What the spiders saw…

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Houdina is back!

Posted by mayralovesbooks on May 4, 2008

The librarian was shelving some books last Monday, when she heard her name being called by some children who were lining up in the hallway. As she went to see them, she noticed a familiar friend climbing up the stairs. It was Houdina! The librarian carefully picked her up and took her back to the library where she placed her in a well-sealed pet container. The students followed her, and had the chance to take a close look at Houdina, the best escape artist this side of the Mississippi.

A closer look

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Looking for information on the web and not knowing where to begin

Posted by mayralovesbooks on April 5, 2008

Click on the-presentation to see the power point show the librarian prepared on “Looking for information on the web and not knowing where to begin”.

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Wikis in third grade

Posted by mayralovesbooks on March 21, 2008

As part of her required coursework in her masters in IT, the librarian had to create a lesson using Web 2.0 tools in the classroom. The librarian has decided to place the lesson here, with the hope of receiving feedback from others and the possibility of someone utilizing the lesson in their own classroom or library. The lesson is posted first, the comments follow.

Subject area: Language Arts, Technology
Grade level: Third
Lesson title: What is a wiki? Nine-year-olds collaborate to design a definition

Brief lesson description

One of the most notable distinctions of the beginning of the 21st century has been the rapid advance in technology. Internet accessibility for many, mass ownership of personal computers, combined with accessible forums for anyone with a computer to voice an opinion has created a situation where different skills are required for 21st century citizens. Education is slowly beginning to change its delivery to one that is more current with society’s needs. In this lesson, the author aims to change the typical delivery of a lesson from students as recipients of information from an instructor to students who act on the information they experience and collaborate to create a product others can benefit from.
This lesson has many purposes, though the most important one is to prepare students in a third grade class for 21st century online collaboration. The lesson provides hands-on experience with a wiki. Instead of providing a teacher definition, the students themselves will build the definition of a process they will have experienced.
WI State Standard – Learning Target(s) addressed:

3rd Grade Language Arts:

  • Organize sentences into paragraphs. Organize paragraphs to build on an idea.
  • Revise and edit their writing using proper grammar and spelling.

NETS-S technology standard addressed:
1. Creativity and Innovation: Students demonstrate creative thinking, construct knowledge, and develop innovative products and processes using technology.
2. Communication and Collaboration: Students use digital media and environments to communicate and work collaboratively, including at a distance, to support individual learning and contribute to the learning of others.
Technology resources needed (hardware and software)
Laptops, internet connection, access to a room at MPS’ Student Learning Community

Procedure:

Hook/Engagement: The teacher shows the class a rectangular cake. She tells the students a person, new to this country and this language, wants to know what “cake” is. The class will have to use words to describe the cake.

Vocabulary: post, edit, save

Focused Instruction “Let me show you something: this is how we can all work together to create a definition of this word.” The teacher has already created a wiki with very basic information such as: “A cake is round.” She promotes a discussion to determine if that sentence tells everything a person needs to know to understand what a cake is. Students who disagree are invited to edit, post, and save their replies. The process of editing and saving gets to be repeated over and over as students change or add responses to the class definition of “cake”.

Guided Practice: “Let’s do it together with different words.” The students work on definitions of “bubble gum, candy bar, goo”. Teacher paces the room and encourages students that are not participating to do so. After the class is finished collaborating on the definitions, the teacher informs the students that the term for what they were doing is a wiki.

Added Vocabulary: wiki

Independent Practice: “Now you try.” Students work on a group definition of a wiki.

Assessment Method: Feedback will be provided in two forms: collectively while the discussion is going on and individually, as the teacher paces the room and provides quick feedback to students that might not be participating or are not encouraging others to participate.
Assessment will consist of teacher notes.

Explanation, purpose, and features

This lesson has many purposes. It has been selected as one step on a continuum to prepare a class of third grade students for online collaboration. The lesson provides hands-on experience with a wiki, a “collaborative workspace where anyone can edit content that has already been published” (Richardson, 2006). Instead of providing a teacher definition, and then practice, the librarian decides to have the students themselves work on a wiki related to terms they know well, then build the wiki’s definition based on their shared experience.
The first lesson begins small and simple: teacher provides modeling of wiki work while the class defines the word “cake”. Students move to guided practice while working in teams to define the words “bubble gum, candy bar, and goo”. This lesson eventually culminates with wiki essentials, as students collaborate online to establish a definition of the word “wiki” based on their experience. Further lessons will promote wiki work as teams develop library terms definitions they will eventually post at the library page (barcode, spine, verso, holds, etc). The goal is that the students will collaborate on book reviews to post at the library room. Lastly, this experience will prepare students to transfer what they have learned to their classroom page, where other subjects such as science, Spanish, social studies, and math will be incorporated.

