Thursday, June 25, 2020

REINVENTING.SCHOOL - Episode 8 Today, "Home as a Place for Learning" #reinventingschool

Today (Thursday, June 25) at 4:00 pm US-EDT, we present the eighth LIVE episode of the new LearningRevolution.com weekly interview series, REINVENTING SCHOOL. If you miss the LIVE show, we post the edited version here by Monday over the weekend.

This week, REINVENTING.SCHOOL explores an increasingly common practice--home as a place for learning, and in some cases, as a physical replacement for a physical school facility. It is our belief that many students and parents and teachers will experience much of the coming school year at home. And so, we decided to take a closer look at how this might work. We will address homeschooling, but our experts are prepared to go beyond the usual discussion. Pat Farenga describes himself as a “writer and education activist who addresses academic and general audiences about working with children, not on children, to help them learn.” He carries on the legacy of author and teacher John Holt. Doug Fine takes the concept several steps further, offering a unique approach that combines traditional school coursework with work outdoors at his New Mexico ranch. Diana Ortiz Burns is Director of Operations and Sustainability, Indian Creek School, and a force in the physical reinvention of local facilities used for learning.

Please join us at www.reinventing.school for the live shows as well as access to the recordings (also on YouTube).
 
More about this week's guests:

PF+Portrait.jpg?format=500w&profile=RESIZE_400xPatrick Farenga brings more than 34 years of fieldwork, advocacy, and personal experience (he and his wife unschooled their three daughters) to help parents and children learn in their own ways. Farenga is a writer and education activist who addresses academic and general audiences about working with children, not on children, to help them learn. Farenga worked closely with one of the founders of the modern homeschooling movement, the late author and teacher John Holt, and published Growing Without Schooling magazine (GWS) from 1985 until it stopped in 2001. GWS was the nation’s first periodical about learning without going to school, started by Holt in 1977. Farenga speaks as a homeschooling expert at education conferences around the world—such as in Colombia, Ireland, France, England, Canada, and Italy—as well as on commercial radio and television talk shows in the United States (The Today Show, Good Morning America) and abroad. Farenga writes about homeschooling and self-directed learning for a number of publications and operates the John Holt/Growing Without Schooling website, www.johnholtgws.com. He is also a founding member of www.alternativestoschool.com. His latest project is Starting to Homeschool with Pat Farenga—http://www.startingtohomeschool.com/—a series of videos, publications, and online support. Farenga’s books include The Beginner’s Guide to Homeschooling (Holt, 1998); Teach Your Own: The John Holt Book of Homeschooling (Perseus, 2003); The Legacy of John Holt: A Man Who Genuinely Understood, Trusted, and Respected Children (HoltGWS, 2013); and his latest publication, How to Report Unschooling to School Officials (HoltGWS, 2015).
https://www.johnholtgws.com/pat-farenga

 

6275488072?profile=RESIZE_400xDoug Fine is a solar-powered goat herder, comedic investigative journalist, bestselling author, and pioneer voice in regenerative farming, including cannabis/hemp. He has cultivated hemp for food and seed-building in four US states and teaches a Sterling College hemp class in Vermont. In addition, he is an award-winning culture and climate correspondent from five continents (for NPR, the New York Times, and the Washington Post, among others). His books include American Hemp FarmerHemp Bound, Too High to Fail, Farewell, My Subaru (Boston Globe Bestseller available in two Chinese dialects), Not Really An Alaskan Mountain Man, and First Legal Harvest, a monograph that was printed on hemp paper. Willie Nelson calls Doug’s work “a blueprint for the America of the future.” The Washington Post says, “Fine is a storyteller in the mold of Douglas Adams.” A website of Doug’s print and radio work, United Nations testimony, television appearances and TED Talk is at dougfine.com. Social media: @organiccowboy.
https://www.dougfine.com

 

