Monday, October 30, 2023

How Did You "Celebrate" Media Literacy Week?

 


Last week was Media Literacy Week in Canada. (Thanks to Media Smarts for this attractive logo, which was part of their promotional kit available for free.)

I have to make a confession. Even though I am the co-vice-president of the Association for Media Literacy, and the Canadian representative for UNESCO's Media and Information Literacy Alliance, North America and Europe Chapter, I didn't do anything special to commemorate the occasion at my school. 

Before you arrange to have my membership revoked, it's not like I did absolutely nothing. I participated in a special Media Literacy Week edition of the Mediacy podcast on VoicEd Radio. I reported to the UNESCO MIL Alliance Regional meeting about all the neat things that Media Smarts and AML have been doing to promote the event in Canada. I'm currently enrolled in the Media Part 2 AQ course. I've been following Jennifer Casa Todd's daily Media Literacy Week suggestion posts on social media - she was ahead of the game this year and posted this all the way in August! I even had the pleasure of listening to Kim Davidson conduct a guest lecture for my York University Teacher Librarianship Additional Qualification course students, and much of her talk focused on media literacy and critical thinking.


So why didn't I do anything specific at school? If I'm being honest with myself, it's because I ran out of time to do something meaningful (even though Media Smarts made it easy to mark the days, with pre-made images that were easy to share). If I wanted to justify the lack of action, I could argue that I celebrate media literacy week every week with the kinds of activities and question prompts I include as part of my programming. Here are a few photos from last week and some hints about how I make them "more media literate".


Dance & Drama = Shadow Puppets

What we did: To address the problem solving and innovation strand in kindergarten, I asked students to consider what they might use as an object to cast a shadow that would make a good spout to go with their spider shadow puppet for their mini-performances of "The Itsy Bitsy Spider".

How I infused more media into it: We took photos of the audience as well as behind the scenes to show what was going on. We talked about how it didn't have to be an actual pipe or spout but the shadow had to make it look like one from behind. (Key Concept #2 - Media constructs versions of reality.)

How I could have infused even more media into it: We could talk more about why the spider is going up the spout and if this is a good or bad thing. (Key Concept #5 - Media communicate value messages.)



Social Studies = Battleship

What we did: To cover the expectation in the curriculum that deals with using grids to find locations on maps, we learned how to play the "board game" Battleship.

How I infused more media into it: For the older students, I paired the set up with the picture book "Playing War" and asked them to consider how the inclusion of the book changed what they thought about the game. (Key Concept #6 - Media communicate political and social messages.)

How I could have infused even more media into it: We could have talked directly about what I was alluding to with the book prompt. How is the experience of sinking a battleship in this game similar or different to being on an actual battleship? Would people in Gaza right now consider this game fun? How do the number of slots in the boats match with the type of ship and its power? (Key Concepts #1, 3 & 5)






Drama = Puppet Plays

What we did: While I worked with individuals on their face acting (see further below), I asked students to form groups and "make up" a puppet play with their team to share. We watched some of the "first drafts" of these plays.

How I infused more media into it: One of the students commented, "That wasn't a play, that was them having a fight with their puppets". We began to talk about what made a puppet play an actual play. (Key Concept #7 - Form and content are closely related.)

How I could have infused even more media into it: Different groups set up different puppet theatre spots. We could have talked about how the setting of the theatre impacted the type of performance. We could have discussed which play they enjoyed the most and why, and how the puppet format impacts the enjoyment of the play. (Key Concept #8 - Each medium has a unique aesthetic form.)



Library = Indigenous Prompts

What we did: We own this drum at the school. I have no idea when the school obtained it. It used to just hang in the library. As part of our SIP goal to embed more indigenous content throughout the school day, I placed this drum with two questions for the Grade 4-8 students visiting the library to choose to answer if they wished.

How I infused more media into it: The types of questions I asked probed for personal reactions (Key Concept #3 - Audiences negotiate meaning) and meaning interpretation (Key Concept #5 - Media communicate values messages).

How I could have infused even more media into it: We could have had some whole-class or small-group discussions to encourage more responses. What is it? How is it used? How was it made? How much is it worth? (Key Concept #4 - Media have economic implications.)








