13 Ekim 2012 Cumartesi

Read Across America: The Lorax in the Junior High Library

To contact us Click HERE
Our library celebrates Read Across America every March. This year, the NEA has teamed with the new Lorax movie, and the theme is green.
 
Image from NEA



Plans are already in the works for our March 1 and 2 celebration in the junior high library.
Deb, the library's creative genius, hard at work.
Here's what we've got planned:
Truffula Tree Tops
Finished Truffula Trees

* We're making life-size truffula trees for the month's book display which will feature "green" books about the environment. We don't have a perfect prototype yet for the tree, but the top involves tissue paper balls, and the trunks are the inner cardboard tubes from carpet roles, painted yellow with brown stripes.(Update: We've got finished Truffula trees! Instead of cardboard tubes, which were 12' tall and didn't fit in the car, Deb used foam pipe insulation and wrapped it with yellow ducktape to form stripes, then glued the tissue paper tops to the "trunks.") I also like this idea for trees below - they used pollyfill pinned to styrofoam and spray painted it.

Image from McLellan Style
Image from Pintrest
* We've gotten our science club involved, and we're going to hold a tree planting event. A local nursery has offered to donate baby trees. Before the trees get transplanted outside, they'll live for a week or so inside the library on display shelves in planters that looks like the one to the left. Instead of terracotta pots, we're using #10 cans we got from the cafeteria.

* The Lorax's mustache is fabulous, and our junior high kids still love playing dress-up. We'll be making mustaches on sticks modeled after the Lorax's iconic 'stache. We're jumping on this wedding trend, and setting up a "fauxto" booth area where students can pose with the mustaches and Dr. Seuss' red and white stripped hat.
Image from The Prippy Handbook

* It's not an event without food! We're going to have a make-you-own truffula tree option. Kids can dip the top of their pretzel rods in melted chocolate, and then in colored sprinkles of their choice. We've had popcorn in the past, but it's super messy, so pretzels and sprinkles can't really be any worse. Is it healthy? Ummmm, it could be worse, right?

* As we always do, we'll have a read-a-thon featuring teachers and students. I plan on purchasing Dr. Seuss' eBooks. We'll hook an iPad up to our ceiling mounted projector, allowing students to see the illustrations as the book is read.We've also invited students from ESF, a local college for Environmental Science and Forestry. They're going to help us plant the trees, and hopefully also read.

What fun ideas do you have planned for the event?

Back to cookies (win) and trees (fail)

To contact us Click HERE
We're back from February break (a return made sweeter by the FOUR! boxes of Girl Scout Cookies that arrived on my desk), and it's full steam ahead as we finish preparing for Read Across America.


Yippie for Girl Scout Cookies!
I'm booked with classes all week (as always), so our other fantastic staff members are tying things up.

Students from SUNY's school of Environmental Science and Forestry (ESF) came yesterday afternoon. They helped our science club plant conifer seedlings. The planters are adorable, but have you ever try to find tree seedlings in upstate New York in February? Yeah, not an easy task. One of our aides had these trees stored in the barn on her farm. She's been saving them since last summer, and planned to plant them in the spring. We're hoping they're just dormant. Right now, it looks like we stuck some twigs in a little dirt. This is NOT an image that will end up on Pintrest:

Yes, that's a tree. Believe me.
On a more successful note, we've got a Lorax! Our custodian, Mr. Stanton, is a fantastic artist. He's responsible for this life size model. We're going to make it available to kids tomorrow, so they can pose with it in photos.
Mr. Stanton with his Lorax

Read Across America -- A SUCCESS!

To contact us Click HERE
We're kicking off Day 2 of Read Across America this morning. Right now, Deb, our library secretary is in the back of the room reading Walter the Farting Dog -- junior high kids seem to dig it just as much as elementary students. Here's a few photos from yesterday's events.
Everyone, and I mean EVERYONE loved posing with the Lorax. It was a HUGE hit. We've got Lorax photos plastered all over the school.


Our readers did a great job. Kids love to read out-loud -- no shyness evident. We put a document camera next to the reading chair and hooked it into our ceiling mounted projector, allowing the kids to see the pictures as the book was read.

Lorax mustaches were the HOT item in the junior high yesterday. We had to keep making them, as they were in such high demand.

A reader enjoys a Truffula Tree pop as a reward for his reading efforts. 

The Cat in the Hat roamed the halls to drum up support and encourage students to visit the library. 

How did YOU celebrate Read Across America?

The Year's Most Popular Titles

To contact us Click HERE
The end of the year means circulation statistics.

Image from here.
This time around, I've delved deeper into specifics, and I think I know a lot more about my user population and their reading habits. This week I learned the following:
  • Ninth grade boys don't very read much. I didn't realize that their circulation numbers were so abysmal compared to everyone else until I broke it down this spring. I **think** it's because most of my 9th grader ELA teachers don't require classroom novels, and fifteen year old boys just aren't that anxious to read for fun.
  • 8th graders and 9th graders read very different things. Books popular at the 8th level don't even break into the top ten at the 9th grade level. This could be because 8th graders are exploring titles that weren't available in the middle school library, while most 9th graders read these books the previous year.
  • Blockbusters, like Hunger Games, are popular with EVERYONE.
  • New books aren't always the most popular. Older titles like Twisted and The Lovely Bones were well-read across the board. This is probably the result of ELA teacher booktalks which get the kids pumped for specific titles.  
Most Popular Books Overall in the Junior High:
  1. Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
  2. Mocking Jay by Suzanne Collins
  3. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  4. Numbers by Rachel Ward
  5. Twisted  by Laurie Halse Anderson
  6. Matched by Ally Condie
  7. Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O'Brien
  8. Fallen by Lauren Kate
Most Popular Books Among Females in the Junior High:
  1. Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
  2. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  3. Mocking Jay by Suzanne Collins
  4. Numbers by Rachel Ward
  5. Matched by Ally Condie
  6. Fallen by Lauren Kate
  7. Crossed by Ally Condie
  8. The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold 
Most Popular Books Among Males in the Junior High:
  1. Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
  2. Mocking Jay by Suzanne Collins
  3. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  4. Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O'Brien
  5. Numbers by Rachel Ward
  6. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian by
  7. Football Champ by Tim Greene
  8. Twisted by Laurie Halse Anderson


What titles drew top honors in your library this year?

Steve Jobs Essay ‘Death is very likely the single best invention of life'

To contact us Click HERE
Co-founder of Apple Computer and a pioneering force in the computer and technology industry was found dead on Wednesday at the age of 56. The Apple chairman and former CEO who made personal computers, tables, smart phones and digital animation mass-marker products passed away. Steve Jobs died on October 5th 2011 after a long and hard struggle with cancer.

I Came, I Saw, I Conquered

Steve Jobs was the reason many of us got into this industry or even care about technology at all. He was "a great man" for real and he was the one who made Apple one of the most valuable companies in the whole world. Steve Jobs made a positive influence on our world.

