students working on their Langston Hughes projects and Friday I had my GAPP kiddos back with me doing an "I Love My Library" activity (more to come on that later).

There were a lot of BIG things this week:


I'm not going to talk much about the Gala. It was a wonderful evening but doesn't really have anything to do with what happens in the Media Center. I will say that I got to walk down a red carpet, do a red carpet interview (if you'd like to watch it, it is the second video on the linked page and about 18 minutes into the video), and I got to meet a lot of awesome educators. The interview part was one of my favorite parts of the evening (other than having my mom, my husband, and my bestie there with me) because I got to speak about the importance of my profession and what I do everyday and how AMAZING our students are. 

Thursday I had the honor of having Greg Pallone join us for an interview. He did a story on our school-wide 20 Book Challenge and our participation in the Follett Challenge. He spoke with some of our kids who were featured in our video. He got some information from me and then worked hard to get the story in the 5:00 News and on their website. I'm so thankful that he came and invested some of his time to help our students out. 

Friday we had our monthly Project Lit Book Club meeting but this month's was a special one. We focused on Dear Martin by Nic Stone and Ghost Boys by Jewell Parker Rhodes. Our students got out of class for an extended period of time and we got to Skype Nic. It was sponsored by two of our incredible community members. We had a former NFL player join us, a fierce attorney, a high school senior, and one of our City Councilmen join us. Our students asked really great questions and our community members also had the chance to ask Nic some questions. I highly recommend doing this for your students!



I've written several times about the power of author visits. I have seen the impact of them. Sometimes budgets are strained...ok, who are we kidding? Budgets are ALWAYS strained but this is a great option that is significantly less expensive and still brings your students a great experience. 

A few tips about Skyping with an author for the first time:
  • schedule your time and date with your author and then plan to have students in and everything else set up and ready to go before that. Our students came to me 15 minutes ahead of time.
  • Make sure the students are prepped for the event. My students knew the event was happening, had read the book, and had been given some background information on the author. 
  • Expect tech hiccups but Skype with someone else to test it all out and make sure you have all the equipment you need. 
  • Make sure you have your admin stop by so they can see how awesome it is!

Nic is incredible. She's an incredible author and she loves students. If you are looking for an author to Skype with, she's definitely a great choice!  

If I can leave you with one piece of advice it would be to promote your program like it's your job because it is. People don't know that great things are happening unless you tell them about it. Be your own advocate! 

Tuesday, January 22, 2019

A Whirlwind of Great Learning

I'm really behind on posting some great things that have happened. It's been a whirlwind. I'll do my best to be brief but share some of the awesomeness and if you have questions or want to see more information, please let me know.

The week of Dec. 10-14 we had a lot of big/cool things happen. 

1. A committee came to watch me teach, interview me, and interview 3 of my peers and my admin to decide if I should be the Teacher of the Year for Brevard County Schools. At first I thought I needed to do something really big and amazing to show the committee that Media Specialists do more than just check out books but I decided to do what we do best...engineering stations tied to novels. It was an interesting day to say the least but our stations were awesome, the kids learned a ton, and we had a great day! The thing that sticks in my mind the most about that day (other than all the cool things our kids built tied to their books) is that my colleagues said the committee members asked them why I got picked instead of a "real" teacher since I'm just a librarian. I love that my awesome co-workers jumped right on it to make sure they knew that in this position, I get to teach everyone, including our teachers. It's a pretty incredible thing to work in a school where you are so supported. I wish everyone had what I have here. The committee spoke with my peers and my admin team, watched me teach, and then interviewed me last. They seemed to have really enjoyed the lesson that I heavily encouraged them to participate in and asked me all kinds of questions. My prayer is that I represented my profession and my school well. I know these kids did and I think it's pretty great that the committee got a glimpse into the great stuff that happens here on a regular basis. I think their view of what my role is and how it can impact a school has changed a lot. :) If you read the station cards you can see some of the challenges we issued to the kids.






2. Project Lit for December where we talked about Refugee by Alan Gratz. If you haven't read that book yet, you are making a terrible life choice that needs to be rectified immediately. Our book club kids are amazing! They had a Kahoot put together, tshirt designs ready to go, and completely ran the show. Our adult sponsors just had to show up. :)
3. We started the Jason Reynolds story contest with our GAPP students. It was in an issue of Scope magazine and it is an awesome contest! I can't wait to see what our kids come up with!