Drama = Face Acting with Feeling

What we did: After reading "How Are You Peeling", we brainstormed nine emotion words. Students are to pick three of these words and "act them out" just with their faces. We have also had classes and practice with how we use certain parts of the face (eyebrows, eyes, and mouths) to convey emotions and what they mean.

How I infused more media into it: When we take the photos, the students can look to see if it was what they intended to convey, since a photo is just a split second of time captured. (Key Concept #3 - Audiences negotiate meaning.)

How I could have infused even more media into it: We could compare the different class choices. We could sort them into categories like positive vs negative or eyebrows up vs eyebrows down. We will be looking at the photos as a group and interpreting them. Which feelings look most believable and why? (Key Concept #1 - Media constructs reality.)



Media = Puppet Creation

What we did: Kindergarten students made two different kinds of puppets - a paper bag puppet and a marionette.

How I infused more media into it: We talked a bit about how the puppets move and what we could use to decorate them. (Key Concept #8 - Each medium has a unique aesthetic form).

How I could have infused even more media into it: We could have asked some more questions. Which is easier to make? Which is easier to use? What does your puppet say about you and what you like? (Key Concept #3, 5 & 7).




Media = The Word and the Definition

What we did: To become familiar with the word and what it means, as well as practice some reading, we've played lots of games with these letters. A favourite is for me to mix them up on the board and pairs of students come to put them in the right order. In this photo above, the Year 2 student is turning the D around  that the Year 1 student had placed backwards.

How I infused more media into it: Letters are media. So are words. (We haven't delved into this yet, but we will.) Without words, it's hard to express ideas about things. (Key Concept #1 - Media constructs reality.)

How I could have infused even more media into it: I could have asked some questions about the orientation of the letters. If the letters are in the right order but not facing the right way, is it still readable? Why might it be wise to keep the letters facing the traditional/legible way? What might having letters face the wrong way suggest? (Key Concept #6 - Media communicate political and social messages.)


So, even though I didn't "do much" for media literacy week, to paraphrase a different saying, EVERY week can be media literacy week!

Monday, October 23, 2023

SMART Goal Irony, Land Acknowledgement Loose Parts and Photos as Biased Texts

 I tried to tie in all of the things I wanted to reflect on in this blog post into a single thread that would unite all the narratives, but I had neither the time nor the creative inspiration on how to do it. I could have connected them to my Media Part 2 AQ, which I'm currently taking with the talented trio of Neil Andersen, Carol Arcus, and Michelle Solomon facilitating the course, but it doesn't quite capture all the nuances. Therefore, bear with my "3 topics in 1" approach to this glimpse at my current thought processes.


SMART Goal Irony

This year, a small percentage of my schedule is devoted to "guidance". Honestly, the true guidance lead at our school is the irreplaceable Farah Wadia, our Grade 8 classroom teacher. My role is to support and relieve her when she had to complete guidance-related tasks, particularly those related to Grade 8-9 Transition, such as course selection forms, high school applications, and so on. She recently attended a workshop where she received some training on how to implement the whole-school online portfolio requirement that must be posted twice a year on either BrightSpace (if you are K-6) or MyBlueprint (if you are 7-12). While she prepared how to disseminate this information with the staff, she asked me to conduct a lesson with her Grade 8s on what counts as a SMART goal. (SMART is an acronym that stands for Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Time-Bound.) We didn't spend time creating personal SMART goals yet, but we played with those adjectives to solidify our understanding of those terms by generating examples and non-examples.

A brief note in our school's general updates reminded us that our ALPs (annual learning plans) are now expected to be submitted online, and that they will be due October 31. I didn't consider this to be a big deal, since I have a digital copy of the ALP file that I modify year after year. 

I. Was. Wrong.

Only the first portion of the ALP, the background data that informs the formation of the plan, matches the old template. The new, online version is a lot more detailed. In fact, instead of a four-column list of goals, goal strategies, rationales, and action plans, each goal (minimum of one, maximum of ten) have multiple sections to complete with specific timelines and metrics to determine success. In other words, we have to write our ALPs more like SMART goals.