Unfortunately, how it often happens, Steve Jobs was diagnosed with the disease in 2004. That is why he was compelled to leave his position as CEO of Apple in 2004. As you see Steve Jobs influenced on everybody of us , in a word, he was like a teacher. If you have a desire to have a Steve Job essay you have an opportunity to make an order at our custom writing company. We are always glad to assist our clients with their academic writing problems.

Use Our Custom Writing Company. Buy Steve Jobs Essay

Order Steve Jobs essay or any other type of essay, dissertation, research paper or book review at our custom writing service. We have gathered the team of highly qualified writers that are ready to assist you at any moment. Our clients are on top priority, so we are trying to create such conditions that will meet all your demands.

Use our essay writing service and we will create the brilliant and outstanding Steve Jobs essay. Furthermore, you will be pleasantly surprised with our pricing starting only at $10 per page. If you have to select the topic for your writing by yourself and are not sure which is best, you can ask our writers to make their suggestions and settle with the writer whose offers for the topic you find best suited for your needs.

The Choice is up to you

Think twice before writing Steve Jobs essay independently as you may have some problems concerning the appropriate material and reliable information. Become our customer today and receive the list of essay writing advantages.

At Buyessay.org - professional custom writing service - you can order your assignment 100% written from scratch. Buyessay.org works only with top-rated Ph.D. and Master's academic writers, which write quality custom research papers, term papers, essays, research proposals, thesis papers & dissertations at affordable prices. Get 10% Discount for your First Order!

12 Ekim 2012 Cuma

March News

To contact us Click HERE
The library is busy this month with an intense author study project by Mrs. Owens and Mrs. Beatty and their English 10 Honors classes.  All five classes had a presentation on how to use Destiny and the literary criticisms available here in the RBV library.

Erica R., my period two TA, has put up a new bulletin board for readers of series novels.  There are some great titles featured and some new ones on order. Look for matching bookmarks coming soon created by my wonderful intern Rachel R.

Spring break is just two weeks away! Don't forget to stock up on some good books to read while you are enjoying the time away from school.

Speaking of good books...I just finished Maze Runner by James Dashner.  If you liked the Hunger Games trilogy, you will like this book.  The second title The Scorch Trials has just been out for a short time.  I will be putting it on my spring break reading list.

LL

New Skills

To contact us Click HERE
I am at an intense training at the county office where I am learning so many new tools and tricks. I've created a Pod Bean account that will allow me to create my own podcasts.  My first entry is stictly a text entry. It has been linked below as a post to this blog.  By the end of today, I hope there will be an audio podcast available to listen to my tickler on James Dashner's book Maze Runner.

LL

Did you have a nice Spring Break?

To contact us Click HERE
I hope everyone enjoyed his or her time off.  Not everyone was off work.  Our amazing custodial crew cleaned the library and shampooed the carpets while no one was in here.  It looks great! Thank you custodians for all your hard work.

Did you read some good books during the break?  Did you know that you can write reviews and make recommendations to your friends through Destiny?  Make sure you have a Destiny account, then log on and give it a try.  You can always stop by the library to ask me if you need help with this.

Testing season is right around the corner.  Good luck and please do your best on the upcoming CST tests.  Watch for more information about closures the library will have in May when the AP and IB tests begin.

LL

Destiny Quest? There's an app for that!

To contact us Click HERE
Well, it looks like 2012 is off to a fine start. I hope all of you had a wonderful Winter Break. I also hope that you got to read some good books during your down time. Make sure you check my list on the right side of your screen for the new titles I've added that I read during the break.

Did you make a New Year's resolution to read more? If you did, your RBV library is the place to support you in your endeavors.  Just stop by anytime; you'll never leave disappointed.

Do you have a smart phone? Now you can download an app for our catalog. Follett's Destiny Quest feature of the catalog is available as an app through your app store. Once you download the app use this address to find us the first time http://destiny-1.vusd.k12.ca.us/ then create an account and search our catalog from wherever you might be.

LL

Steve Jobs Essay ‘Death is very likely the single best invention of life'

To contact us Click HERE
Co-founder of Apple Computer and a pioneering force in the computer and technology industry was found dead on Wednesday at the age of 56. The Apple chairman and former CEO who made personal computers, tables, smart phones and digital animation mass-marker products passed away. Steve Jobs died on October 5th 2011 after a long and hard struggle with cancer.

I Came, I Saw, I Conquered

Steve Jobs was the reason many of us got into this industry or even care about technology at all. He was "a great man" for real and he was the one who made Apple one of the most valuable companies in the whole world. Steve Jobs made a positive influence on our world.

Unfortunately, how it often happens, Steve Jobs was diagnosed with the disease in 2004. That is why he was compelled to leave his position as CEO of Apple in 2004. As you see Steve Jobs influenced on everybody of us , in a word, he was like a teacher. If you have a desire to have a Steve Job essay you have an opportunity to make an order at our custom writing company. We are always glad to assist our clients with their academic writing problems.

Use Our Custom Writing Company. Buy Steve Jobs Essay

Order Steve Jobs essay or any other type of essay, dissertation, research paper or book review at our custom writing service. We have gathered the team of highly qualified writers that are ready to assist you at any moment. Our clients are on top priority, so we are trying to create such conditions that will meet all your demands.

Use our essay writing service and we will create the brilliant and outstanding Steve Jobs essay. Furthermore, you will be pleasantly surprised with our pricing starting only at $10 per page. If you have to select the topic for your writing by yourself and are not sure which is best, you can ask our writers to make their suggestions and settle with the writer whose offers for the topic you find best suited for your needs.

The Choice is up to you

Think twice before writing Steve Jobs essay independently as you may have some problems concerning the appropriate material and reliable information. Become our customer today and receive the list of essay writing advantages.

At Buyessay.org - professional custom writing service - you can order your assignment 100% written from scratch. Buyessay.org works only with top-rated Ph.D. and Master's academic writers, which write quality custom research papers, term papers, essays, research proposals, thesis papers & dissertations at affordable prices. Get 10% Discount for your First Order!

11 Ekim 2012 Perşembe

Library Use for IB/AP testing

To contact us Click HERE
I just want to give everyone a heads-up that the month of May brings some closures to the library.  Many of the IB and AP tests have so many takers that classrooms are too small. The library is one of the larger venues (along with the gym and PAC) that is used when this happens.  The calendar for these closures has been sent to all staff and is posted all over the library.  I have asked to have it posted on the RBV website as well.  Please check this calendar before assuming the library is open during May.

LL

Destiny at Home!

To contact us Click HERE
Great News! You may now access Destiny, the library catalog, with all its excellent links and support for your research projects from home.  Go to http://destiny-1.vusd.k12.ca.us/ then choose Rancho Buena Vista in the high schools box.
Use the button in the top right corner - Create Account - to make your own log-in and password.  The account gives you access to even more features of Destiny.  If you need any help, just stop by the library and we'll show you how.

