Thursday, February 29, 2024

Teacher & Staff Fun - Valentine's Edition

 My goal this year was to boost teacher/staff morale by organizing a fun activity every other month.  This month I did a Valentine scratch off card.  I created 3 different cards. 



I made 8 copies of the "DutchBro" drinks, 24 copies of the "Mystery Prize" (which was a cup of candy with a Mardi Gras necklace and reading stickers), and then I made 148 "candy" prizes.  I have roughly 180 faculty, staff members, custodians, and cafeteria workers at my high school.  The scratch off part of the ticket is a sticker that I placed over those 3 prizes . . . which I found on Amazon.  I bought the 1000 piece roll, round stickers, gold, one inch.

We are about to close this activity; I originally ended the activity on Feb. 16th, but decided to give teachers and staff the whole month to claim their prizes.  So far I have given away lots of candy, 12 mystery prizes, and 0 DutchBros drinks.  I guess we will soon see who won those, or theDutchBro cards will stay forever unscratched in the mailroom.  How sad!

I have used the scratch off ticket 3 times this year.  I did an August scratch off that also doubled as an introduction to the library.  The front of the ticket was the prize, and the back of the ticket highlighted some quick ways to use the library.







I did a Halloween scratch off (only one-sided) where everyone won candy.




And this month was the Valentine scratch off, also one-sided.  If you would like to use any of these scratch offs, I made them in Canva.  Here are those template links.
What did I do for December you might ask?  After all, I did say I was trying to do a fun activity every other month.  I created a  December "12 Days of Christmas" calendar.  Teachers opened each day to find a book recommendation, a brain break, a treat, or a technology tool.  I created that in Genially.  Here is the copy version: 12 Days of Christmas.  If you have a Genially account, go to the bottom of this presentation and click the button that says "reuse this genially." It should create an editable copy & place it in your account.

In April, I am planning a "self help" Tic-tac-toe card.  I stole this one from a presentation and adapted it for my activity.  Here is that template if you want it:  Self Care Tic-Tac-Toe board

Where do I get the money to finance these activities?  It's a combination of Activity Funds and my own back pocket.  It just depended upon whether I got the PO request done in time for the activity.

As always, I need to give credit where credit is due.  These ideas are not always my own.
  • The original scratch off card I borrowed from Pam Pinkerton, former high school librarian & current library coordinator in Mansfield ISD.
  • The Self Care Tic-tac-toe board came from a presentation called "Collaborate and Compete with Canva" which was part of the Winter Virtual Showcase hosted by the Canva Librarians & Teachers FB page.

Tuesday, February 20, 2024

4th Six Weeks Check In

 


I'm not going to lie, my check out statistics are disappointing for the 4th six weeks.  I saw the downward trend coming, but this is probably an all time low for me.  It's time to push book check outs because we all know if the students are not checking out books, they are not reading books . . . in general.  We do have classroom libraries in each of the ELAR rooms, and I know some students buy books or download them.  Regardless, we should have more than 336 books checked out in 6 weeks!

I have added different data collection to this report after seeing Shannon McClintock Miller at TCEA.  She didn't go over library statistics specifically, but her presentations inspired me to go to her blog.  One of her blog posts, "Sharing Our Library Statistics and Celebrating our Readers by Setting Up New Carousels in Destiny Discover," gave me some great ideas.  I like how she ran the stats for top patron readers and top homeroom classes, and then the top books checked out.  So the second page of my library statistics looks like this . . . 


I am hoping to spark some competition with the students and maybe even the ELAR teachers.  I plan to post this report on social media and email the staff too.  If you look at the actual check outs, they are low.  However, I have to start somewhere.  There is only one way to go from here. 

Another fun statistic I added to Destiny is a ribbon which has the top 20 books checked out from our library this year.  (Thanks, Shannon . . . again)  I didn't rank them according to how many times they have been checked out.  I just did Alphabetical order, but I think we might get some check out traffic with this new ribbon:  https://search.follettsoftware.com/metasearch/ui/26295 

Something else I thought to include is to have a shelf where my top readers can recommend their favorite books.  Maybe that will also spark some book check outs.


Then, of course, I will continue my book check out incentives.  Right now we are giving out Mardi Gras necklaces.

In addition, my school purchase Beanstack, and I have yet to promote that.  I love the product, and to be honest, I am not sure why I have been hesitant to try something new, especially when it is hooked to reading.  I guess I will get over myself, and dive into Beanstack, and maybe do a school wide challenge after Spring Break.  That gives me plenty of time to talk it up to the teachers and students before the actual challenge.

I believe I am ready for the 5th six weeks.  Stay tuned to see how this all goes.

Friday, February 9, 2024

TCEA Did Not Disappoint This Year



TCEA did not disappoint this year.  Lots of new learning, new people, old colleagues, and AI.  As always, some sessions were better than others.  We did get some positive feedback on our session which was the first day at 1:30 pm.  It wasn't a packed house, but not as many people were there on Saturday.  To be honest, I would have skipped Saturday if I wasn't already presenting.  As I  get older, my weekends become sacred.  I need downtime these days.

The best session I attended was AI & Research Tools: Transforming Libraries for Dynamic Outcomes.  What made it stand out from the others was the practical ways a librarian could use these tools with students and research.  So many AI presentations are all about the theory of AI - where it pulls its data, the history, etc.  I guess I am past knowing about the theory/history and am ready for the practical examples of how to use AI in the classroom.  After all, AI is just the next tool.  If we are not using it, we are obsolete.  Will AI replace my job? . . . not in my lifetime.  Will someone using AI replace me?  That is the better question, and I believe the answer is YES.  AI is definitely here to stay.

Other sessions I attended are listed below with my take away piece of information.


These are a few of my Favorite Things - I want to create a choice board of digital breakouts for students to do at their own pace. Great idea from this session.


Creative PD to ACE your Library Evaluation - okay, this was our presentation, but my one take away - create with purpose. Create your programs and activities around your library standards.

Canva: Amplifying Student Voice in School Libraries - pay attention to the design - what can people see? what do you want to emphasize? Also loved the "New Year's Reading Resolution" that students could design and put up in the library


EdTech Bytes: A Subscription Box to Rule them All - I WANT TO DO THIS!!! not sure if I will try with teachers or students first. Still thinking




Tools you Can Use Tomorrow - I think I need to revisit Padlet


Unlock the magic of Genially - I really am better at this program than I thought. I need to explore the breakout examples.


Tech Badge Dash: Building Teacher Capacity within Your School  - I've always wanted to do this, but this session was a bit too technical for me. More coding than I am comfortable doing.


Magic of AI in Canva for Education - that icebreaker is worthy of adapting and doing with a group of teachers or students


Tech Tastings for Teachers - need a digital binder or hub for all teacher training, I might be doing that with Canvas. Need to revisit.


My Favorite AI Apps - need to look at Copilot (Microsoft's version of ChatGPT)



Like I said, TCEA did not disappoint this year. I have lots of new ideas, and I need to see where they will fit in my library program.