Ontario Library Association Super Conference 2014
A Universe of Possibilities
Conference Reflections by Diana Maliszewski
Thursday, January 30, 2014 – 7:45 a.m.
Session #200: Forest of Reading Awards Breakfast
Summary = This event is an opportunity to appreciate the
authors and illustrators, selection / steering committee members and other key
stakeholders that make the Forest of Reading possible. Unfortunately, because
of the awful traffic congestion, (a journey that usually takes me 30 minutes
took me 90 minutes to complete) I missed the breakfast entirely. I spent a
great deal of the morning lamenting that “I missed the Forest breakfast”!
Thursday, January 30, 2014 – 9:05 a.m.
Session #302: Designing for Thinkers: A Critical Literacy
Approach to Digital Citizenship by Anita Brooks Kirkland, Ruth Hall, and
students
Summary = TALCO received a grant to develop authentic,
relevant tools to use to promote various aspects of digital citizenship. The
group presented their work to date, gave students a chance to address small
groups about these topics, and the audience helped continue the work with their
input.
3 Key Points
- ·
“Digital citizenship is character education in a
networked world” and we need to examine our own understanding of citizenship in
a digital age as well as understand what students need from us, because many of
our assumptions about students and digital use are wrong (e.g. students do care
about their privacy, people aren’t as mean online as the media portrays, etc.)
- ·
Research from PEW Internet (“How Teens Research
in a Digital World”) and Media Smarts (“Young Canadians in a Wired World”) show
that students are over-dependent on search engines, need help judging quality
information, etc.
- ·
Students responded live to questions like “How
should technology be used to help your learning?” “How can schools encourage
positive communication?” and “How do you find information online and how can
schools help you find reliable information?” and demonstrated that they are
interested in working together with adults to improve everyone’s use and
understanding.
So What? Now What? = I need to check out the resource when
it goes live. One of the teens at our table sent me her Tumblr URL, which will
help me with my Tumblr inquiry I’m doing with two other TL Twitter associates
(Lisa and Sarah). I also need to remember to bring in these topics frequently
and in a way that gives students a chance to have their say.
Thursday, January 30, 2014 – 10:40 a.m.
Session #404: TLs & ECEs – Inquiry Partners by Jennifer
Balido-Cadavez, Maria Isidro & Diana Maliszewski
Summary = Early Childhood Educators and teacher-librarians
have a lot in common. The two ECEs from my school and I talked about understanding
our roles and how we can maximize our time together to benefit the students.
3 Key Points
- ·
Both ECEs and TLs have special training that we
can take advantage of, especially because the ECE is a bridge between the
library and classroom and knows the students emotionally, academically, and
socially because they are with them all day.
- ·
It’s okay to be at different “rungs” on the “ladder
of effectiveness”, because there are so many factors that can hinder movement.
Stories are important and we shared many, but we also have our moments where we
are just “hanging on” and trying not to fall (to continue the metaphor).
- ·
The relationship is what you make of it, just
like the Play Doh we distributed near the end of the session. Advocate for ECEs
because they need champions, just like TLs need.
So what? Now what? = It was the first time that Thess and
Jen presented for a crowd of this size, and they did a fabulous job. Our rehearsal
looked nothing like our final talk, and that was okay. The audience was so
incredibly warm and supportive to my colleagues, approaching them afterwards to
thank them and reinforce the message that they are teachers too. My own next
step will be to spread and share this message of TL/ECE collaboration and
appreciation to other key stakeholders so that, for example, ECEs can maybe get
regular prep time so that we can collaborate more than just at lunchtime.
Thursday, January 30, 2014 – 12:00 noon
Canadian Books for Canadian Kids (Association for Canadian
Publishers) Luncheon
Summary = This invitation-only affair brought together
authors, publishers and selected supporters to network and enjoy a scrumptious meal.