LL

Welcome Back

To contact us Click HERE
Hey Longhorns,

Welcome to the 2011-12 school year. The library will reopen for business on Tuesday September 6, 2011. I can't wait to have you come back.

I have lots of new books ready for you. Check out the special displays -- many sequels to some great reads are here for you.

Here's a little teaser for you -- I will be added something brand new to the collection in the coming weeks. I am very excited about it and hope you will be too.  Watch for details!

The after school extended hours will continue this year and will start on Tuesday. The same staff as last year will be working it, and we'll get the CSF tutors on board as soon as we can.

Enjoy the long weekend. See you Tuesday!
LL

SSR Books

To contact us Click HERE
This is the time of year when many students are required to bring novels to English class for Sustained Silent Reading -- lovingly called SSR. Students often complain that they don't like reading. Not to worry, I can help you with that!

If you do not like to read, it's simply because you haven't found the right book yet!!!

Finding a good book is as simple as A - B - C.

Ask - that's what your library staff is for - just ask us to help you. We know all the tricks to find just the right book for you.

Blog, Bookmarks, and Brochures - check here for a running lists that the librarian has read that you might enjoy. Also, there are videos on the RBV Reads blog that share specific genres of books.
Additionally, on the front check out counter there are brochures and bookmarks that feature some great reads.

Catalog - every computer in the library and any internet-enabled computer off campus has access to our catalog of books. It's called Destiny, and it is your one-stop place for all things library. There are many ways to search for a book that is perfect for you. Destiny also has many links to important sites for research, information, and fun.

So don't be shy, Longhorns, come on in and get to know your library and find a great SSR book in the process.

LL

Destiny Quest? There's an app for that!

To contact us Click HERE
Well, it looks like 2012 is off to a fine start. I hope all of you had a wonderful Winter Break. I also hope that you got to read some good books during your down time. Make sure you check my list on the right side of your screen for the new titles I've added that I read during the break.

Did you make a New Year's resolution to read more? If you did, your RBV library is the place to support you in your endeavors.  Just stop by anytime; you'll never leave disappointed.

Do you have a smart phone? Now you can download an app for our catalog. Follett's Destiny Quest feature of the catalog is available as an app through your app store. Once you download the app use this address to find us the first time http://destiny-1.vusd.k12.ca.us/ then create an account and search our catalog from wherever you might be.

LL

10 Ekim 2012 Çarşamba

The Year's Most Popular Titles

To contact us Click HERE
The end of the year means circulation statistics.

Image from here.
This time around, I've delved deeper into specifics, and I think I know a lot more about my user population and their reading habits. This week I learned the following:
  • Ninth grade boys don't very read much. I didn't realize that their circulation numbers were so abysmal compared to everyone else until I broke it down this spring. I **think** it's because most of my 9th grader ELA teachers don't require classroom novels, and fifteen year old boys just aren't that anxious to read for fun.
  • 8th graders and 9th graders read very different things. Books popular at the 8th level don't even break into the top ten at the 9th grade level. This could be because 8th graders are exploring titles that weren't available in the middle school library, while most 9th graders read these books the previous year.
  • Blockbusters, like Hunger Games, are popular with EVERYONE.
  • New books aren't always the most popular. Older titles like Twisted and The Lovely Bones were well-read across the board. This is probably the result of ELA teacher booktalks which get the kids pumped for specific titles.  
Most Popular Books Overall in the Junior High:
  1. Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
  2. Mocking Jay by Suzanne Collins
  3. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  4. Numbers by Rachel Ward
  5. Twisted  by Laurie Halse Anderson
  6. Matched by Ally Condie
  7. Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O'Brien
  8. Fallen by Lauren Kate
Most Popular Books Among Females in the Junior High:
  1. Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
  2. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  3. Mocking Jay by Suzanne Collins
  4. Numbers by Rachel Ward
  5. Matched by Ally Condie
  6. Fallen by Lauren Kate
  7. Crossed by Ally Condie
  8. The Lovely Bones by Alice Sebold 
Most Popular Books Among Males in the Junior High:
  1. Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
  2. Mocking Jay by Suzanne Collins
  3. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  4. Z for Zachariah by Robert C. O'Brien
  5. Numbers by Rachel Ward
  6. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part Time Indian by
  7. Football Champ by Tim Greene
  8. Twisted by Laurie Halse Anderson


What titles drew top honors in your library this year?

Steve Jobs Essay ‘Death is very likely the single best invention of life'

To contact us Click HERE
Co-founder of Apple Computer and a pioneering force in the computer and technology industry was found dead on Wednesday at the age of 56. The Apple chairman and former CEO who made personal computers, tables, smart phones and digital animation mass-marker products passed away. Steve Jobs died on October 5th 2011 after a long and hard struggle with cancer.

I Came, I Saw, I Conquered

Steve Jobs was the reason many of us got into this industry or even care about technology at all. He was "a great man" for real and he was the one who made Apple one of the most valuable companies in the whole world. Steve Jobs made a positive influence on our world.

Unfortunately, how it often happens, Steve Jobs was diagnosed with the disease in 2004. That is why he was compelled to leave his position as CEO of Apple in 2004. As you see Steve Jobs influenced on everybody of us , in a word, he was like a teacher. If you have a desire to have a Steve Job essay you have an opportunity to make an order at our custom writing company. We are always glad to assist our clients with their academic writing problems.

Use Our Custom Writing Company. Buy Steve Jobs Essay

Order Steve Jobs essay or any other type of essay, dissertation, research paper or book review at our custom writing service. We have gathered the team of highly qualified writers that are ready to assist you at any moment. Our clients are on top priority, so we are trying to create such conditions that will meet all your demands.

Use our essay writing service and we will create the brilliant and outstanding Steve Jobs essay. Furthermore, you will be pleasantly surprised with our pricing starting only at $10 per page. If you have to select the topic for your writing by yourself and are not sure which is best, you can ask our writers to make their suggestions and settle with the writer whose offers for the topic you find best suited for your needs.

The Choice is up to you

Think twice before writing Steve Jobs essay independently as you may have some problems concerning the appropriate material and reliable information. Become our customer today and receive the list of essay writing advantages.

At Buyessay.org - professional custom writing service - you can order your assignment 100% written from scratch. Buyessay.org works only with top-rated Ph.D. and Master's academic writers, which write quality custom research papers, term papers, essays, research proposals, thesis papers & dissertations at affordable prices. Get 10% Discount for your First Order!