The librarian in this school has created a room at the district’s student online learning community, which uses Moodle as the course management platform. This room, available only through an enrollment key to the students at her school, has several features that promote online collaboration. Wikis, dictionaries, and forums are available. Unfortunately, blogs are not available at this time to students in this setting. The librarian initially presented this student learning community to two teachers at the school and, after taking all the required coursework necessary to create and maintain these rooms, both teachers have thus created their own classroom online rooms.

Effectiveness of this medium

The school this librarian works for promotes cooperative learning as a way for students to act on the knowledge they acquire. Students are used to working as teams, to collaborate at tables or selected groupings to come to an understanding or create a product. However, although web 2.0 tools, such as wikis, provide more efficient ways to attain this, this school has stayed behind by using 20th century methods such as paper and pencil. It is the librarian’s intention to work with a classroom teacher and the special education teacher to introduce online collaboration to the students. They aim to scaffold the students so they feel comfortable using features of the library’s student learning community room (slc) and then move them over to their classroom room at the slc. They want to tap into the students’ thirst for technology and at the same time get them to experience how students can work together online as teams to create a product useful to others.

Several reasons influenced the librarian’s decision to choose a wiki over a blog. First of all, for reasons no one has been able to explain to the librarian, the district’s student learning community’s set-up does not allow for student blogs. (Teachers can have modified blogs at the teacher learning community.) Since the librarian and the classroom teacher want to provide the students with online practice in a controlled environment, the use of this room, though limited slightly, has been chosen as the route to go. Another reason, expressed previously, is the librarian’s thought that students need to learn how to collaborate online, and a wiki is provides such experience. Lastly, practice with entries similar to blogs can be promoted by the use of forums, something that is easily created at the student learning community rooms.

The use of wikis in the classroom will provide students with opportunities to publish, edit, and revise content, yet a lot more should be happening while this collaboration is going on. Through wiki work, students will learn how to negotiate with others about correctness, relevance, meaning, grammar, and more (Richardson, 2006).

Reflections on the lesson


Before students could work on a wiki, they need to learn how to navigate on the student learning community. Considering that these are students have had very little computer experience, every step to navigating in the room has to be considered. That involves teaching students how to log in and log off, respond to a prompt on a forum, and complete their profile information. The librarian anticipates that before the teachers are finished with the first lesson, some students will have figured out how to send messages to each other, and that is fine. Further lessons will be planned on digital citizenship and staying on task. Table groupings will make managing the groups more efficient, as students will be encouraged to help each other.

This lesson is also teaching the librarian how to work with groups so they will be able to use the library’s page at the Student Learning Community and have a voice. The objective is to begin with the third graders so as they move up in the grades at this elementary school, they will be learning how to “operate in a world where the creating of knowledge and information is more and more becoming a group effort” (Richardson, 2006). The librarian also agrees with Baggetun, in that “blogs and wikis could be one way of nurturing the relationship between schooling and the outside world, and learning as participation, drawing from both spheres in creating richer opportunities for more meaningful learning” (2007).

References:

Baggetun, R. (2007). Emergent web practices and new educational opportunities. Version 0.1-4 Revista Telos: cuadernos de comunicación, tecnología y sociedad. Accessed 3/21/2008 at:

http://www.campusred.net/telos/articulocuaderno.asp?idarticulo=9&rev=67

Richardson, W. (2006). Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts, and other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms. Corwin Press, CA.

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Where is the librarian?

Posted by mayralovesbooks on March 20, 2008

We haven’t seen her for a week now and can’t understand what is going on and why she is not here. The school engineer comes over, looks at us then  feeds us, and goes back to locking the library.

We will pay close attention from now on. Sophie says we need to look at the hallway and listen, maybe someone passing by will be talking about her and we will pick up some bits of information. I say we need to hope the engineer talks to someone while feeding us and we will get the entire story.

Shirley says wah, wah, I want mommy (she is a baby). Okay, spiders don’t act like that, they could care less about their mothers. Shirley says to be patient and we will find out when the librarian gets here.

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The story of Houdina

Posted by mayralovesbooks on March 18, 2008

One day last December the librarian came to the library with a very saddened look. Since we rely on listening to what she says to the visitors at the library, and she wasn’t talking, we had to be patient to find out what went on. Well, she eventually told, and this is what we found out.

Last December the librarian received a call from the folks at the pet shop informing her that the spider she had been waiting for had arrived. This spider, a very tiny choko golden, was waiting for her and she had to go pick her up. On a very cold night she went, bought the spider, placed her in her leather glove, then inside her coat pocket, and took her home. At home she thought the spider would be crammed in such a small enclosure (it was similar to a pill box), so she took her out and placed her in a small pet carrier, the plastic kind where kids put hermit crabs. By then it was late and she went to sleep.