6275361082?profile=RESIZE_400xDiana Ortiz Burns, FMP, LEED Green Associate, serves as Indian Creek School's Director of Operations and Sustainability. Diana is a Facilities Management Professional and LEED Green Associate, who received her Bachelor of Science degree from Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pennsylvania, majoring in Environmental Science and minoring in Sustainability Studies. Before coming to ICS, Diana served as a Facilities Consultant with The Stone House Group and their working relationship with ICSultimately led her to join our community. Her experience spans facilities, energy and operations management, and LEED Administration. Diana has an extensive list of extracurriculars that has helped her to develop a strong background in program management, including sustainability programming, outreach and education. Diana’s interests outside of school include playing sports, particularly soccer and tennis. She also has a certificate in Sustainable Health and Nutrition and enjoys gardening and cooking.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/schools-have-harder-than-ever-before-conversely-also-diana/

 

4995562699?profile=RESIZE_400xHoward Blumenthal created and produced the PBS television series, Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? He is currently a Senior Scholar at The University of Pennsylvania, studying learning and the lives of 21st-century children and teenagers. He travels the world, visiting K-12 schools, lecturing at universities, and interviewing young people for Kids on Earth, a global platform containing nearly 1,000 interview segments from Kentucky, Brazil, Sweden, India, and many other countries. Previously, he was a nationally syndicated newspaper columnist for The New York Times Syndicate, and United Features. He is the author of 24 books and several hundred articles about technology, learning, business, and human progress. As an executive, Howard was the CEO of a public television operation and several television production companies, and a state government official. Previously, he was a Senior Vice President for divisions of two large media companies, Hearst and Bertelsmann, and a consultant or project lead for Energizer, General Electric, American Express, CompuServe, Warner Communications, Merriam-Webster, Atari, and other companies.

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Library 2.0's "Safety and Security with Dr. Steve Albrecht" - Podcast and Blog

We've created a new section of the Library 2.0 community site devoted to a new regular podcast and blog series from Dr. Steve Albrecht on "Library Safety and Security." Steve is a trainer, speaker, author, and consultant, and the host of most of our popular Library 2.0 paid webinar programs.

You can access the podcast and blog by going to the "Safety & Security" link in the main Library 2.0 menu, or clicking here directly. This week, Dr. Albrecht has released a 30-minute podcast on "Sexual or Racial Harassment." You can listen to it on the site or on SoundCloud

We've also posted an excerpt from the recent Library Journal article, "Security Experts on How To Reopen Safely," which quotes Dr. Albrecht extensively. Available at the bottom of the page here.
 
Our Library 2.0 paid webinar recordings by Dr. Albrecht can be accessed here. And there is much more to come!
 
See you "online!"
 
Steve
 
Steve Hargadon
Library 2.0

This Week's Shows + Presentations from The Learning Revolution Online Daily Education Conference #learningrevolution


Welcome to the weekend June 24 - 28 edition of the 2020 Learning Revolution daily online conference. The rest of the week's sessions are below. To see all sessions submitted so far, and to correspond with presenters, click hereRecordings of past sessions are listed on the Recordings page. The conference hashtag is #learningrevolution.
TODAY'S SESSIONS (June 24):
  • 10:00 AM - The Connected Classroom Episode #7 - "Falling Forward This Fall" with Guest Angie Olson with Rusty May, School Counselor & Creator of SchoolToolsTv.com (Portugal) WEEKLY SHOW
  • 12:00 PM - How to build student wellbeing through wonder with Elaine France, Founder, Flow In Action (Switzerland)
  • 2:00 PM - Exceptional Circumstances for Exceptional Learners with Rebecca Muller, Special Educator and Advocate, Collingswood High School (USA) WEEKLY SHOW
  • 4:00 PM - Thrive in EDU with Rachelle Dene Poth (USA) WEEKLY SHOW
THURSDAY'S SESSIONS (June 25):
  • 4:00 PM - REINVENTING.SCHOOL Episode 8 - "Home as a Place for Learning" with Howard Blumenthal (USA) WEEKLY SHOW
FRIDAY'S SESSIONS (June 26):
  • 3:00 PM - Building learning biodiversity projects in Crisis.: an App, a classroom, and some enthusiasm. with Mirko Labbri, Middle School Teacher, Site administrator, Gsuite administrator , Digital innovation and Teachers' trainer, IC SAN FIOR (Treviso- Italy) (Italy)
SUNDAY'S SESSIONS (June 26):
  • 9:00 PM - The story of Ibadan School library, Librarian and the blessings of Unwanted Reality from the corner of Nigeria with Dr. Kolawole Aramide, University of Ibadan (Nigeria)

More information below. Have a great weekend, and see you "online!"