Do my Assignment

To contact us Click HERE
Do my Assignment
If you are a college or high school student you are engaged in different academic writing activities. If one wants to have good academic writing results he/she should know that possessing a good tone in the paper is required. Moreover you should thoroughly plan all your ideas and thoughts in order to do your assignment in the best way and don’t ask somebody “to do my assignment”. Let’s realize what exactly academic writing is and how we can improve it in order not to ask people with high academic writing skills to do my assignment?

We'll Do Your Assignment for a very Low Price! Get a First order Discount!

  Academic Writing Guide Firstly you should remember that you are writing for an academic audience. The authority includes the teacher and the professionals that are familiar with your theme. Try to write with an air of authority, it doesn’t mean that you should know all the answers concerning the theme you have chosen, simply be ready to answer questions connected with your paper. You are highly recommended to avoid becoming friends with your audience, use only proper language, avoid excessively casual tone, clichés, contractions and slang terms. Remember, editing is one of the most important tasks that you should obtain while writing any type of academic paper. Give you essay, course work or dissertation to someone who is strong in academic writing this will help you to avoid some misprint and grammatical mistakes.
  Ask Help-Do my Assignment
Pay to do homework or any type of academic paper and take a rest. Really if you have the desire to pay for homework you are always a welcome guest at our website. If you realize that you have lack of time, lack of writing skills or lack of appropriate literature you can simply ask “Do my assignment” and take a rest. The team of professional writers is ready to assist you with the paper of any academic level. Everything that you should do is to say “Do my assignment” make an order and give all important requirements concerning your paper. Pay for Homework – Get Rid of Problems
It is a well-known fact that students often ask “ Do my homework for me ” as they have lack of academic writing skills. The team of educated writers is ready to start the paper of any academic level right now. We guarantee that you will get the paper within the deadline, 24/7 support team that is always ready to assist you with the order, overnight delivery and of course affordable pricing starting only at $10 per page. Furthermore we guarantee confidentiality for every customer. So, the choice is up to you to make your research independently or to make an order and ask our writers to do my assignment.

  At Buyessay.org - professional custom writing service - you can order your assignment 100% written from scratch. Buyessay.org works only with top-rated Ph.D. and Master's academic writers, which write quality custom research papers, term papers, essays, research proposals, thesis papers & dissertations at affordable prices. Get 10% Discount for your First Order!

Custom Term Papers

To contact us Click HERE


It is a well-known fact the writing a research paper requires the student knowing and possessing all important rules and essential recommendations. In this article you will find out the overview on how to write term papers. Custom Term Papers. How to Write
When you are researching some topic in your college papers, don’t forget that you should involve your own interpretation of the idea this means creative writing. Determine all goals of your paper (analytical or argumentative research). Thesis statement should state the main idea of the work, state your position according to some ideas. Usually thesis statement takes one or two sentences. While searching for sources be ready to attend college libraries, and read web sites, magazines, books and professional journals. Read over all your sources and only then make important notes. After one has thoroughly examined the great number of sources he/she is welcome to draft the outline of the term paper. Include thesis statement, main facts and significant points, and don’t forget about evidence that will support main points of the paper.
  Custom Term Papers. We can Assist you! 
Of course organization of the term paper and following important methods can make the process of writing easier and not so stressful. But if you have lack of time, lack of writing abilities or lack of appropriate literature you have the possibility to make an order at our custom writing service and get custom term papers. If you have a desire to get custom term papers you should fill in the order form with appropriate requirements concerning your paper. Choose the appropriate theme for your paper, don’t forget that it should be interesting and catch the attention of the reader.
 Our custom writing service can offer you on time delivery, 100% unique content, checked by our own plagiarism detection system. Moreover, custom term papers will be written by the team of professional and qualified writers that have appropriate education and academic writing experience. 24/7 support team is always ready to assist you with any question concerning our service. We have affordable pricing starting at $10 per page. Get custom term papers at our academic writing service and receive the brilliant and outstanding paper written by professionals.
The choice is up to you to write your paper independently or to make an order at our custom writing service and take a rest. Get custom term papers at our service and you will not feel regret.
  At Buyessay.org - professional custom writing service - you can order your assignment 100% written from scratch. Buyessay.org works only with top-rated Ph.D. and Master's academic writers, which write quality custom research papers, term papers, essays, research proposals, thesis papers & dissertations at affordable prices. Get 10% Discount for your First Order!

NSCC Library Course Reserves Policy

To contact us Click HERE

NSCC Library Course Reserves Policy
Items must either be owned by the Library or be your personal copy. Items belonging to other institutions cannot be placed on reserve. You can place items belonging to NSCC Libraries on reserve at either campus. Contact yourlibrary liaison if you would like an item we do not own ordered for course reserve.

What can be placed on reserve in the Library?
  • Books and media
    • We maintain the right to limit the amount of reserves placed for a course or department.
    • All reserve items will be removed at the end of each semester. Items that are not picked up by the end of the semester will be returned to your office or department.
    • The Library is not responsible for damaged or lost personal copies. We recommend that you do not place items with monetary or personal value on reserve.
What can be placed on electronic reserve?
  • Electronic versions of journal articles not available in the Library's databases
  • Parts of books
    • For a book with no chapters or fewer than ten chapters, your use should be limited to no more than 10% of the book. For a book of ten or more chapters, your use should be limited to one chapter. If you are using pages from several different chapters, look at the average number of pages per chapter in the book and limit your excerpts to no more pages than the average.
    • If you want to use more than 10%, or one chapter, you must obtain permission to use the item. Permissions may be obtained from the Copyright Clearance Centeror from the copyright holder (generally the publisher). Evidence of permission must be submitted to the Library with your reserve request.
What cannot be placed on reserve?
  • Course packs. Course packs must be purchased by students.
  • Consumables. Works intended to be used in the course of study or teaching include workbooks, lab manuals, exercises, standardized tests, test booklets, answer sheets, and student solutions manuals.

How to Submit a Request

Step 1
Review the Fair Use Exception and use the Fair Use Checklist as a tool to help you determine if your use of the item is considered fair use.

Step 2
Complete and sign the required Reserves Request Form.

Please provide all information requested on the Reserve Request Form, including complete citation information andcall numbers for Library owned items. Reserve requests are processed as quickly as possible. Complete citation information and early submission of requests can help speed processing. Please allow at least one week for reserve processing.