Well, dang! Creating a SMART goal isn't a quick endeavor. The other challenge is that some of these goals of mine are ones I've been working on for years because it's about progress, not perfection. I've always scoffed at the IEP's (Individual Education Plan's) insistence that a number be attributed to the objective. It felt artificial. Each year brings different challenges. These were the goals I had originally chosen for this school year:

1)    Participate in leadership opportunities (AML as a vice-president, The Mentoree as a mentor, York and Queen’s University as an AQ instructor); in-school leadership will focus on renewed exploration around Equity.

  (Leadership Role)

2)    Continue to focus on accommodating and modifying lessons for ELL students as well as improving my assessment practices (especially related to kindergarten) to give timely feedback to students and parents about their progress in the reportable subjects I teach. I also aim to re-examine my “tried and true” practices to see if they could be improved with revisions.(Instructional Role)

These don't qualify as SMART. They aren't specific enough. I have no quantitative measures linked to them. I don't declare at what point I will have "succeeded" with these goals. I will go back to work on my online ALP after writing this blog post, but I've deleted some of these, separated and expanded some of these so now I have five goals, and now I need to iron out all the nitty-gritty. Is it even possible for some of these education goals to fit the SMART criteria? Will I be able to say "yes, by the end of June, I will be 80% better at modifying my lessons for MLL students"? By forcing them into a SMART framework, will they become ridiculous? (For instance, I feel like I can morph my timely feedback goal into something I can "count" by saying that I'll reach out to parents via the agendas or a note or a newsletter once a month. However, I see everyone from Grades K-4 - this may be Specific and Measurable, but is it Realistic?). Hopefully, you can see my dilemma here. However, that "time bound" deadline of October 31 looms, so I'll try my best to make it work.


Land Acknowledgement Loose Parts

I've been working on our School Improvement Plan update. It also is phrased in terms of SMART goals, but for some reason it feels slightly more possible to fit these items into a SMART framework. Weeks in, we are still working on the phrasing of these goals (reinforcing the point above that you can't just whip up a goal in an hour). The board has shifted some of the focus from three goals related to Academic Success, Equity, and Well-Being to equity infusing all three goals and the new subtitles of Academic Success, Indigenous Education, and Joy/Belonging. 

Meaningful Indigenous education is a focus everywhere, including my Media Part 2 Additional Qualification course where I am a student. We watched a fantastic, inspirational 11 minute video and every participant will be required to share the way to present or address the land acknowledgement. Last week, I mentioned how I'm trying to incorporate my learning from my Kindergarten AQ I took in 2019-20, especially loose parts. I did a bit of an experiment with the junior-intermediate students during their short book exchange time in the library. I usually have STEM challenges or playful provocations set up on the table for them to use when they have finished their book exchange and if they have extra time. You can see some of the set-ups in this post. This time, I used a phrase from the video we watched in the Media AQ as a loose part prompt. "What does it mean to acknowledge the land?"



Students in Grades 4-8 were encouraged to use the loose parts to symbolically represent their thinking and potential reflection on that question. I took some video of their explanations. Here, below, are just a few of the photos I took of their work. These are just the samples from the Grade 8 class. I plan on compiling the images and commentary into a video that we can play over the announcements and at the Media AQ as a sample of an interactive way of making the daily land acknowledgement meaningful and relevant. The first image is a visual pun. (Tree-T = treaty).





Photos as Biased Texts

I enjoy taking the Media AQ, even though it takes a significant portion of my time. I like how it gets me to think and rethink. For instance, I feel like I am gaining a deeper understanding of some of McLuhan's ideas and of the Key Concepts of Media Literacy. For instance, a foundational idea behind Key Concept #2 (Media construct versions of reality) and #3 (Audiences negotiate meaning) is bias (and side note: I really wish I could commit to memory the 8 key concepts in numerical order. I have to keep looking them up. Do you think that'd be a valid SMART goal for myself?). The bias in KC#2 comes from the producer and the text itself. The bias in KC#3 comes from the audience. 

It's been said multiple times so far in the course that it is impossible to take an unbiased photograph. I whole-heartedly agree. I rely on photographs a lot as an assessment tool, but not only are they my views, they are my views at a very specific set moment in time. They don't capture what happened just before or just after the photo was taken. (This is why, back to Farah Wadia, she likes taking a "live" photo because she can then grab one of the frames of the photos in which a student isn't blinking or looking away.) 