Steve Hargadon
How you can participate in the Learning Revolution:

We've created a structure to host or join online book groups. A book group can be focused on a single book or it can be a place for a group to discuss a series of books. You can combine your book group with the ability to schedule Zoom sessions and host regular online meetups as a part of the group. Go to https://learningrevolution.com/bookschangelives or www.bookschangelives.org.


We now have five active weekly shows: "Teaching by Heart" with Angela Maiers, "The Virtual Classroom" with Rusty May, "Exceptional Circumstances for Exceptional Learners" with Rebecca Muller, "Thrive in EDU" with Rachelle Dene Poth, and "REINVENTING.SCHOOL" with Howard Blumenthal. Check the LearningRevolution.com site to learn more as details are posted.


PRESENT: Submit to present a regular session on an education topic here. See the long list of potential strands here. If you present for a living and need to figure out an appropriate role in the Learning Revolution Conference, email admin@learningrevolution.com.
ORGANIZE: Organize your own mini-conference inside of the Learning Revolution conference here. You create a group for your topic, come up with a strand tag for your topic/group, encourage your audience (and/or others) to join learningrevolution.com and to submit topic-specific presentation proposals./td>
SPONSOR: Help by sponsoring or supporting this event-- you can become a conference partner or sponsor, you can sponsor a special speaker or a show, or you can hold a commercial conference session. Email steve@learningrevolution.com.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

Learning Revolution Weekly Shows - Thrive in EDU, Teaching by Heart, Reinventing.School, The Connected Classroom, Exceptional Circumstances for Exceptional Children | #learningrevolution



This week on the Learning Revolution we have two new weekly live and interactive shows starting - "Thrive in EDU" with Rachelle Dene Poth and "Exceptional Circumstances for Exceptional Children" with Rebecca Muller. They join our already-regular shows: "REINVENTING.SCHOOL" with Howard Blumenthal and "The Connected Classroom" with Rusty May. And next week, Angela Maiers will be starting her "Teaching by Heart" weekly show. This is a great lineup! We hope you will join LearningRevolution.com and participate.

More information on each of the shows is below. Each show will be held in Zoom, will be listed in the Learning Revolution SCHEDULE calendar, and then posted as a recording on the RECORDINGS page and also on the individual show's page or group. If you're interested in starting your own show, email admin@learningrevolution.com

Next week we'll be announcing the book groups that are starting. Information on hosting or joining a book is at bookschangelives.org.


See you "online!"

Steve

TEACHING BY HEART
Angela Maiers
(@angelamaiers)
Founder, Choose2Matter

TUESDAYS, 4:00 PM US-EASTERN TIME. Show starting date: June 30th
NEXT SHOW: Inaugural Conversation: What Is Teaching by Heart?
SHOW DESCRIPTION: A weekly exploration of the most important aspects of education.
SHOW LINK

BIO: Angela Maiers has been creating and leading change in education and enterprise for 31 years, teaching every level of school from grade school to graduate school and consulting with companies around the world. Angela founded Choose2Matter to bring the world hope by helping every individual embrace their value and potential contribution. Initially launched to challenge and inspire students to work collaboratively to develop innovative solutions to social problems, Choose2Matter has evolved into a movement that support parents, educators, and employees around the world. Her work in 60,000 classrooms across 100 countries has rallied more than a million children who have banded together to launch 170 social enterprises and pass 17 laws. And organizations across all industries are finding new ways to ignite the genius of their employees, successfully addressing a $15 trillion employee engagement problem Angela earned a BS in Education with a minor in Neuroscience and Master Degrees in Literacy and Ed Leadership. She is the author of eight books, including Liberating Genius,The Habitudes and The Passion Driven Classroom. Angela is widely recognized as one of most influential voices on social media today, consistently ranking in the top 1% and a regular contributor to the Huffington Post.