Questions regarding reserves should be directed to:

Phanary Auk
Lynn Campus Library Reserves
Phone: (781) 593-6722 ext 6251
Email: pauk@northshore.edu

Edie Saranteas
Danvers Campus Library Reserves
Phone: (978) 739-5526
Email: esarante@northshore.edu 

9 Ekim 2012 Salı

Business-Based Reforms and Foucault's Pendulum

To contact us Click HERE
Back and forth, back and forth. In the middle of the city of Paris, a pendulum swings back and forth over a table. Foucault's pendulum, named for physicist Leon Foucault, works with the rotation of the earth; in fact, the pendulum is one of the first experiments that visibly showed that the Earth rotated on an axis. So now, there it sits, strung up in the Pantheon in Paris, swinging back and forth, ad nauseum. That is the way with cycles: seasons, calendars, water, business-based reforms in schools.
Efficiency has long been a by-word in our profession (and several other human service professions), but efficiency is not the way of schools. There is no efficient way to teach students because they are people with flaws and faults that are all their own. Larry Cuban's book, The Blackboard and the Bottom Line, includes the story of an executive who found his assumptions of business-based educational reforms challenged. This executive, the owner of an ice cream company, was addressing a group of teachers about their learning. During the question and answer session at the end, a veteran teacher asked him what his most famous favor is. "Blueberry," the exec replied. "What do you do with the blueberries that aren't up to your standards?" "We toss them out." "We can't toss out our bad blueberries," she replied.
At this year's NCTE convention, this story came charging back into my mind. I was sitting in a room at the Yacht and Beach club convention center and I began to remember why I got into the classroom. But, that happened a lot at this year's convention. I think that is why I get so excited in November; NCTE is my oasis of educational nirvana, my moment of zen in a year of otherwise tenuous situations at work.
The business-based reform crowd does have something to contribute to education, but more often than not the focus on efficiency grinds educators down. Why would something that should be beneficial be so destructive? The reason is the focus. The focus for efficiency is time, not people.
According to Cuban (2004), the things that teachers are looking for in a reform are "effectiveness, fidelity [to original goals], popularity, and adaptability." These four are not unreasonable requests. I think people have the conversations about the first and third of the traits listed, but the second and fourth really deserve closer inspection.
First, what are the core assumptions of these "efficiency," or business-based, reforms? They are:
  • Schools are inherently and malignantly flawed
  • Teachers, administrators, and support staff are glorified blue collar babysitters who only bungle our big business reforms
  • Schools should be run like businesses, idols of perfection in the American landscape
  • The strong economic growth, high productivity, long-term prosperity, and increased competitiveness in global markets depend upon a highly-skilled workforce
  • Public schools are responsible for churning out these highly skilled workers
  • All public schools are failing to create highly-skilled workers with urban schools failing the most
  • Business-modeled reforms can be applied to schools to match workers with their jobs, increasing public confidence in schools (does anyone have Ayn Rand's number in the after-life?)
  • Higher tests scores automatically forecast better performance in the workplace (All core assumptions from Cuban, 2004; sarcasm added by the author)
These assumptions resulted in a standard reform model, adopted along Bipartisan lines (now we need to call Gary Sheytengart), that eventually allowed for the national government's hijacking of state and local responsibilities in the public schools. Systemic reform - establishment of curricular standards, imposition of standard texts, merit pay, expanded parental choice, and hostile takeovers of failing schools and districts - was born, leaping unwisely from the brow of a group of business "leaders," politicians, educators, and parents.
Imagine my dismay when I read an article in the Wall Street Journal about a new non-governmental agency, "cutely" titled StudentFirst, created and helmed by the belle of the business-based ball, Michelle Rhee. That was when I had it.
I have had it, and so should you. I am in a fortunate position (which is unusual) in Virginia. we are obstinately holding out against the Common Core. The more I read of it, the more I am glad we are. The reforms of the Common Core appear to be doing more to fragment and micro-manage our teaching than any set of standards I have seen before. Reading an opinion piece published online at EdWeek's website on November 12th, I began to hear some of my own frustrations and realizations given life in the much more eloquent voice of Kelly Gallagher.
Gallagher, one of those teachers on my people-I-need-to-thank-for-sustaining-me-in-my-first-five-years list, has come to a realization about the proliferation of standards that I thought I was crazy for thinking. Let me syllogize (alright neologisms). Sprinting-and-covering material, while really efficient, does not build learners. Multitudinous and specific content standards create a sea of material that must be covered quickly to ensure students are prepared by the time state tests arrive in January (Semester Terms) or May (Year-Long Terms). Therefore, having a lot of content-specific standards assessed on the multiple-choice end-of-course assessment does not allow for the development of deep thinking we expect from students.
So, driving uniform, efficiency-style reform down the collective throats of educators and students alike is not the answer. What is the effect of fidelity and adaptability to reform movements? Let's consider the fidelity to original goals first.
The original goal of the NCLB reforms was to increase educational parity across every line, but especially the gap between the "rich" students in the suburbs and the "poor" students in the inner city. Yet, from international comparisons of our students with those from other countries to the Condition of Education reports published by the National Center for Educational Statistics, our students results have stayed significantly stagnant. If we were true to our goals, we would not cling to a reform that has had almost nine years of time and no significant difference.
The same applies to adaptability. Reforms focused purely on outcomes run the risk of repeating the same errors because they do not ask about how they got involved. There is no talk of adapting reforms to geographical areas and certain populations in the service of meeting educational goals, there simply is a meeting or not. If you miss the goal, you have not reached adequate yearly progress. You are not adequate. In uninformed hands, the notion of schools literally classified as "inadequate" becomes a dangerous political weapon.
So, what now shall we do? I think Virginia has taken step in the right direction this year. Our state standards have been revised, more unified, and more focused on the academic skills necessary for success in the English Language Arts classroom. What's more, all of the key elements of the Common Core are present in the condensed Virginia standards.
The START treaty has been in the news lately and I think it is time we learned the lessons nuclear war has to teach: keep the infrastructure small and specific and verification can be easily achieved. Just as the START treaties seek to reduce the number of nuclear weapons so that they can be tracked more easily, so we should streamline our standards, reflect and remind ourselves of the goals we have for our students, consider that perhaps the most popular reforms are not those that are the most effective, and keep searching for those reforms which we can adapt to our classrooms to create greater success for students. If we don't get involved and take back what we can of our schools from the business-based reformers now, we cannot be surprised when, as in Max Berry's novel, schools become named for corporate sponsors like Nike, McDonald's, and Office Depot (I wouldn't want to play against the team from Nike High if I went to McDonald's High). And, lest we forget, maybe we should ask Christopher Whittle how those Edison schools have done in the for-profit public school business (think the popular song "Breakeven" by the Script).

Why High School Matters

To contact us Click HERE
by Tara Seale

I recently returned from NCTE 2010 in Orlando. As always, High School Matters was my favorite session, packed with the best presenters and the best teachers sitting shoulder to shoulder. If only the whole room could work at the same school. What a school that would be.

First, Carol Jago related her favorite books for the year, and she provided a complimentary bookmark for each attendee. If you were unable to attend, and you would like to see Carol Jago's recommended reads, please click on this link: Carol Jago Recommended Books for 2010
As a bonus, she shared a book that was not on her bookmark. It was called The Room by Emma Donoghue. I also heard another recommendation for The Room by a fellow attendee at the NCTE, so it will be a Kindle download and a holiday read for me. Carol Jago's recommended reads are not only interesting, but inspiring. If someone as busy as Carol Jago can come up with 8 incredible reads for the year, what is my excuse? What is your excuse? We should all be reading and sharing in 2011.
On a more humorous note, Carold Jago also shared the YouTube video, "It's a Book" by Lane Smith. It is funny, but scary at the same time. Did you see Wired Magazine's cover from November titled "The Web is Dead." Will we have a magazine cover in the near future that announces "Books are Dead?"