The next morning when she went to see her new friend she was gone! The little spider had disappeared. The librarian looked everywhere in her room, but found no signs of the spider anywhere. Saddened, she went to school and went on with her life, thinking any day she would find the shriveled carcass of her baby spider.

One night two months later,  as she unfastened her sneakers, she looked down and there was the spider, waving hello! The librarian carefully picked her up, placed her in a well-sealed container, and took her to school. By then the librarian already had purchased Shirley Spydelle, so it was a joy to be able to compare one and the other. It wasn’t difficult to come up with a name for the new spider: Houdina it would be! She was definitely an escape artist.

The sad part is that the story doesn’t end there. Once at school, Houdina  managed to escape again. She hasn’t been seen, even though the librarian has moved every shelf surrounding the cage. Maybe in two months she will return. We certainly hope so, since she is getting too much attention.

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The girls and the mini bus

Posted by mayralovesbooks on February 19, 2008

We thought it was time to show the world how we have changed over the last few months, so the librarian took photos of the three of us by a mini bus she keeps on her desk.

sophie and the bus The first photo showcases Sophie Titina, who has been the librarian’s friend for over 8 years. Sophie’s name comes from a picture book in English, Sophie’s Masterpiece by Eileen Spinelli, and a poem/song in Spanish, La hormiga Titina, by Argentinean author Maria Elena Walsh.

Next is Krista, right by the bus. Krista is about two years old, and Krista and the bus

her name comes from a library volunteer, who would always come in to the library to greet the arachnids first!

shirley and the bus Last is Shirley Spydelle, who is so small, she managed to climb on the mini bus. Shirley must be less than a year old, and her name comes from a character in the series Secrets of Dripping Fang.

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A spider like Shirley

Posted by mayralovesbooks on January 16, 2008

The librarian looked all over the net and found this picture of a gal like Shirley. The librarian would like to thank http://hometown.aol.com/thevez2/species.html

for letting us show their picture until we can take one ourselves.

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New friend in the library

Posted by mayralovesbooks on January 16, 2008

Sophie and I can’t believe that we haven’t bugged the librarian to comment what has been happening in the library since July!!!! A lot has happened – though we won’t get into it at this time. Our message today has to do with a new friend we have in the library.

Her name is Shirley Spydelle. Yes, she happens to be named just as ProfesCover Imagesor Spydelle’s wife in The Secrets of Dripping Fang series by Dan Greenburg.   And yes, she is also a spider. She is a Choko Golden and from what we have heard, she will get to grow bigger than Sophie. Now Sophie is getting a bit on the large size group, so it will be interesting to see how big Shirley can get. Stay tuned, for we will ask the librarian to post some pictures soon.

~Krista

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Books for tarantula enthusiasts

Posted by mayralovesbooks on July 8, 2007

Today I heard the librarian tell some teachers that she was doing an internet search at home for books about spiders. She said she was trying to remember the title of a book she had read a few years ago and was being unsuccessful remembering the precise title. Her comment to some teachers was that it took about 3 pages in Google before she could locate the book. Both Sophie and I, Krista, were astounded: three pages in Google? We know it wasn’t due to the fact that the librarian couldn’t carry out a search. We heard her say that it was a shame there were few sites that provided listings of titles for the young tarantula enthusiast.  

So both Sophie and I decided to invite young readers to find books about tarantulas. Now that school is out and there is more time for reading, we invite you to go visit the public library and ask one of the friendly librarians to help you track a few good books about us hairy fellows. Once you find a great book, drop us a line and we will include it here. Tell us why you think it is a great book. Hey, maybe we can jointly put together a recommended book list for tarantula fans!

 Interview with Harry the TarantulaSince you know we are well-informed library tarantulas who enjoy listening to library conversations, we thought we would share with you what we found out about the book the librarian searched. An Interview with Harry the Tarantula, written by Leigh Ann Tyson, and illustrated by Henrik Drescher, is funny, yet full of true facts about us eight-legged darlings. We heard the librarian say that the author did quite a lot of research about spiders and consulted with entomology expects to make sure the facts in the book were correct. That is perfect!  Now, in our opinion, while the text is great and the illustrations of reporter Katy Did of KBUG Radio cute, Harry is pictured as an eight-legged, too-many-teeth goofball. That is the only part we did not like, thought you must know that tarantulas have a different sense of humor than humans, and some humans might consider the illustrations funny. We heard the librarian say that the book could be purchased at the National Geographic site, so we went ahead and linked it to the title of the book. So tarantula enthusiasts everywhere, go to your public library and start reading!      

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A video about a rose hair tarantula!

Posted by mayralovesbooks on April 28, 2007

Look at what the librarian found! Sophie looks like a giant compared to this spider.

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