The next week (Dec. 17-21) I had:

  1. Brevard Media Specialists Holiday Party which was super fun. It is so important to spend time with other people who do what you do and are passionate about it. It's also really important to cut loose and have fun sometimes. 
  2. Maker space and book check out which are always some of my favorite days! Our maker space days involve design challenges for different stations. I usually set up 8 or so stations and the students have to complete at least 3 before they leave. They have a handout to document their work that walks them through the engineering process at each station. Sometimes these are general challenges and sometimes they are tailored to what is being covered in the content class they came with. Each teacher makes that choice for their kids and then I set everything up and walk them through it. 
  3. The annual Ugly Sweater Contest and our faculty pot luck. Anything that involves costumes is my jam and I'm happy to report I am reigning champion. At our potluck, I used some of the games from our BPS Media Holiday Party and did it staff wide. We had a BLAST! We had a "snowball" (balled up paper) fight and we made some reindeer. We all laughed so hard. Everyone really needed that before the break. 











Over  the break I went to visit my mom and we went on a ski trip to Utah with my husband's side of our family. It was just what I needed to recharge for another big semester of activities. I also got to use all that travel time to read 12 really great books! 


Since returning to school we have:
  1. Check out, announcements, and maker space with Ms. Ross's classes
  2. A stupid cool vocabulary activity with Mrs. Watkins's classes. We had the kids take their vocab words, use Canva to create a graphic for it, and then posted it to a Padlet. I got the idea from my friend Andrea who is a high school Media Specialist in Alabama. It worked really well and the kids really liked it! Mrs. Watkins is going to print them and post them in the classroom as they continue their unit. 
  3. I met with a furniture company to try and get all new furniture for our Media Center. I hope it all works out because this place will be AMAZING if it does. All of our tables are breaking or already broken and don't work for this space. We need flexible seating! 
  4. I got to celebrate our ESE self-contained kiddos finishing two more books! They are at 8 books for the year. I could not be more proud of them! We built a motels from Home Sweet Motel and decorated rabbits to look like the main characters from Podkin One-Ear





  1. Friday I got to work with our Art students. I got to teach them some Langston Hughes poetry and they are going to illustrate a poem that spoke to them. I had them choose a poem, jot down the title and then make a list of any images or objects in the poem. Then they made a list of any colors represented in the poem and then started sketching out ideas. This is an on-going project that will eventually be displayed in the Media Center. They had some incredible sketches and ideas. I'm really excited to see how their projects turn out. 
This week? All the crazy. 

The biggest thing is that we are participating in the Follett Challange and my school needs YOUR votes. You can vote for us here. Our submission focuses on our #swms20bookchallenge and I'm so proud of the video we submitted. These kids are awesome! 

Sunday, November 18, 2018

Less Than Awesome


One of my biggest goals for this year has been to make sure I did something really cool with the kids at least once a week. To step outside of my comfort zone or try something new. To build on something I've done before but make it better.

Up until this past week, I've succeeded at that goal.

This week I didn't.

We didn't have school Monday in observance of Veteran's Day.

Tuesday I had scheduled for us to do a massive pull-out for Learning Ally to get all of our students who qualify set up and make sure they knew how to use it. Due to some miscommunication, we weren't ready for that and instead spent the day as a team cleaning up accounts. We deleted duplicate accounts and made sure every kid who needed an account had it and printed their log in information. Learning Ally is a really amazing tool for students who struggle with reading for a variety of reasons. It gives them access to something like 80,000 titles of audio books. It is really incredible.  It was a day full of doing things that needed to be done, but not what I was expecting. I did get a phone call from Follett and they want me to present at a national conference next year. That's pretty stupid cool but the deadline for my application is coming up in a HOT minute so I really need to get on it.

Wednesday I took the day off because I was feeling really worn down from all the things I've been doing and I had my interview to be considered for Teacher of the Year for Brevard County in the afternoon. I knew I'd be much better prepared if I was well-rested. I didn't sleep in because I still had to take my kids to school. I spent the morning tackling a "to do" list instead of resting like I should have done. Right after my interview, I got several missed calls from my daughter's school saying she was sick. One Urgent Care visit later and we found out she had Strep.

Thursday = no school to stay home and take care of a sick kiddo. I also delivered some food to my kids's school to help contribute to a Thanksgiving Feast for the teachers and staff that the families of our church put on each year. I thought I could get some school work done from home but that did not happen.

Friday I could have been on an awesome field trip to the Miami-Dade Book Fair to see Jason Reynolds with our Reading students but I didn't know if I'd need to be with Ansleigh (my daughter) so I didn't go. My husband stayed home with her so I wouldn't miss another day of school. I thought I'd have a day of scoring 20 Book Challenge responses and working on my conference presentations (coming up soon and the new one requested by Follett) but instead I was asked to cover for a teacher because we were short on substitutes. I brought them all to the Media Center and let them check out and read. It was an early release day and they all needed books so that's what we did. I also had a meeting with someone to help her with research she's doing on how Media Specialists choose resources to promote diversity.

I literally didn't do anything cool with the kids this week except share what book I was reading with some students who were curious why I was so into my book when I sat and read with them. I'd love to share something incredible but I just don't have it.