Carol's talk was followed by one of my favorite ice breakers. Everyone at the round-table shares their favorite book of the year, and in the process, we get to meet everyone at our table. Never enough time, but it doesn't really matter because we all enjoy sharing, interjecting, and enjoying one another. It is a time to discover that English teachers attend NCTE from all over the country, and they are interesting, intelligent, and fun people to know (we did not make it around my table, but it was okay because we all bonded and connected).

There are usually three speakers. Last year, a poet performed in the middle, but at this year's High School Matters, a local Shakespeare group performed. I loved how the theater group utilized gestures created by the audience members who volunteered to paraphrase Shakespearean language. It had my head spinning as to how I could incorporate this into my classroom. I will, but I need to contemplate the best method.
As always, NCTE throws so many ideas at me that I need Christmas break to recover and incorporate.

High School Matters incorporates two round-table discussions. This year, I found myself at two tables titled To Hell with Romeo and Juliet and Exploring Zines. If you have not attended High School Matters at NCTE before, I suggest you attend this session because not only will you meet round-table leaders in secondary English, but you will connect with everyday high school teachers who just happen to sit next to you, like me! When you walk into High School Matters, you will see a number on each table. This number is important. If you look on the paper printout on each table, it will describe each table's discussion focus. Who wouldn't want to attend To Hell with Romeo and Juliet? If nothing else, could I use this as ammunition not to teach the next month or so? Alas, it was not a session to throw out Romeo and Juliet, but to accurately place the characters in their proper place in Dante's Inferno. What a great idea! My second table discussion involved creating small publications for passion, not profit. That is the definition of a Zine. I was unfamiliar with Zines, so I am glad I attended this round-table discussion.

The last speaker at High School Matters was Jim Burke. He has impacted many English teachers as the creator of the English Companion Ning which has almost 24,000 members. Jim Burke is funny, witty, and real. His senior moment talk was almost too real for me. We both have children who left home this year which is a scary realization involving not only our own life, but our control or lack of control over our children. Jim pointed out how literature reaches not only the kids we teach, but the kids we raise, and also the lives we live. Jim Burke made the audience re-live books we are all familiar with, but in a different light because every time we read them, it is a different point in our lives, and that is significant.
He created an heroic journey chart that rivals Joseph Campbell. I hope he will post it online. I have too many arrows, notations, and annotations in my composition book as I tried to keep up with him, but fortunately, he also provided an incredible visual for students and teachers alike by taking his students to the football field.

Although I scribbled many notes before this, I have very little here. I think it is because it was so poignant. Burke had his students sit on the yard line of their age. Most sat on 17 or 18. Then he sat (on his age) more than double the yards away from his students; later, he said this was a bad idea and doesn't suggest it. But fortunately, this is the best part, he had his students look back and walk the few short yards to their 9th grade year, not many steps. Look at how far you have come (but on a big football field, it isn't much). Now, let's hypothetically say that you live 100 years. Look down the field. That is how much you have to learn. That is how much you don't know. What a significant visual to the know-it-all teenagers. Maybe they don't know much after all.

Now do you see why High School Matters?

How Google Has Enhanced My Practice - An Homage to My Fellow Blogger

To contact us Click HERE

I have dedicated this blog post to Tara Seale because I owe everything I know about using Google to teach to her wise counsel.


Here's what I was able to do with my AP English Language and Composition class. The assignment combines a lot of exciting elements from student self-assessment to guided process writing.


First, the basic assignment: I've been doing Mentor Text writing assignments since I started teaching, I just didn't have a name for it until after this past NCTE conference. This assignment asks students to read a professionally written text and then try and mimic it in style. This mimicry helps the student practice writing like the experts, helping them integrate professional skills into their amateur styles. The result is a more finely tuned compositional style, one with greater maturity and clarity.


I asked them to write a holidays-are-crazy style essay based on a "Shouts & Murmurs" column written by Larry Doyle titled "Is There a Problem Here?" The original can be found here.


Students read the piece (once in class, once at home), analyzing for Doyle's use of rhetoric; students were asked to also pay special attention to the elements of voice (diction, detail, syntax, imagery, figurative language, and tone) and the four basic elements of satire (irony, hyperbole, …, …). We read, they highlighted, we discussed, they took it home to reread.


Then, students had to draft their rough drafts. They needed to mimic Doyle's satirical style while focusing on some aspect of the holidays. Here is where the technology really came into play.


Before I go into how I used the technology, let me explain each component. All of these programs are located in Google Docs. The first is the Google document. This program is just like Microsoft Word (with some exceptions...it isn't Microsoft after all). The Google document features collaborative typing and pop-out chat, great tools to help guide students with their writing - in real time!


The second program is the Google form. These are great. Seriously. Imagine a world where you can create any information gathering form you want/need and then have that form generate a spreadsheet with the responses. I created a student survey earlier in the month and now I have actual telephone numbers for all of my students' parents.


For the assignment, students drafted their holiday craziness essay on a Google document. Then, they evaluated themselves based on a rubric I created on a Google form (you can see the rubric/form here). The idea was to have the students assess their own writing based on effort and perceived achievement (based on an A - D scale). Then, students wrote reflections justifying the choices they made in their writing and their assessment. Finally, students revised based on their assessment of their work. I will conference with them once we return to school on Monday (or, snow-willing, after the holiday break). The resulting Google document flowed from a draft, to a reflection, to a revision, showing thoughtful, process-oriented writing from beginning to end.


So, what did I get out of it as teacher?


First, I got instant feedback. The responses from my survey/rubric form dumped into a spreadsheet. I could see where students thought they stood in terms of their writing at a glance. I could also see what they liked about the assignment and their writing (a voluntary, extra box that nearly every student filled out).


Second, I got the ability to have writing conferences with my students without giving up class time. Using the real-time editing and pop-out chat features, I could have individual writing conferences without having each student come to my desk while the others worked on whatever. Additionally, I didn't have to make one stroke with a red pen.


I am sure that there will be many more advantages to using these programs. I really didn't expect to discover the versatility and utility I've already experienced.


As a side note, Google has a program called Knol. It is a collection of people's knowledge on different topics. I searched the Knol database for Huckleberry Finn and found a four minute synopsis video of the novel done in Legos. It...was….awesome.