THE CONNECTED CLASSROOM
Rusty May

School counselor, author, teacher trainer

TUESDAYS, 10:00 AM US-EASTERN TIME. Show starting date: Already ongoing!
NEXT SHOW: Falling Forward - This Fall with Angie Olson.
SHOW DESCRIPTION: On his seventh show already this week, Rusty engages the audience in a discussion around each topic related to teaching and learning in the time of pandemic.
SHOW LINK

BIO: Rusty May is a school counselor, author, teacher trainer and the creator of SchoolToolsTv.com. He helps educators connect more effectively with the kids in their care resulting in more time on task, better outcomes, increased job satisfaction and the students learning the life skills they need to succeed. Currently, his only focus is helping teachers and students cope and thrive during this pandemic.

EXCEPTIONAL CIRCUMSTANCES FOR EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN
Rebecca Muller
(@educatormuller)
Special Education Geometry and Algebra 2 teacher

TUESDAYS, 2:00 PM US-EASTERN TIME. Show starting date: June 24th
NEXT SHOW: Special Guest: Ann Phillips, Executive Director of Delaware Family Voices, Inc.
SHOW DESCRIPTION: COVID19 has impacted everyone. As school districts transitioned to remote learning, students who received services throughout the day now had their routine eliminated. Families who relied on nurses had to make tough decisions whether or not to allow these professionals into their homes. Self-reliance became essential within a community that relies on each other for support. It has had a huge impact on learning for those with special needs and, at the current time, resources are scattered. Together, through conversation and community, let's help create a bridge to children and resources. As budgets get cut, special education advocacy must be paramount.
SHOW LINK

BIO: Rebecca’s dedication to exceptional learners started in elementary school when she was a “special friend” to the mainstream class. She was President of the Council for Exceptional Children at her school, attending many conferences and working with local community groups to help educate and advocate for persons with disabilities. Her senior thesis was “World Autism Awareness Day and It’s Educational Challenges” allowing her to work alongside Global Education Motivators as a Representative to the United Nations to conduct the first international video conference for teachers on the subject of autism. She earned her Master’s Degree in Special Education from Rowan University and certification in Educational Leadership from the University of Pennsylvania. Her career started in the private sector as a school district liaison working with students, families, and school districts to transition students from the home as their least restrictive environment back to the school setting. Most of these students were classified on the autism spectrum but had complex profiles. Many were children adopted from other countries dealing with reactive attachment disorders. This work drove the importance of advocacy for education programs for all children. Through attending conferences, listening to others, and building a network she continued to gather information to help her families. She taught 4th grade at a dual-language community school outside of Washington, D.C. where 70% of the population were english language learners. She helped to pilot a new mathematics program to help the school increase effective mathematics instruction. By 2013, she transitioned back to her home state of New Jersey and taught 7th grade in a suburban school as a language arts and mathematics resource teacher for five years. In addition to teaching, she was director of the school musical creating an inclusive environment. Currently with a drive to make a difference in the lives of exceptional learners she is teaching high school geometry and algebra 2 helping students find their career paths and get them on the road to success post high school education.

THRIVE IN EDU
Rachelle Dene Poth
(@Rdene915)
Spanish & STEAM Emerging Technologies Teacher

WEDNESDAYS, 4:00 PM US-EASTERN TIME. Show starting date: June 24th
NEXT SHOW: Inaugural Show: Let's talk about the future of education and how to thrive!
SHOW DESCRIPTION: Where learning happens and random thoughts related to all things education are shared. Join in each week to talk about some of the emerging trends and topics in education. Topics include Artificial Intelligence, AR/VR, Global Collaborations, Preparing Students for the Future, PBL, SEL, Coding, the Power of PLNS and more!
SHOW LINK

