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Virtual Presence of the School Library Dr. Holly Weimar and Dr. Karin Perry Sam Houston State University

Virtual Presence for the School Library

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Presentation for Clear Creek ISD Librarians

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Page 1: Virtual Presence for the School Library

Virtual Presence of the School LibraryDr. Holly Weimar and Dr. Karin Perry

Sam Houston State University

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He might be a dirty dog, but

THINK POSITIVE!

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The PowerPoint, examples, and tools we’ll talk about today will be available to

you at the end of this presentation.

DON’T cramp your hand taking notes.

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How many of you have heard of

David Loertscher's Virtual Learning

Commons?

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So, how is a Virtual Learning Commons

different from a traditional library

website?

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In order to make the shift from library website to Virtual Learning Commons, a

sense of community needs to be fostered and

developed among all stakeholders.

With the advent of new technologies that allow for the real-time participation

and collaboration of users in an online community, the opportunity presents

itself for the VLC to become the 'infrastructure' of the school (Loertscher

& Koechlin, 2012), to transform itself from informational website to participative

community.

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Teachers’ Participation, Creation, & Learning

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Students’ Participation, Creation, & Learning

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Stakeholders’ Participation, Creation, & Learning

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• Dr. Weimar and Dr. Perry created a survey using SurveyMonkey.

• We posted the survey link to the SHSU Library Student Listserv, TLC, LM_Net, Facebook, and Twitter.

• We received 200 responses.

How did we come up with the examples for this presentation?

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What would your ideal virtual presence look like? What should it contain?

What should teachers/students/parents have access to?

Is your library website easily accessed from the school’s website? If not, who do you speak to to fix that?

Can your website accommodate multiple pages? If not, how will you provide the access needed?

Turn and Talk

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Why should you provide a Virtual Learning Commons for

your teachers/students/parents?

• We need to encourage collaboration to prepare students for the future.

• We need to make learning accessible in order to provide for “on-the-fly learning” and transform students into self-starters.

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The Five Main Portals of the

Virtual Learning Commons

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The Information Center

The Literacy Center

The Knowledge Building Center

The Experimental Learning Center

School Culture

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The Information Center• The landing page.

• Links users to useful tools.

• Features a “hook” in the center of the page to draw users to the entire site. (photo slideshow, club info, screencast tutorials, links to blog, Facebook, Twitter, and other social networking sites)

• Calendar of events or for teachers to reserve space/equipment.

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Virtual tours don’t have to be that fancy. Here is another example of

what you can do.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMcf7iBI8hY&index=1&list=

PL67E5355A0FB59304

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RebelMouse or Totally.me

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Blog Posts

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Calendar

Sign-Ups

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1. Users click available time slot

2. Fill in information3. Automatically goes to

user’s calendar

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Your Turn Discuss with a neighbor How will you beef up the Information Center

on your library website? Social Networking accounts? Calendar signups for teachers for equipment

use or collaboration? Virtual Tours of the library?

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The Literacy Center

• The place for all things reading, writing, speaking, and listening

• Digital and In-person Book Club information

• Writing Club information

• Book trailers

• Book reviews (from both students and teachers)

• App recommendations

• YouTube Channel (from both students and teachers)

• Website recommentations

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Book Trailers

(Librarian Made)

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Your Turn Discuss with a neighbor: What are you going to do to create The

Literacy Center for your library’s website?

Book Review Blog Book Club (Virtual or In-person) Resources to help kids find book

recommendations and writing help Book trailers and podcasts

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The Knowledge Building Center

• Personal Learning Networks – hobbies, personal interests, organizations (causes people are passionate about), informational learning

• Resources for units of study

• The learning experiences featured here can be done in a variety of learning environments including Moodle projects, projects done in content management systems, technological learning spaces, or face to face projects with the organization done in digital space.

• Examples of successful projects

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Resources for Units of Study

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Project Tools

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What is missing from these examples?

The Collaborative Learning Experiences. It is difficult to find examples of a true Knowledge Building Center.

In addition to Project Resources, you need to provide:

CalendarsStudent work spaceInformation about assessmentA place for them to communicateAn area for reflection

How can this be accomplished? TURN AND TALK

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The Experimental Learning Center

• Educational technology information. Tips, tutorials, guides, resources

• The home of the student technology group that tests out and teaches a wide variety of Web 2.0 tools to adults and students around the school

• Current school-wide focus issues: calendars, progress reports, plans, action research projects

• Project progress plans

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High School School Tech Team

Student-Run Tech Group

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Mobile Site

Survey

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Your Turn What will you add to the Experimental

Learning Center part of your website? Technology Tutorials, Tips, and

Resources School-wide issues Progress reports

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School Culture

• A living school yearbook; the place that draws in students, teachers, administrators and even parents. It is the exhibition space of individuals and groups connected to the school

• Events, assemblies, interviews, celebrations, contests, candid camera shots, sports, concerts

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Library/School Newsletters

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Student Library Advisory Board

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Your Turn How will you highlight School Culture? Photo galleries (of what??) Newsletters Club highlights Contests Sporting events Assemblies Drama productions

How will you collect all this information? What system will you put in place?

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Example: http://team5libraryspace.webs.com/

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Google Sites (FREE)

Webs (http://www.webs.com/)

Weebly (http://www.weebly.com/)

Blogger (http://www.blogger.com)

LibGuides

Platforms to use for Virtual Presence

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What is something you’ll be able to accomplish this year?

If you’ve already started, what are you going to add?

Turn and Talk

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To download or view the PowerPoint, please visit http://slideshare.net/karinlibrarian

To access all the links used in today’s presentation (and even more resources) go to https://www.smore.com/1kem9

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American Association of School Librarians. (2007). Standards for the 21st-Century learner. Retrieved from http://www.ala.org/aasl/standards.

Kajder, S. (2010). Adolescents and digital literacies: Learning alongside our students. National Council of Teachers of English.

Loertscher, D. V., & Koechlin, C. (2012, October). The Virtual Learning Commons and school improvement. Teacher Librarian (39)6. pp. 20-24.

Loertscher, D. V., Koechlin, C., & Rosenfeld, E. (2012). The Virtual Learning Commons: Building a participatory school learning community. Learning Commons Press.

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