(Mine began with an apple and pomegranate salad, followed by BC organic salmon
in a maple pommery glaze with baby vegetables and lemon cauliflower puree and
ended with fresh berries.) I did not take as many photographs as I usually do
because I was enjoying such engaging conversation with my tablemates, including
Kate Edwards (Program Manager of ACP), Donna Francis (Marketing Manager of
Creative Book Publishing), Sara Foster (Children’s Product Manager of Library
Services Centre), Margaret Bryant (Director of Sales & Marketing at
Dundurn), Judy Green (author and workshop provider) and Lisa Dalrymple
(author). My “swag bag” contained books by Lisa Dalrymple, Philippa Dowding,
Deborah Ellis, Elizabeth MacLeod, Sheree Fitch, and Rosemary McCarney.
Thursday, January 30, 2014 – 2:10 p.m.
Session #500: All Conference Plenary by Jennifer Keesmaat
Summary = (as printed in the conference program) “Jennifer
Keesmaat is committed to creating places where people flourish. Having poured
her coherent, comprehensive and collaborative approach into cities throughout
North America – and doing the same in her role as the Chief Planner for the
City of Toronto – Jennifer speaks with passion on her belief that now is the
time to engage in city building and take ownership of our shared future.”
Unfortunately, I never made it to the plenary session because I was so involved
with discussions with individuals and groups in the Expo Hall.
Thursday, January 30, 2014 – 3:45 p.m.
Session #615: Captivate your Audience with Infographics by Jane
Foo, Adele Magowan, and Shanna Pearson
Summary = Three college/university level librarians
explained what is an infographic, shared different types and frequently used
designs, outlined the process for creating them, provided tips and demonstrated
a continuum of tools (from easiest to hardest) for individuals to use to make
their own infographics.
3 Key Points
- ·
You need three components for a good
infographic: visuals (colour, typography, graphics), content (facts, data,
statistics) and knowledge (insight and perspective)
- ·
The presenters believe there are six general
types of infographics, and knowing your content will help you select the right
course to take. (The six types are 1. Comparison, 2. Chart, 3. Timeline, 4.
Process, 5. Article, and 6. Interactive.)
- ·
Use “honesty, logic and beauty” as your guides
while creating an infographic. (The process involves A. Determining what you
want to show, B. Pinpointing patterns/data/findings, C. Finding the appropriate
metaphor or mental mode, D. Laying out the content and designing the graphical
elements, E. Putting it all together, F. Assessing and reviewing the
infographic, and G. Revising it at least twice.)
So what? Now what? = This workshop was FANTASTIC and my
favourite Thursday session. I really wanted to learn how to make infographics
and now this goal seems reachable. Jane, Adele and Shanna made a website with
all their examples, directions, and advice (at
http://ola14infographics.wordpress.com)
and I have plans to work with a colleague in my board (Joel) to try out
Piktochart and PowerPoint (yes, PPT can make these too!) and design a few.
Thursday, January 30, 2014 – 5:15 p.m.
Session #701: Ontario School Library Association Awards
Presentation and Annual General Meeting
Summary = The Minister of Education appeared to make some
opening remarks, deserving people received awards, and OSLA business occurred.
3 Key Points
- ·
Leslie Holwerda received the OSLA
Teacher-Librarian of the Year Award and Julie Fisher received the OLA Technical
Services Award. Both ladies are from the Peel District School Board.
- ·
Jeff Kawzenuk of the Kawartha Pine Ridge
District School Board won the OSLA Distinguished Administrator of the Year
Award.
- ·
Phillip Jeffrey from the Hamilton-Wentworth
Catholic District School Board got the OSLA Award for Special Achievement.