For drama, I'm taking photos of the students doing "face acting" and portraying different emotions. I count down before I take the photo, but what if their expression was "better" in the split second before I captured the photo? I try to let the students look at the photo I took to get their approval, but when you consider I'm taking 3 photos per student (of the 9 feeling word options they generated as choices as a class) and there are about 20 students in each class and I'm doing this with 4 classes, 3x20x4 = 240. That's 240 photos I'm trying to take within a short period of time, while ensuring that the rest of the class is safely preoccupied with something else so I'm free to take the photo. (Yes, I know the students could take each other's photo, or they could do a selfie, but there are reasons why I'd like to take the photo myself, even though it would add more student agency to this task.) 

A photo is a version of reality and not reality itself. I wish I could capture what I hear or my thoughts and reactions at the time more effectively. I've had this talk with the kindergarten teachers about pedagogical documentation. It'd still be a mediated version of reality, but it might help me recall the moment better. Problem is, video take up a lot of space on devices, and I have to watch the video afterwards.


There's lots here to unpack. You can see why my mind is abuzz and I'm a bit tired. 

Monday, October 16, 2023

Applying Kindie AQ Learning: My Wonders, My Blunders and My Puppet Experiments

 I'm going to apologize in advance if this blog starts looking more like a kindergarten teacher's blog than a teacher-librarian blog. I have so much kindergarten prep coverage (13/40 periods in my schedule) and I'm preoccupied with making my early years programming work better than it did in the past. The focus-on-four-and-five-year-olds is not necessarily a bad thing - after all, my friend Beth Lyons has made the leap from teacher-librarian to full-time kindergarten teacher and her blog is still titled https://thelibrariansjourney.blogspot.com/ . In fact, she writes about the first 6 weeks of kindergarten in her latest post. Many of the things she is concerned about are things I'm concerned about and things our absolutely fabulous kindergarten team (MM, new to our staff, and JC, an educator who's been at this school longer than I have, and this will be my 20th year!) also think about regularly.

I took my Kindergarten Part 1 AQ in 2019. I'm still trying to incorporate what I learned there in my practice. Room K1 uses a lot of loose parts provocations, so I plan on sneaking in there to peruse the set up more frequently. As I mentioned in this past post about loose parts, it's helpful to get the opportunity to attempt things multiple times, so that you can learn from the errors the first time around and improve it on the second. 

I haven't been able to set up any new loose parts provocations since my initial attempt in September - book fair sort of got in the way. However, I've been relatively pleased with how the subjects are meshing into each other and how the ebb and flow of the lessons are being determined by student interest. The routine is slooooooowly being established. Big thanks to Matthew Malisani for making me signs that help me remember the process. 

Before I launch into the description of what's happening, I need to share my struggle with pedagogical documentation. We had a kindergarten reorganization and we transformed from two classes with 22 students each, complete with an Early Childhood Assistant, to a class of 15 with no ECE and a class of 29 with an ECE. It's been disruptive. The small class is challenging without an extra adult present. The large class is challenging because of the large amount of students. In both classes, it's been hard for me to properly document what I see, hear and notice students saying and doing that demonstrates their thinking and learning. Right now, it's so busy that all I've been able to do is take photographs and hope (in vain) that I'll remember what was happening at that particular time. I'm also still debating about whether it's better to keep separate student files and flip to each to record, or maintain a daily log which I can then try to link to to ensure I make notes on all the students. 

Back to what's happening in class. My general theme, at least according to my long range plan (which usually falls to the wayside in a few weeks when it comes to kindergarten) is all about imagination. In dance/drama time, we've been really interested in puppets. It's expanded into our media time and a bit into our music time. We've learned about the differences between hand- and finger-puppets and stuffed animals and how to use the puppets without getting too physical with each other. (There's a tendency for puppets to hit other puppets and people and get rammed up in faces - I know this is part of the Punch-and-Judy puppet tradition, but thankfully mini-lessons on friendly interactions have reduced the number of times I've had a puppet smack me. Eating me, on the other hand ... )



Based on comments from students, we "made" our own puppet theatres with cloth and chairs, and that's been neat to see how they set things up and put things away. 