BIO: Rachelle Dene Poth is an edtech consultant, presenter, attorney, author, blogger and teacher. She teaches Spanish and a STEAM course on emerging tech that covers AR/VR and artificial intelligence. She presents regularly at conferences on technology and ways to drive student learning. She is president of the ISTE Teacher Education Network and serves on the leadership team for the ISTE Mobile Learning Network. At ISTE19, she received the Making IT Happen Award and a Presidential Gold Award for volunteer service to education. She’s a Buncee Ambassador, Nearpod PioNear, Microsoft Innovative Educator Expert and Google Certified Educator Levels I and II. Rachelle is the author of In Other Words: Quotes That Push Our Thinking, The Future Is Now: Looking Back to Move Ahead, Unconventional Ways to THRIVE in EDU, and Chart A New Course: Essential Skills for Tomorrow's World. She is a regular blogger for Getting Smart, Defined Learning, Neo LMS and STEM Informer.

REINVENTING.SCHOOL
Howard Blumenthal
(@hblumenthal )
Senior Scholar at The University of Pennsylvania

THURSDAYS, 4:00 PM US-EASTERN TIME. Show starting date: Already ongoing!
NEXT SHOW: Home as a Place for Learning
SHOW DESCRIPTION: Before the virus, more than a billion children and teenagers relied upon school for learning. After the virus (or, after the current wave of our current virus), basic assumptions about school and education are no longer reliable. School buildings may become unsafe for large numbers of students. The tax base may no longer support our current approach to school. Without the interaction provided by a formal school structure, students may follow their own curiosity. Many students now possess the technology to learn on their own. And many do not. Reinventing.school is a new weekly web television series that considers what happens next week, next month, next school year, and the next five years. Hosted by University of Pennsylvania Senior Scholar Howard Blumenthal, Reinventing.school features interviews with teachers, principals, school district leadership, state and Federal government officials, ed-tech innovators, students, leading education professors, authors, realists and futurists from the United States and all over the world. Each episode features 2-4 distinguished guests in conversation about high priority topics including, for example, the teaching of public health, long-term home schooling, technology access and its alternatives, the role of parents, friendship and social interaction, learning outside the curriculum, the future of testing and evaluation, interruption as part of the academic calendar, job security for teachers and support staff, setting (and rethinking) curriculum priorities, special needs, student perspectives on the job of school, the importance of play, the psychology of group dynamics and social interaction, preparing for future rounds of a virus (or cyberattack or impact of climate change, etc.), college readiness, higher education transformed, the higher education promise in an economically challenged world, and more. Clearly, there is much to discuss; nearly all of it ranks high on the list of priorities for raising the world’s children.
SHOW LINK

BIO: Howard Blumenthal created and produced the PBS television series, Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? He is currently a Senior Scholar at The University of Pennsylvania, studying learning and the lives of 21st-century children and teenagers. He travels the world, visiting K-12 schools, lecturing at universities, and interviewing young people for Kids on Earth, a global platform containing nearly 1,000 interview segments from Kentucky, Brazil, Sweden, India, and many other countries. Previously, he was a nationally syndicated newspaper columnist for The New York Times Syndicate, and United Features. He is the author of 24 books and several hundred articles about technology, learning, business, and human progress. As an executive, Howard was the CEO of a public television operation and several television production companies, and a state government official. Previously, he was a Senior Vice President for divisions of two large media companies, Hearst and Bertelsmann, and a consultant or project lead for Energizer, General Electric, American Express, CompuServe, Warner Communications, Merriam-Webster, Atari, and other companies.

"

Friday, June 19, 2020

The Weekend Edition - Presentations from The Learning Revolution Online Daily Education Conference #learningrevolution


Welcome to the weekend June 19 - 21 edition of the 2020 Learning Revolution daily online conference. The next three day's sessions are below. To see all sessions submitted so far, and to correspond with presenters, click hereRecordings of past sessions are listed on the Recordings page. The conference hashtag is #learningrevolution.
FRIDAY'S SESSIONS (June 19):
  • 12:00 PM - A Deployment Plan for the Hybrid Blended Learning Classroom with Marcia Kish, DSD Professional Development | Jeff Kish
SATURDAY'S SESSIONS (June 20):
  • 1:00 PM - "New Normal" School with Heather Martinson, Owner and Administrator, Celebration Education
SUNDAY'S SESSIONS (June 21):
  • 10:00 AM - Hybrid Lesson Plan - Never a dull moment with Katy Toma, Education Adventurist Founder of ZeduPLus and SMARTe

More information below. Have a great weekend, and see you "online!"