So what? Now what? = As the semi-official photographer for
the event, my next step is to send all the pictures I took to all the
individuals and groups that would like copies! The Minister was gracious enough
to stay for the entire awards ceremony and pose with the winners afterwards. In
her remarks, she talked about mental health, math support and community
building, and our 2013 OSLA out-going president, Isabelle Hobbs, was wise
enough to point out that the school library can help with all these
initiatives. I had the opportunity to
chat with Carmen, Lori, and Heather about their project to align TL objectives
with their board School Improvement Plans. Afterwards, I was able to continue
some great conversations with Sara, Lauren, and Joel over some vegetarian pizza.
I got home at 11:50 p.m.
Friday, January 31, 2014 – 9:05 a.m.
Session #1027: Don’t Worry, Be Happy by Saffron Beckwith,
Laureen Cusack, Janet Murie, and Rosalyn Steele
Summary = The “Dewey Divas and Dudes”, a group of Canadian
publisher representatives, presented their favourite new and older books that
dealt with childhood anxiety and teen angst, with the hope of promoting good
titles that can act as “bibliotherapy”.
3 Key Points
- ·
Good picture books include Stuck with the Blooz by Caron Levis, When I Feel Worried by Cornelia Maude Spelman, Theo’s Mood: A Book of Feelings by Maryann Coccia-Leffer, Bedtime Monsters by Josh Schneider, Dinosaur Thunder by Marion Dane Bauer,
The Very Brave Bear by Nick Bland, When Lions Roar by Robie H. Harris, Year of the Jungle by Suzanne Collins, The Dark by Lemony Snickett, Pete the Cat and His Four Groovy Buttons
by Eric Litwin, Wemberly Worried by
Kevin Henkes, Walter and the
No-Need-to-Worry Suit by Rachel Bright and many more.
- ·
Good middle-school novels include The Center of Everything by Linda Urban,
Julia Gillian and the Art of Knowing
by Alison McGhee, A Snicker of Magic
by Natalie Lloyd, Smile by Raina
Telgemeier, Freak the Mighty by
Rodman Philbrick, P.S. Be Eleven by
Rita William-Garcia, Home Ice Advantage
by Tom Earle, Invisible Girl by Kate
Maryon, and more.
- ·
Good teen fiction titles include Cameron and the Girls by Edward Averett,
Dr. Bird’s Advice for Sad Poets by
Evan Roskos, The Opposite of Geek by
Ria Voros, Why We Took The Car by
Wolfgang Herndorf, A Trick of the Light
by Lois Metzger, Faking Normal by
Courtney Stevens, Tease by Amanda
Maciel, and many more.
So what? Now what? =
I think I will buy some of these books after consulting with my staff and
students.
Friday, January 31, 2014 – 10:40 a.m.
Session #1100: All Conference Plenary by David Usher
Summary = (as printed in the conference planner) “David
Usher is a creative tour de force. As the front man of the internationally
acclaimed rock bandMoist, as as a solo artist, David has sold more than 1.4
million albums, won countless awards, and performed at sold-out venues around
the world. Believing that creativity and creative success is a learnable skill
that anyone can master, his unique and dynamic presentations employ music and
video to show audiences the steps they can take the stimulate the creative
process at home and at work.” Once again, circumstances led me to miss all but
the final three questions and answers at the end of the presentation. Instead,
I was conversing with Colleen Rampelt, examining the Pop-Up MakerSpace (toy
hacking, Arduino robot rovers, 3D printers, etc.) and visiting the vendors.
Friday, January 31, 2014 – 12:00 noon
Toronto District School Board Teacher-Librarian Luncheon
Summary = It’s an annual tradition for the TDSB TLs
attending Super Conference to dine at Joe Badali’s on Friday. I had a chance to
talk with Christy, Bob, and Gianna while eating a delicious Italian buffet,
including pork, pasta, and pizza.
Friday, January 31, 2014 – 2:10 p.m.
Session #1204: 100 Things I Hate About Advocacy by Deb Kitchener
and Diana Maliszewski
Summary = Deb and I talked about the difficulties with
advocacy, potential solutions, and the OSLA response and new initiative.