We've also modelled some "mini-scenarios" or "tiny-stories" (such as "The Race" [like The Tortoise and the Hare] or "Are You Mommy?" [like "Are You My Mother? / Is Your Mama a Llama?"]). That helped with our "puppet plays" because at first, many of the puppet "shows" were silent. Having a narrative structure to riff on helped a lot. 


One class got really interested in sorting the puppets, so we made signs to keep us organized and we grouped them.




I own a marionette (stringed puppet) and brought it out for students to try out (gently). I was inspired, in one of those just-before-you-fall-asleep-aha-moments to try and make our own mini-marionettes, but without almost any directions or instructions. I am very cognizant of the philosophy that making in kindergarten should not result in carbon copy replicas as final products, but explorations and experimentations. (Below is a photo of Thess showing the puppet.)


This was an example of learning from the previous class. The first time I tried this, we didn't have time to finish and it wasn't safe to just leave the projects lying out on tables in the library. I talked with Thess Isidro, the ECE, to generate ideas on how to deal with this problem. She recommended collecting the items in paper bags labelled with their names. The bonus was, we could then use the paper bags for hand puppet creations later! I also set up stations so that the students did not have to wait on me for supplies. Tape and strings were all available on chairs and the bins with scissors and potential materials to make the puppet bodies were out and reachable.



I was really pleased with how some of these mini-marionettes turned out! The products hinted at what they understood about how the marionettes worked. 


So I've made some mis-steps. We've had tears, and pick-up mix-ups, and sometimes lessons don't go according to plan. That's okay. Mistakes are part of learning, but I'll keep trying to figure out how to make this work in the school Library Learning Commons.

Monday, October 9, 2023

Go with the Flow

 For a shortened week, it was pretty jam-packed. The AQs that I lead for Queen's University and York University started this week. I hosted the annual Scholastic Book Fair in my library. Also on the calendar was our school's Curriculum Night, Terry Fox Run and the TDSB Teacher Librarian Facilitator Meeting and Planning Session. Did I mention taking my parents to get their haircuts and arranging Thanksgiving dinner? Busy, busy, busy.

Two moments this week reminded me about the importance of flow - both traffic flow and going with the flow.

Last year, the book fair resembled a packed dance club at the hottest night spot; it was so crowded that people could barely move, and even with five staff members helping out, by the end of the night we were all exhausted. This year, the admin team came by to scope out the space and make suggestions on how to improve the situation. I appreciated their interest and concern. My principal recommended a change that actually made a huge difference: create a corridor where shoppers would line up to pay that did not block people still browsing and selecting in the book fair. We moved the cashier location to a spot near my circulation desk and the door to help with this shift. I don't have any photos of the alteration, but it worked well. We only had three staff members monitoring the book fair, and those wonderful colleagues, Connie Chan and Julie Tran, sped things along even more than before by writing and calculating the purchase amounts on sticky notes that the buyers passed to me at the checkout. That meant that I could focus just on collecting the payment and making change when needed. 

I've mentioned frequently about how disruptive and dysregulating the book fair can be. I am now the primary prep provider for the kindergarten classes, and I thought I'd be clever and avoid all the distractions of the book fair by holding my music class on Wednesday in their kindergarten classroom instead of the library. The decision wasn't that smart. I couldn't log into my MusicPlayOnline subscription while in the other class. I improvised my lesson as best as I could, but the students began to get restless, and some of my usual redirection tricks relied on items left in the library. No worries - why not go to the library and use my laptop with my saved password intact? This would have been fine, if my laptop speakers had not suddenly decided to stop working. Having no sound on a music website isn't useful at all. By this time, I was getting a bit frazzled. I was saved by two things: our compassionate Educational Assistant, Joan D'Souza, who saw I was struggling and rearranged her schedule to help me out, and my handy-dandy box of instruments. Although I wasn't feeling like a very competent teacher at the time, I can be a bit creative and think fast on my feet on occasion, so we did some compare and contrast, including a repetitive song phrase I made up on the spot to match one of two instruments (bells or tambourines). It worked so well that I repeated it with the other kindergarten class I saw later that same day. (In case you are curious, the song chants were "This is a tambourine" [ta / tee tee / tee tee / ta = so, so, so, mi, mi, so] and "Bells, bells, bells bells bells" [ta / ta / tee tee / ta = so, mi, so, so, mi]).