Steve Hargadon
How you can participate in the Learning Revolution:

We've created a structure to host or join online book groups. A book group can be focused on a single book or it can be a place for a group to discuss a series of books. You can combine your book group with the ability to schedule Zoom sessions and host regular online meetups as a part of the group. Go to https://learningrevolution.com/bookschangelives or www.bookschangelives.org.


Starting the week of June 22nd, we'll have four active weekly shows: "The Virtual Classroom" with Rusty May, "Exceptional Circumstances for Exceptional Learners" with Rebecca Muller, "Thrive in EDU" with Rachelle Dene Poth, and "REINVENTING.SCHOOL" with Howard Blumenthal. Check the LearningRevolution.com site to learn more as details are posted.


PRESENT: Submit to present a regular session on an education topic here. See the long list of potential strands here. If you present for a living and need to figure out an appropriate role in the Learning Revolution Conference, email admin@learningrevolution.com.
ORGANIZE: Organize your own mini-conference inside of the Learning Revolution conference here. You create a group for your topic, come up with a strand tag for your topic/group, encourage your audience (and/or others) to join learningrevolution.com and to submit topic-specific presentation proposals./td>
SPONSOR: Help by sponsoring or supporting this event-- you can become a conference partner or sponsor, you can sponsor a special speaker or a show, or you can hold a commercial conference session. Email steve@learningrevolution.com.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

REINVENTING.SCHOOL - Episode 7 Today, "Learning and Teaching Hope" #reinventingschool

Today, Thursday, June 18, at 4:00 pm US-EDT, we present the seventh LIVE episode of the new LearningRevolution.com weekly interview series, REINVENTING SCHOOL. If you miss the LIVE show, we post the edited version here by Monday over the weekend.

This week, REINVENTING SCHOOL addresses a difficult question for students, parents, teachers, and administrators: the many aspects of hope in the midst of a very challenging time. Hope is connected to reasonable expectations, optimism, temperament, social action, and more. This requires sorting out, so we’ve invited several experts from very different domains for our discussion. MK Asante is a filmmaker, author, and professor at Morgan State University and India's MICA Business School in India. Dr. Lara Jana is a pediatrician, educator, and the author of The Toddler Brain: Nurture the Skills Today that Will Shape Your Child’s Tomorrow. Sharon M. Ravitch, Ph.D., is a Professor of Practice at The University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education, and a GIAN Scholar of the Government of India.

Please join us on Thursdays for the live shows, or visit www.reinventing.school for the recorded versions.
 
More about this week's guests:
 
6051276280?profile=RESIZE_584xMK Asante is a best-selling author, award-winning filmmaker, recording artist, and distinguished professor who the Los Angeles Times calls “One of America’s best storytellers.” He is the author of Buck: A Memoir, praised by Maya Angelou as “A story of surviving and thriving with passion, compassion, wit, and style.” Buck is a multi-year Washington Post Bestseller and the recipient of numerous literary awards. Buck is currently being adapted into a major motion picture. Asante studied at the University of London, earned a B.A. from Lafayette College, and an M.F.A. from the UCLA School of Theater, Film, and Television. He is the Host and Co-Executive Producer of While Black with MK Asante, a Snap Original docuseries nominated for a 2020 Critics’ Choice Real TV Award. Asante has lectured at Harvard, Yale, Stanford, as well as hundreds of other universities. He has toured in over 50 countries and was awarded the Key to the City of Dallas, Texas. He is featured in A Changing America, a permanent video exhibit at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture.