Who's Schools? - Over-analysis and the Question of Who Makes the Decisions in Schools

To contact us Click HERE

This week is definitely dead week. So far, I've seen and heard a lot about nothing really special. Now, don't get me wrong, the woman who was killed by a neck massager is truly sad (the family is probably reeling), but I do not believe it warrants a 30 minute breakdown on the Fox News Channel.


But that is truly what US culture has become all about. I think that is why AP English Language and Composition has become such a big course in the past decade (including getting its own style of question). We are analysis junkies.


Critical thinking has become a part of our cultural raison d'etre (I apologize, I can't figure out accent marks in this format). I find it utterly confusing that a country that televises un-called for critical analyses of tragic appliance deaths should have such trouble educating and understanding its youth.


It has been a break from school, so I've been reading. So far, I've torn through The Hunger Games, devoured Dave Cullen's Columbine, browsed the first couple of chapters of The Geography of Bliss (I recommend this one highly), cruised through the first half of The Fountainhead, refreshed my Huck Finn, and am currently tromping through Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter (also a fantastic read). For work, I'm reading Readicide (best...book...ever) and Kylene Beers's When Kids Can't Read: What Teachers Can Do (True Confession: I struggle with struggling readers). What Readicide and When Kinds Can't Read have taught me is that struggling readers don't struggle because they can't read, rather they struggle because they can't read anything under the text.


As a reader of text, whether it is composed of alphabetic symbols or visual images, I am looking for the big ideas so that I might engage in intellectual battle. Parker Palmer discusses big ideas in The Courage to Teach. Palmer says that we have forgotten how to center our classrooms on big ideas. The curriculum will be fine regardless of what we do to it because the big ideas cannot be submerged or destroyed. They are bigger than me, my department, my administration, my school system, Parker Palmer, Kylene Beers, Kelly Gallagher, and a partridge in a pear tree. They are not inviolate and pristine, rather they invite us to dismantle them and reassemble them; we are supposed to climb inside, get comfy, and find ourselves. In the end, that is what big ideas do. They show us the parts of ourselves we cannot physically see and challenge us to evaluate ourselves.


Struggling readers need to be challenged with the big ideas in the text. Why would I teach The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn to a group of 21st century high school juniors? For one, if you think racism is dead, you must live in the wrong country. Huck's awakening to Jim's humanity is slow and occasionally heartbreaking. Consider the scene where Huck is appalled that Jim might get away and steal his own children away from their owner. I love milking this scene with my students because they can easily access it and it stands in such sharp contrast to the scene later on when Huck gives away his soul to save Jim. Did Twain blow the ending? Maybe. But I am with Francine Prose on this one: I cannot, I should not, think that my chronological standing gives me the right to shake my finger in the face of the great writers of the past. Those two scenes fromHuck Finn are rich with meaning and stylistically well-written. They are excellent teaching pieces from a novel that has parts that are, arguably, better off ignored. But I will not concede to Jane Smiley's view that Huck is somehow part of perpetuating Jim's (and other slaves') dehumanization. There is simply too much heart in that character to write off. Whether or not Twain chickened out in the end, there are overt statements and actions in Huck Finn that bespeak a certain striving toward equality for all men, one of the foundational big ideas of the US.


Since the junior-year English course is a survey of American literature, big ideas that are foundational in the US are extremely helpful. This idea, the push toward a more egalitarian country, is particularly rich. To briefly describe where I work: we are the fourth wealthiest county in the US, but the high school I work in has a fairly high percentage of free and reduced lunch. This division comes from all sort of interesting historical details, like we were the real terminal point of the North during the Civil War. There is a house in the county that served as a headquarters for the Union Army as it stared across the Rappahannock River at the Confederate Army. The community is a result of that forced blending of motley cultures: northern and southern, white, slave, and free black. The students bite so quickly when baited with this issue while some teachers, feeling unmotivated by a lack of salary and a lack of respect, don't even consider having these conversations; worse, they think there is no time to have these conversations before "the Test." Our discussions of progress are usually driven by SOL (Standards of Learning - VA's unfortunate acronym) or SAT scores. Our SOL results have risen considerably over the past decade; unfortunately, our SAT scores have remained stagnant. They are higher than the national average, but they haven't changed. Before people from states like New York and Connecticut get confused, I can say with the certainty of someone who has seen some of the other tests that the SOL is not even comparable with the Regent's exam or the Connecticut test (I can't remember the acronym right now). The SOL is the epitome of a "readicide" assessment (Gallagher, 2009). Big ideas are not alive in a redicide school, so finding them, capitalizing on them, and sharing the success they bring is huge.


Which brings me back to where I started. US culture as over-analysis. Everything has become a matter of quantitative breakdowns, of measurable outcomes, of a populist accountability that asks amateurs to judge the work of professionals based on the most superficial of metrics. I still love the statistic that shows that most people think education is in trouble but are still happy with their neighborhood schools. Talk about contradictory findings. Yet, since education became a golden goose for politicians, everyone has an opinion. Everyone, that is, except those who should.


Consider the reasons teachers leave the profession. The top three, according to Richard Ingersoll's analysis of the Schools and Staffing Survey and its supplement, the Teacher Follow-up Survey (SASS/TFS), are: family or personal reasons, pursuit of another career, or general dissatisfaction. Salaries are part of this dissatisfaction, but other reasons actually appeared more frequently: "student discipline problems; lack of support from the school administration; poor student motivation; and lack of teacher influence over schoolwide and classroom decision making" (Ingersoll & Smith, 2003). The last one is key. Teachers are tired of being judged, blamed, and condemned based on the decisions made by politicians or other equally detached persons. The frustration of other professional teachers, even in my own building, at the inability to use a pedagogy that engages and grows students, versus a pedgogy predicated on readicide, is palpable.


Thus, teachers feel torn; torn between the need to educate and the need to appear accountable; torn between big issues and ideas and narrowly defining what matters; torn between growing students as critical thinkers and letting them stagnate in the upscale public daycare centers our schools have become. Then, the filmakers of the world make documentaries on the heart-breaking state of education, then laud people who have not directly addressed the issues fueling our stammering system. Are schools in perfect shape? Nope. Are there teachers to blame for this? Probably. Yet, teachers are not being allowed to influence how policy decisions are made. Why? They don't know. Ask an administrator (well, to be fair, ask some administrators) at the school or central office level. Teachers are not employed to be consulted, they are employed to do as the system wishes. Unfortunately, I can't think of another profession (besides nursing) that demands such autonomy within such strict regulations (and even nurses can become nurse practitioners; what should teachers become?).


The over-analysis culture has hamstrung our public school systems from curriculum to staffing. Everyone has an opinion, but most do not have the expertise.


Maybe I am wrong. Public schools are supposed to be for the public. What do you think? I struggle with this question all the time and I am interested in hearing others' opinions.