Going with the flow isn't easy when the flow is more of a rushing river than a lazy stream. The same goes for traffic flow; managing traffic is better when it isn't like rush hour on the 401. However, life's course never runs smoothly and these tales make for entertaining stories and helpful lessons learned.

Monday, October 2, 2023

Say Hi and Bye to the New Guy

 September and early October are times in the school year that are both full of beginnings and endings. Students meet their new teachers and classmates. Teachers join new schools and get to know new colleagues and communities. However, in late September, school numbers get readjusted. Staffing shifts happen. Buildings gain or lose teachers. It's a rollercoaster ride that people in education often call "ReOrg". Reorganization is a mixed blessing. It was the way I obtained my first full-time permanent contract; yet, it can be awful to upend growing learning communities, like when I had to switch from a Grade 6-7 to a Grade 5-6 assignment and "give up" my Grade 7s

Considering the size of our staff, we have a rather large number of LTOs (long-term occasional) teachers at our site this year, for various reasons. One position that was particularly hard to fill was that of our Special Education Resource Teacher. Thankfully, we found someone willing and able to take the position, and Catherine Wang arrived.

Catherine is a new graduate from the Faculty of Education, but what she may "lack" in terms of experience, she more than made up for with her willingness and enthusiasm. She travelled from downtown to our school in north-east Scarborough via public transit every day, a 90 minute commute one way. I offered to drop her to the nearest station to shorten the trip a bit, so we had the chance to get to know each other a bit more on these drives.

Catherine is eager to learn as much as she can from everyone. She asked questions and observed how the adults interacted with the students. She sought genuine feedback after dealing with students and valued all the advice she was given. One of her greatest talents was the way she quickly forged relationships with all members of the school community. We were so fortunate that she is fluent in Mandarin, so we often called on her to help us with translation issues. After just a few weeks, the parents started asking for Ms. Wang by name for assistance!


I don't have many photos of Ms. Wang, because after her Special Education schedule was established, she was busy supporting students in many classes. This is a shot of her helping one of the kindergarten classes I saw in the library on the second day of school. Catherine is hard-working. She took three separate Additional Qualification courses over the summer to make herself more marketable and improve her skills. She agreed to work on creating the front hall display and took this task seriously, researching welcoming displays and considering equitable representation. She constantly offered to help out in any way she could.

I keep flipping between writing in the present and the past tense, because Catherine is no longer at our school. Our school board has gone on a mass hiring blitz, both this spring and this fall. There were over 200 positions listed a week ago that were permanent contract jobs! This is unprecedented. I was a supply teacher for over a year before I was hired full-time, and I know of many other teachers who spent years working as OTs and LTOs before landing their secure positions. I just peeked on the board website and there are still 24 positions advertised on September 28 with hopes of filling for early October! Golden opportunities like this don't happen every day, so Catherine sent out a flurry of applications. She actually received and conducted 13 interviews for positions over the course of three days. And she was successful! She starts her new, full-time, permanent contract position on Monday October 2.

Catherine oozes gratitude. She sent the staff a lovely email thanking everyone for being so wonderful and supportive. She never failed to thank me every day for dropping her off at the subway, and I'd often find boxes of "thank you Timbits" on my desk from her. She is so appreciative of time she has spent at our school, her fortune in snagging a LTO so quickly after graduation, and all of the kindness she's been shown. She's young enough to be my daughter - in fact, she's just a month older than my eldest - and she may qualify as the "new guy" but she won't stay a "n00b" for long. Her positive attitude and go-getter disposition will take her far. Congratulations Catherine, and all the best in your new teaching job!


Monday, September 25, 2023

What can I do to help?

A blog post in which Diana shares her correspondences, a change in schedule, and admits to hating a beloved children's classic ...

I've had a lot of poignant email and in-person conversations lately. I am honoured that others see me as someone who can help solve problems. Many of these talks fall along similar themes. Be it C through my work email, M in my non-work email from the AQ, M in my DMs, or even C at the grocery store - all of them are reaching out for assistance on explaining aspects of teacher-librarianship to those who aren't in the role, and managing the role itself.