 

6051290477?profile=RESIZE_930xSharon M. Ravitch is a Professor of Practice at the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education. Dr. Ravitch co-founded Penn’s Inter-American Educational Leadership Network. She serves as the Principal Investigator of a number of multi-year international applied development research initiatives, one in Nicaragua and several in India.  Ravitch has published five books including Applied Research for Sustainable Change: A Guide for Education Leaders (with Nicole Carl, Harvard Education Press, 2019); and School Counseling Principles: Diversity and Multiculturalism (American School Counselor Association Press, 2006). Ravitch is currently completing a book, Building (and Critiquing) Expertise: Framing Research and Professional Development. She has recently begun an ethnographic research project, in collaboration with Kevin Kelley, a 32-year USPS employee, focused on the lived experiences and unique perspectives of urban mail carriers as they relate to the current moment of distrust, community (dis)engagement and organizing, and relational stress and healing in the United States.  Ravitch earned two master’s degrees from Harvard University in Human Development and Psychology and Education, and a doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania in an interdisciplinary program that integrates across the fields of anthropology and education.

 

6051298297?profile=RESIZE_400xPediatrician, educator, health communicator, and award-winning author, Dr. Laura Jana finds connections across disciplines and crystallizes big ideas into far-reaching, real-world applications, with a focus on social impact. Currently an Associate Research Professor at Penn State’s Edna Bennett Pierce Prevention Research Center, Dr. Jana was most recently Director of Innovation in Public Health at the University of Nebraska Medical Center. Dr. Jana is an internationally acclaimed speaker invited to present at venues spanning from local, state, and national pediatrics, education, and early education conferences to the US Chamber of Commerce, the TED stage, and the annual meeting of The World Bank. As a translator of ideas and facilitator of dialogue, Dr. Jana is on a mission to unite these worlds in order to change public conversation and understanding about the skills and support needed for our children to succeed and thrive in the 21st Century. Her most recent books, The Toddler Brain: Nurture the Skills Today That Will Shape Your Child’s Tomorrow and Jumping Into Kindergarten, introduce the fundamentally important concept of QI Skills and convey the powerful role parents, educators, and other caring responsive adults play in children’s healthy development during their foundational first 5 years.
http://www.drlaurajana.com

 

4995562699?profile=RESIZE_400xHoward Blumenthal created and produced the PBS television series, Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego? He is currently a Senior Scholar at The University of Pennsylvania, studying learning and the lives of 21st-century children and teenagers. He travels the world, visiting K-12 schools, lecturing at universities, and interviewing young people for Kids on Earth, a global platform containing nearly 1,000 interview segments from Kentucky, Brazil, Sweden, India, and many other countries. Previously, he was a nationally syndicated newspaper columnist for The New York Times Syndicate, and United Features. He is the author of 24 books and several hundred articles about technology, learning, business, and human progress. As an executive, Howard was the CEO of a public television operation and several television production companies, and a state government official. Previously, he was a Senior Vice President for divisions of two large media companies, Hearst and Bertelsmann, and a consultant or project lead for Energizer, General Electric, American Express, CompuServe, Warner Communications, Merriam-Webster, Atari, and other companies.

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Tomorrow, Wednesday June 17th - "Small, Rural, and Independent Libraries" Mini-Conference #library2020

Tomorrow is our second Library 2.020 mini-conference! "Small, Rural, and Independent Libraries," will be held online (and for free) on Wednesday, June 17th, from 12:00 - 3:00 pm US-Pacific Daylight Time (click for your own time zone). There are currently over 5,000 registrations--space is unlimited, and we invite you to join us!

This mini-conference will focus on innovation and innovative thinking in rural, independent, tribal, and other small libraries--as well as the many unique challenges that they face. A diverse array of keynote panelists and curated presenters will cover topics that will likely include:

  • Innovations to provide Internet access and training to rural patrons;
  • New ways that small libraries can offer services that the big urban libraries offer;
  • Taking community partnerships to the next level;
  • How workers from small and rural libraries can easily connect with each other to get ideas and keep innovating;
  • Novel ways to fund special programs;
  • Unique "Internet of Things" offers that are tailored to specific communities;
  • Safety, security, and ways to deal with emergencies when the sheriff's department is far away.