I would like to tell you about my TOY Interview. I promised I'd be transparent about it and I want to.

My interview was blocked off for 30 minutes in the afternoon. There were 10 other secondary teachers being interviewed for the south area of our county (where I teach) and 8 of them went before me. When I walked into the room, it was my former principal who always runs this committee and hosts the interviews plus last year's south area finalists. I expected to see more people so I was kind of relieved that there were only four people plus me. I was told they'd ask me 10 questions and I could take a few minutes to look over the questions before we got started. What a gift! Although, honestly, I was so worried I'd run out of time answering the questions that I didn't want to spend a lot of time looking at the questions. I read through each one quickly and tried to think of a quick response I could give when they got to that question. I didn't spend nearly enough time on it. Once they started asking the questions, I tried my best to speak from my heart and not repeat the same answer over and over again but I honestly don't know what I actually said to them.

They asked me why I chose to go into teaching which gave me an opportunity to talk about my dad, which then lead me to start crying right on my first question. It wasn't ugly crying but I definitely teared up a lot. I was able to share his story of how he grew up and how he always impressed on me how important it was to be there for these kids. I also got to share how he passed away right as I was starting as a Media Specialist (literally, he passed away during pre-planning) and how hard I've worked to make him proud. I think I did well on that question.

They asked me several others about how I differentiate instruction, how I am part of school-wide initiatives and what leadership roles I have in that, how I collaborate with others and how I used project-based learning, how I participate in professional development (participating and leading) across the district and state, and how I involve the community. I honestly don't know if I even really answered their questions. It's so hard to tell. I spoke about the specific things they asked me and tried to give them new information for each question they asked. I tried my very best to impress up on them how much teamwork it takes to make any of this happen and how it isn't all me. I tried to make everything about the kids and what they are doing. I saw a lot of head nodding but couldn't really get a feel for how receptive they were. They were definitely hard to judge.

They asked me two other questions that I felt good about. They asked me something about stakeholders. I don't even remember what the question was but I got so excited. I started sharing with them how we have involved the community in our 20 Book Challenge, our City Councilman who participates in our Project Lit Book Club, the Mayor and our School Board Representative being at our event, the authors I share with on a regular basis, and how I use social media to share with the companies of products we are using (Nearpod, Ozobot, Follett, etc.), publishers of books our kids read, and other teachers and librarians across the globe. I even got to share about flying to New York to be on Bookish to share with not just our stakeholders, but Kwame's stakeholders as well, how awesome our kids are, how hard they are working, and how much they love his books. I told them that all of those people are ALL stakeholders because our kids have the power to change the world and all of these companies and authors are involved in that process. I was so excited to share my passion about why I work so hard to let the world know what we are doing. I may not have answered what they asked, but goodness gracious, I gave them an answer!

The other question I felt really good about was when they asked me if I could tell them about a specific student who had been impacted by what I do. I thought of S.C. who had never finished a book in his life until 8th grade and *almost* finished the 20 Book Challenge. He read every book we had by Kwame and Jason Reynolds. I thought of T.W. who hated to read and then started reading Kwame's books and in a few months his Reading Plus scores jumped several grade levels. I thought of A.C.T. who came to us as an English Language Learner and didn't like reading. I gave him The Red Umbrella in Spanish and asked him to read it for me and let me know if it was worth putting in the library. He loved it so much he asked for another copy to send to his family. He read all of Christina Diaz Gonzalez's books and finished our 20 Book Challenge in ENGLISH!!!!!! I didn't tell their stories though. I knew once I started telling those stories, I wouldn't be able to stop and all of those kiddos are in high school now. Instead, I told the story of M. B. who is a 7th grader right now. Her sister reads more than I do (and that's a lot!) and her mom mentioned that I wouldn't probably see M.B. as much because she never reads...ever. She's been trying for YEARS to get her to read and she doesn't like it. I convinced her Reading teacher to start the year reading The Crossover as a class and since then, homegirl can't put down a book. She's logged 9 books so far this year! 9!!!!!!!!

I ended up answering all of their questions with some time to spare (which is a miracle straight from Heaven because I'm always long-winded) and I was able to take a few minutes to talk about the state of our Media program when I took over and what kind of work we had to do to get it from where it was to where it is now.

I left not really sure of how well I did or if they cared at all about what I had to say. I do know that I had the opportunity to share how our students shine and how I get to be part of that.

The next step in the process is that they will choose three finalist and notify those three somehow in the next two weeks or so. The committees will go watch those teachers teach in December or early January. Beyond that, I'm not really sure what happens. I'm not too worried about it. I have no expectations to make it any further than I already have. I'm just thankful I got the opportunity to sit in that seat and represent my school to the best of my ability.