As I told my principal recently, my father used to have a saying: "If you aren't part of the solution, you are part of the problem". (I'll circle back to this later.)

I've been a TL for a long time, which means I know a lot of people and have had many years of dealing with different kinds of people and situations. Here are some things I have done, can do, and will do to make things better.

Collaboration = if you need some examples of what collaboration can look like, feel free to look at this blog from 2021 describing a few types of collaborative teaching experiences 

The Role of the TL = I am considering making some generic (as in, can be used by any school board) slide decks that can be used to explain what a TL does and why this is not a waste of resources and time. If I do this, I'll post them here for people to use. If anyone wants to work with me on this, send me a note.

If you need something on the role of the teacher-librarian right away, you might want to check out a recent ETT Teacher Talk podcast on the School Library Learning Commons. I haven't had a chance to listen to the speakers, but the descriptor sounds like the participants worked hard to capture all the important elements of the job. (Plus, Rabia was one of my Library Part 1 AQ students!)




Visits = If I promise you that I'll come to your school to take a look around and help with planning, physical set up, or programming, know that I am good for it. Remember to email me to book a time.

Scheduling = This is the thing that I can do to help that doesn't fill me with delight but is the best course of action. At my own school, I will relinquish my open collaborative time this year. As my dad's motto rang in my head, "if I'm not part of the solution, I'm part of the problem". This is what I can do right now. I'm disappointed but I am old enough to know that there are cycles. In fact, I wrote in my capping paper for my Masters of Education degree about how, the year after I received Canada's highest honour for school librarianship, (the 2008 Canadian Association of School Libraries / Follett International Teacher-Librarian of the Year) circumstances changed.
In the 2009-2010 school year, the majority of my collaborative teaching time was removed due to declining enrolment at my school and the reduction of required minimum teacher-librarian time board-wide. My teaching position now included being the junior and intermediate special education resource teacher for literacy and numeracy in addition to being the teacher-librarian. My library schedule only held six periods available for collaborative teaching time with class teachers, the lifeblood of a healthy school library program; all the rest of my library time was designated for providing preparation time for class teachers by taking groups for book exchange and teaching isolated library skills instruction for every class in the school. I was very disappointed by this turn of events.  

I lost the teacher-librarian position entirely in 2020-21 when my board eliminated the position in elementary schools because of  the COVID-19 situation and reaction. It's not ideal but I remain hopeful that in the future, there will be a better timetable that will allow for co-planning, co-teaching, and co-assessing. Last year, I was able to be involved with 19 collaborative units, even with getting pulled occasionally to deal with the supply teacher shortage. I remain optimistic that the pendulum will swing back, and I'm willing to take the hit this time.


Some may see this as being too sacrificial. Some may even compare it to the famous picture book, The Giving Tree. This is where I'll shriek "NOOOOOOO!" A major reason for my objection is because I actually despise that book. 

I am not the only one that dislikes this book. Reasons why this book is disliked, as mentioned on a Quora thread, and on a Reddit thread, include the toxic relationship between the tree that constantly gives and the boy that constantly takes, and the exploitation of nature


This image was posted by user "thissucks32" part of the Reddit group r/raisedbyborderlines

By the way, I still have a copy of the actual book in the school library where I work, even though I don't like the main message. The removal of certain titles from school library collections cannot be based on personal preferences. Make sure you read the statement by Canadian School Libraries on book challenges. (I won't write about the criticism the Peel District School Board has faced for its deselection practices. That's worthy of a separate post.) My blog post on deselection from this July describes the actual process.

Oh, and I can't stand The Rainbow Fish either. (This article on Medium sums up most of the objections.) 


This image comes from Kidspot. The original images come from two TikTok accounts labelled in the collage image.

I'll stop here, before you get the idea that I am a crank that hates all famous picture books! Just remember, I'm willing to provide assistance if you need it. Just let me know what I can do to help.

Monday, September 18, 2023

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Library

 I'm teaching a lot of drama this school year. To get into the mood, I've been re-watching old episodes of the improv show, Whose Line Is It Anyways? and enjoying the comic genius of people like Ryan Stiles and Colin Mochrie. Funny enough, one of the games or skits that they play on the show, called "Props", is very similar to a game I'm playing with the students.

