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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Linda Corey

Linda Corey

Why I Gave Up Flipped Instruction - 0 views

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    Author shares why she moved from a flipped classroom to project-based learning.
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    Librarians have a powerful role to play in collaborating with teachers who use project-based learning.
Linda Corey

The Other America: Giving Our Poorest Children the Same Opportunities as Our Richest | ... - 0 views

  • In my new book, Fire in the Ashes, I catch up with all those
  • In my new book, Fire in the Ashes, I catch up with all those kids, many of whom I came to know when they were only six or eight years old. They talked to me about the struggles they went through, which were often hardest in their adolescent years. Most are in their twenties now. As they look back on their formative years, they speak repeatedly of books that first awakened their appetite for reading—by which I mean real books, books that children read for pleasure
  • children, their culture, too.
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  • children, their culture, too.
  • children, their culture,
  • children, their culture, too.
  • children, their culture
  • children, their culture, too.
  • First of all,  no matter what the economic ups and downs may be at any given moment, public school libraries in destitute communities need not just sufficient but extravagant funding. If there’s a single thing our state and federal governments could do to stir up a love of learning in our poorest children, it would be to take a good big chunk of the massive sum of money that’s now being wasted on the testing industry and use it, instead, to flood our students’ lives with the joys and mysteries of authentic culture—and not only Western culture but, in the case of, for instance, Hispanic children, their culture, too.
  • no matter what the economic ups and downs may be at any given moment, public school libraries in destitute communities need not just sufficient but extravagant funding. If there’s a single thing our state and federal governments could do to stir up a love of learning in our poorest children, it would be to take a good big chunk of the massive sum of money that’s now being wasted on the testing industry and use it, instead, to flood our students’ lives with the joys and mysteries of authentic culture—and not only Western culture but, in the case of, for instance, Hispanic children, their culture, too.
  • If I had the power, I’d redirect another big chunk of the money that’s now enriching testing corporations and make certain that every inner-city school has its own full-time librarian, and one whose passion about books is contagiously exciting to young people.
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    Support for reading
Linda Corey

PA State Legislators Hold Hearing on Status of School Libraries | School Library Journal - 0 views

  • PA State Legislators Hold Hearing on Status of School Libraries
  • Pennsylvania
  • that
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  • “When you remove a qualified librarian from the library, I believe that the library begins to cease to exist,” said Graig Henshaw, a librarian from the York City School District .
  • “When you remove a qualified librarian from the library, I believe that the library begins to cease to exist,” said Graig Henshaw, a librarian from the York City School District
  • “When you remove a qualified librarian from the library, I believe that the library begins to cease to exist,” said Graig Henshaw, a librarian from the York City School District.
  • while Pennsylvania doesn’t require librarians for public schools, it mandates them for private schools and prisons.
  • Former students
  • Kristy Oren said her high school librarian introduced her to databases and helped her prepare for university-level research
  • During Sean Gregory’s four years at Danville High School, he “noticed a subtle but steady decrease in that trademark ease of access” that he came to take for granted in the library when its staff was reduced and eliminated.
  • Representative Paul Clymer, who chairs the Education Committee, saying, “I was concerned to learn through the study that, on average, staffing, funding, access, and resources are inadequate for achieving optimal benefit from these specialized educators.”
  • The study outlined six recommendations, which included restoring the state-level Division of School Library Media Services in the Commonwealth Libraries and appointing a director; creating an information literacy curriculum; having an annual assessment of school library programs; making the state Guidelines for Pennsylvania School Library Programs available to administrators; and providing guidance in the selection of adaptive technologies for the visual disabled and materials in languages other than English
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    "Meanwhile, Sandra Zelno of the Education Law Center shared school library initiatives from other states and pointed out that while Pennsylvania doesn't require librarians for public schools, it mandates them for private schools and prisons."
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    PA looks at school libraries and librarians
Linda Corey

Dipity - 0 views

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    Create timelines
Linda Corey

2. User Rights, Section 107 Music Video | Media Education Lab - 0 views

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    Videos and lessons about copyright
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