3 Key Points
So what? Now what? = Unfortunately, iPads and Google Docs
don’t work well together, so we had to improvise and record the group’s
suggestions ourselves, which worked well with the size of the group. We’ll
promote the link online so that others can add to the crowd sourced ideas to
help with advocacy. The song “Do You Want to Co-Teach with Me” was well
received.
Friday, January 31, 2014 – 3:45 p.m.
Session #1305: Thinking Critically with Blue Spruce Part
Deux by Ruth Gretsinger
Summary = Ruth shared her dynamic, eco-friendly, engaging
teaching strategies she created with the 2014 Blue Spruce titles in mind, in
ways that cover media literacy, science, critical thinking and inquiry.
3 Key Points
- ·
By using one SMART Board file per class, it acts
as a record for past activities (assessment)
- ·
Ruth noticed that the last book that she read
was often the one that the kids voted on, because they couldn’t remember the
other books they read way back in January. By doing some of the activities she
shared, it helped the kids connect more deeply with the books and helped them
remember them so that there was a more even spread in votes between books.
- ·
To help the students decide, Ruth has
student-created criteria in a chart (which used to have 20+ items but the kids
complained so the kids shortened it to 3 categories and 9 points) and she
recommends that the kids use the criteria but also take their top three and
decide which grabbed their heart most, so that it’s a decision based on facts
and opinions, objective head and subjective gut.
So what? Now what? = Ruth was so incredibly generous with
her ideas and work. As prizes, she gave away five USB sticks with all of her
materials already loaded, and she said she’d be willing to send files to anyone
if they emailed her (
ruth.gretsinger@dsbn.org).
I’m definitely emailing her, as these are brilliant ideas. I also want to go to
www.back2nature.ca for an amazing (and
free) resource my principal will love. Ruth has an outdoor classroom she is
using and this will help us at our school use our own outdoor teaching area
more effectively. Ruth achieved all of this while only being a 0.3 librarian –
that shows me that scheduling should never be an excuse to do less than you
can.
Friday, January 31, 2014 – 6:15 p.m.
Session #1500: All-Conference Networking Event – Party at
the End of the Universe
Summary = This year’s celebration featured an Oxygen Bar, a
DeLorean, a DJ and treats galore. I spoke with Jeanne and Peggy. I was
scheduled to meet with Alanna but it didn’t work out. After taking plenty of
photographs, several of us headed to a post-party gathering. Richard, Lauren,
Sarah (actually 2 Sarahs if I recall correctly), Joel, Yvonne, Melissa, and I
talked about a variety of topics. I got home around 12:15 a.m.
Saturday, February 1, 2014 – 9:15 a.m.
Session #1706: Maker Projects in Action by Jennifer Turliuk
and Andy Forest
Summary = Making things with your own two hands is deeply
satisfying. The founders of MakerKids show what we can do and how we can help
our students enjoy school and be less anxious.
3 Key Points
- ·
80% of adults report some degree of job dissatisfaction,
so finding a job/task that you are good at, you like, and you feel makes a
difference is important. One commonality that several successful entrepreneurs
had in common was they all went to Montessori pre-school. MakerKids says they
want to be like the original idea for Montessori, because making lets you feel
like you have some power over the world.
- ·
The “Maker Kid” recipe has 8 steps: 1) Dedicate a space, 2) Use real tools, 3)
Emphasize process over Product, 4) Let Interest Drive it, 5) Get Kids to Teach
Kids, 6) Get Kids to Teach Us, 7) Hold Exhibitions to Celebrate, and 8) Involve
the Community
- ·
The move from consumption to creation is
possible; start with what you know and love. Check out www.makeitatyourlibrary.org or www.makerkids.ca/educators for
resources, free activity modules, and opportunities (e.g. MakerKids owns 3D
printers you can use and there are 4 levels of 3D printing: downloading 3D
objects from Thingiverse / designing with 123D Creative app / building in
Minecraft and then using Printcraft.org for plans / designing with
Tinkercad.com )
So what? Now what? = I plan on attending one of the
MakerKids Educator Nights (Wednesday 8-10 pm) so that when Francis and I launch
our school Hacker Space / Creative Club, we can have some cool ideas to run
with. I also look forward to seeing the MakerKids people at the Kids’ DIY Media
Workshop at the University of Toronto on February 4.