We first read Not A Stick to see how the main character can pretend that a stick can be many different things. Then, we sat in a community circle, passed around a stick, and played pretend with some structured conversation. (I think a version of this game is also called "This is a Scarf".) The dialogue goes something like this:

Me: "Who are you?"

Student: [says their name]

Me: "Hey [NAME], nice stick."

Student: "It's not a stick."

Me: "It's not a stick? What is it?"

Student: "It's [says and shows something different]"

I have to tell you that when I played this game with one of our kindergarten classes, you would have thought that they were watching Robin Williams or Catherine O'Hara at their finest. Every time I said "It's NOT a STICK?", the entire class howled with laughter. They thought it was the funniest thing they've ever heard in their entire lives. And then, when I'd say it again for the next person in the circle, they'd crack up laughing anew. No word of a lie, they chortled and giggled and rolled on the floor chuckling loudly like it was the very first time they had ever heard such a witty retort. I was absolutely hilarious. (Before you suggest I abandon teaching for a life on the comedy circuit, check out this article on children's sense of humor from the University of Bristol. I suspect it was a combination of funny faces, funny voices, getting a reaction, and mislabeling.)

Now, it was kind of hard to get them to settle down a bit afterwards, and some of the students were still too shy or hesitant to suggest a different interpretation of the stick, but some did. There were a lot of fishing rods inspired by the book and ninja swords, and a couple of new ideas, but most just loved letting loose. You can see from a few of these photos. These are from the Grade 3-4 students, so they are a bit more advanced in their pantomime, but you can see how it progressed.





Joy is a good thing.

It made me think about the times the students or I have bust a gut laughing out loud.

Toy Store

Students who have had me before for drama class have already begun requesting that we play Toy Store. They love to play pretend. They think it's a hoot to "trick the toy store owner" (aka me in role) and have her perplexed as to why the toy store is in disarray each morning after she locks up, never realizing that the toys are alive and partying after hours. That's what drama is about for young learners. It's not about memorizing lines to recite in a stage performance. The Ontario curriculum says that elementary students will "expand their thinking, solve problems, and develop their ability to express ideas and feelings through aspects of the art form such as contextual or process drama and role play". (page 15)


Early Minecraft Play - We Need a GamingEdus Reunion!

My husband likes to share the story of what it was like listening to my children and to me playing Minecraft together in the early days, alternately screaming in terror and hollering in delight as we experienced this new virtual world. Minecraft used to be such a huge part of my personal and professional life. If you look at the list of presentations I've run on my wiki, you'll notice that from 2012 - 2018, I offered many, many sessions about using Minecraft in the classroom with members of the GamingEdus. The GamingEdus were a group of like-minded educators who believed in the power of video games in education and the positive possibilities of games based learning. We used to have so much fun together. The GamingEdus have crept into my thoughts recently, because one of our core members, Andrew Forgrave, aka Gumby Blockhead, has been helping me migrate all of our old Minecraft accounts to Microsoft before they are locked out for good. 


I even found one of our old business cards out of the blue.



So, what happened to the GamingEdus? Well, Liam O'Donnell moved to the Thames Valley District School Board. Denise Colby became a vice-principal in the Toronto District School Board. Jen Apgar became a vice-principal in the Upper Grand District School Board. Andrew Forgrave retired from the Hastings Prince Edward County District School Board. We still love games but Microsoft's acquisition of Minecraft reduced the pleasure of this specific game for some of us, and we moved on to other priorities and jobs. I hope that we can arrange a get-together in the future so we can reunite and reminisce about those great times we had together.


Conversations with Friends over Food

I couldn't recall a specific example of this, except for a time long ago that my sister and I with some mutual friends (Cathy and Brendan) were sitting around the kitchen table at my parents house. We were eating but we were so overly tired that everything anyone said was inexplicably funny. Thing is, combine good friends with good food and uninterrupted time, and it is likely to lead to lots of laughs. These precious moments will often happen at dinner after a conference, or during the summer over a leisurely lunch. 


I hope you get a chance to laugh lustily and without reservations sometime soon. Laughing has many health benefits, according to this article from the Mayo Clinic.  So, live, laugh and love!