Applicable Apps for Apple's iPad

To contact us Click HERE
So, technology in the classroom is one of those big things we always hear about. Tied to differentiation! Tied to student success! Buy our software package! Ancillaries available! On and on the signs cry out for our attention and we, as the savvy 21st century educators we are, flock to the demonstrations and the booths, seeking out that technological tools that will reshape our practice.
Unfortunately, the reality often distances itself from the rose-colored posters of the vendor booths and brochures. In our schools, division or building specialists purchase technology, place it in the hands of some of the faculty, and then expects results. Sometimes the technology sits on a desk in a classroom, holding down papers, keeping the dust all to itself, mutating into a hairy monster that one should not get wet or feed after midnight. The end of the year comes, administrators call for results and examples, people make things up to justify expenses, and technology becomes another term thrown about to justify big bottom lines with very little substance.
One victim of this policy of technological salutary neglect is the iPad from Apple. In case there are people who think that Apple still only means Macintosh computers, the iPad is a friendly little tablet that is about a thin as a class set of quizzes and as broad as a text book. The processing power and display have gone through subsequent improvements; Apple is currently developing its fourth generation iPad. Since the dawning of the iPad day, teachers and administrators have sought ways to incorporate this stylish technology into daily classroom life for a number of reasons, some noble and others not.
The truth of the matter is that this technology presents a fair number of challenges and a fair number of rewards. These vary from subject to subject, class to class, and student to student. As part of my transition this year to the Commonwealth Governor's School, I have had the opportunity to work with one of these pieces of technology all year. My site has even been assigned a cart full of 30 iPads to engage students in classroom activities. As a result, I have been exploring some of the apps available for the iPad in order to make it a seamless part of my daily classroom routine. This is my top app list for this past school year, 2012-2013.
1. ThinkBook: Ever outline or teach others how to outline? How about teaching good note taking strategies? ThinkBook is your app. Intuitive and easy to use, ThinkBook has been one of the most easily adapted apps to my classroom practice. I have used it to teach research outlining and I have used it to outline my own writing. Most helpfully, I have used ThinkBook to organize lesson and unit plans. Beyond this adaptability, ThinkBook is affordable.

2. Essay Grader: As an English teacher, I can appreciate the company that created this app: Gatsby's Light. Essay Grader is the answer to the question: "How many times do I have to write this comment?" I will be posting again soon on this app by itself, but I wanted to include it here since I use it so much. In the app, there are pre-set comments and space for custom comments. After you have set your matrix of comments, all you need do is check the box next to the appropriate category and the app generates a detailed feedback report based on your pre-sets and custom comments. For those who want even more freedom, there are free write sections at the beginning and the end that allow teachers to personally address the student being assessed; these sections are also integrated into the final feedback report. Teachers can instantly send the feedback to the student via e-mail, or they can export them and print them off one-by-one. More on this one soon.

3. Remarks: There are a lot of annotation apps for the iPad, but the most seamlessly integrated one has got to be Remarks. As far as I have tried, remarks offers the best method for pulling digital copies of student papers and, forgive me, remarking on them. There are a variety of options for putting commentary on papers from handwriting to typing. My preference is to use the underlining/highlighting option because I can attach sticky notes to the underline/highlight that students can view by simply hovering over it with a mouse cursor.

4. Storyist: This app, endorsed by the National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) program, allows students (and their teachers) to organize, develop, and write a novel. This function is accomplished in a variety of ways. The most exciting are the story sheets - individual "sheets" that allow for the development of setting, character, etc. These sheets are kept in folders within each separately named project file. I have found that this app makes discussing the process of writing very transparent as students can see their own and their teachers' processes at work. Using it in conjunction with the NaNoWriMo curriculum would be a great activity for any class studying the structure of stories.
5. iThoughts HD: iThoughts HD looks like a very familiar educational technology program, Inspiration. Beside the fact that it is much more affordable than its PC counterpart. The interface is clear and easy to use. The maps are uncluttered and easily manipulated. I've used this program to model essay outlining, to analyze characters, to map out plotlines, and to define problems. All of these exercises have been done through either an LCD projector or an Apple TV, making the development and final use of each map a whole class activity, and an opportunity for open class discussions. I've even labeled bubbles in the map with students' names to identify their contributions to the finished map. This both recognizes each student's contribution to class and makes grading whole class discussions easier and more justifiable.

6. Nearpod: Nearpod is a great app for presentations. Remember the last PowerPoint presentations you sat through. They usually drag on, each slide pounding you further into your seat, making you wish for any opportunity to escape. Unfortunately, we are usually forced to watch these in Professional Development sessions; sessions required by our employers. Students have the same frustrations. PowerPoint-based classrooms can be a grind that wear students down. This takes the computer-based presentation and makes them interactive with videos, quizzes, and other feedback mechanisms. For the teacher, there is a student list that instantly provides feedback on how much the students are learning from the presentation. There are even free response sections that allow each student to respond to open-ended questions. The best part of this app? The fact that it is free. The downsides? First, you need a full class set of iPads for this program to work. Second, the Nearpod "Store" (all of the lessons I've seen thus far are free) contains a limited number of lessons at this point; however, many of them are very interesting and engaging (see the one on Shakespearean insults first if you want to try one out). If you have the equipment, Nearpod is a worthwhile investment.

7. Socrative: A great feedback mechanism for any class because it is available through iPads and PCs. The program provides a template for taking tests and quizzes you already give to students and adapting them. The program allows for student- or teacher-paced administrations of the test. The student-paced version of the quiz allows them to move to each question as they complete them; the teacher readout allows for tracking of class progress by individual student, providing assessment data from first question to last. The teacher-paced version of the quiz allows the teacher to determine when each question will be available. This method, though it takes longer, ensures every student finishes at the same time. After the test is over, regardless of which method you've used to administer it, a report is generated which can be e-mailed or (if you are using a PC) downloaded directly from the site. This reports are then saved to the website and can be recalled at any point in the future. I've used this app on each type of assessment from simple reading check to complex free-response test. It is free and well worth the time. As I think about this coming year, I already have a bunch of quizzes and tests stored on the site that I only need to adjust and then administer.

8. ShowMe: I am going to end this rather lengthy post with this app. I will probably add to this list throughout this year as I find new apps that help, but for now this list should keep the curious engaged. ShowMe is a site on the internet accessed through either PC or iPad. The iPad helps with the writing functionality, especially if you have a stylus, but it is not necessary. A ShowMe is a recorded whiteboard presentation where anyone can listen to you speak as you write on the whiteboard. The benefit of the program is that this app allows for the generation of quick instructional videos that can be used to flip your classroom (see post from 5 December 2011 or 12 May 2012 for more on flipping). I have used this program to provide additional tutoring to students and to share strategies from my classroom with colleagues. ShowMe also contains a large community of people who have developed and shared their work for use in any classroom. Sign up and check it out.

If you have any apps you want to tell other members of the NCTE secondary community about, feel free to respond to this post. There are many apps out there, this conversation could help us identify some of the best.