Saturday, February 1, 2014 – 10:45 a.m.
Session #1803: Interactive Maker Art Builds Community
Cohesiveness by Alan Groombridge and Rachel Martin
Summary = Innisfil Public Library has an artist in residence
and the speakers outlined their three driving forces behind all of their
activity and event plans (“quirky” “fearless” and “[I can’t recall the third
word because I forgot to take notes]”) and the wacky but engaging and
meaningful collaborative maker projects they conducted.
3 Key Points
- ·
Mystery makes things interesting. They had to
move to a former Shopper’s Drug Mart so they painted it bright yellow and
called it “Idea Lab”. No one knew what the building would be for. They also
marched in the Santa Claus Parade wearing black nylon over their faces, yellow
ponchos and a sign saying “What is Idea Lab? Find out [date of opening]”.
- ·
People love being a part of something big and
special. One community art project had Grade 3s replicate something on a sticky
note that, when placed together, made a fantastic portrait. Another had people
submit photographs of “People of Innisfil” with their stories and community
landmarks.
- ·
Their New Media Artist, Alan, decided to build a
working robot torso in the library and while he built in the library, people
talked to him, asked him questions, and gave him ideas.
So what? Now what? = The session attendees actually
contributed there and then to an art project. They used leaves made from
recycled plastic and wrote a single word of significance on each leaf. Alan
made a cardboard tree with branches and they used hot glue guns to attach the
leaves to the tree. Maybe the Creativity Club I’m making at school should
consider how to mesh innovation, art and technology.
Saturday, February 1, 2014 – 12:15 p.m.
Session #1900: Closing Conference Session by Colonel Chris
Hadfield
Summary = Commander Hadfield ran the International Space
Station for part of 2012-13 and was a Twitter sensation while in space. In his
talk, he shared what it was like to be in orbit and the lessons he learned.
3+1 Key Points
- ·
Visualize failure. Success is what you hope for,
but it’s important to be planned and prepared for when things go wrong. He
illustrated this with two great stories: an emergency spacewalk when the ship
leaked ammonia, and being asked for his opinion of the film Gravity while at the Toronto
International Film Festival.
- ·
Librarians are in the inspiration/possibilities
business and it’s important to keep kids inspired. (Thanks Mike Ridley for
Tweeting this idea from the talk.) He decided to be an astronaut at age 9 when
he saw Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin go to the moon, even though there was no
Canadian space program at the time. Great things happen because one person is
inspired to do things (like the Music Monday, which stemmed from one woman and now
had 700 000 participants when Chris Hadfield and Ed Robertson from BNL co-wrote
their song).
- ·
Keep making ongoing movement toward your
goal(s), no matter how small. (Thanks Colleen Rampelt for Tweeting this idea
from the talk.) He said that once you go home, what you do will make you a
different person the next day from the day prior. You’ll be a wee bit closer to
your dream than you were before.
- ·
The real key to social media is SOCIAL, not
media, a way and invitation to share in human experiences. (Thanks Lisa
Dempster for Tweeting this idea from the talk.) People saw the striking,
beautiful, unusual, sad, happy photos from space and shared them because they
resonated somehow with them.
So what? Now what? = I’ve listed many small goals in this
report (about Tumblr, infographics, and more) and I’m taking baby steps to
achieve them. I’m also taking baby steps for a bigger goal (to visit every
province in the country – there’s a possibility from a conversation I had on
Thursday that could lead to a visit to Newfoundland). That universe of
possibilities is ours for the taking.