This event is being organized in partnership with Jim Lynch from TechSoup for Libraries, Kate Laughlin from the Association for Rural & Small Libraries, and The School of Information at San José State University.

This is a free event, being held live online and also recorded.
REGISTER HERE
to attend live and/or to receive the recording links afterward.
Please also join this Library 2.0 network to be kept updated on this and future events. 

Everyone is invited to participate in our Library 2.0 conference events, which are designed to foster collaboration and knowledge sharing among information professionals worldwide. Each three-hour event consists of a keynote panel, 10-15 crowd-sourced thirty-minute presentations, and a closing keynote. 

Participants are encouraged to use #library2020 and #smallruralindependent on their social media posts leading up to and during the event.

SCHEDULE:
An email with actual session links will be sent to all registered attendees the day before the conference. If you registered for the conference and didn't receive or cannot find the final email with session links, click here.


12:00 - 1:00 pm US-PDT (click for your own time zone)

  • OPENING KEYNOTE: Jim Lynch and Kate Laughlin (co-moderators), with Jennifer Pearson, Melanie S. Toledo, and Dianne Connery.

1:00 - 1:30 pm US-PDT (click for your own time zone)

  • Connecting the Community - Digital Inclusion: Dianne Connery
  • Nitty Gritty Policy Makeover: Jennie Garner
  • Winning Grants for Small & Rural Libraries: Stephanie Gerding
  • Park It Right Here: Creating Welcoming Grounds at Rural Public Libraries: Angela Gonzalez and Winona B. Flynn
  • Understanding Political Power and Influence: Patrick Sweeney

1:30 - 2:00 pm US-PDT (click for your own time zone)

  • Libraries and ebooks; challenges and opportunities: Cindy Altick Aden
  • Building Stronger Relationships with Tribal Libraries: Janessa Esquivel
  • Virtual Storytime: Bailee Hutchinson
  • Library learning in the time of COVID: resources and tips for library people : Veronda J. Pitchford
  • Library Reopening Plans: Mary Soucie

2:00 - 3:00 pm US-PDT (click for your own time zone)

  • CLOSING KEYNOTE: Crosby Kemper, Director, Institute of Museum and Library Services


KEYNOTE PANELISTS:

Jim Lynch (@techsoup4libs)
Senior Writer and Editor of TechSoup for Libraries.org
Opening Keynote (Moderator)

Jim Lynch is senior writer and editor of TechSoup for Libraries.org. TechSoup is a San Francisco headquartered high-tech nonprofit whose mission is to tech up charities and public libraries worldwide by providing software, hardware, and the knowledge to use them. TechSoup for Libraries is a free national library online information resource that covers library technology news, how-to content and information on TechSoup product donations and services for libraries. The free monthly TechSoup for Libraries newsletter has over 40,000 subscribers. Over his long career at TechSoup, Jim has created all of TechSoup’s environmental programs. He is one of TechSoup's primary presenters at conferences in the U.S. on nonprofit, foundation and library technology. He has been interviewed extensively over the years on nonprofit and library technology and green tech by the Wall St. Journal, National Public Radio, PC World Magazine, and many other news outlets.

Kate Laughlin (@RuralLibAssoc)
Executive Director, Association for Rural & Small Libraries
Opening Keynote (Moderator)

Kate has worked in service and management for more than 30 years, including over 20 of those working in or with libraries on the front lines, in circulation and reference provision, branch management, staff training, strategic planning, and association management. Kate has a passion for service excellence and the furthering of libraries and their missions. Before "going rogue" in 2007, Kate was the Staff Training Coordinator for The Seattle Public Library. Since then she has trained in and consulted with dozens of small and rural libraries around the Western states and served as the Conference Coordinator and then Executive Director for the Washington Library Association. Kate has worked with the national Association for Rural & Small Libraries since early 2018 and became its first ever Executive Director at the beginning of this year.

Jennifer Pearson (@RuralLibAssoc)
Library Director, Marshall County Memorial Library
Opening Keynote

Jennifer Pearson is the Director of the Marshall County Memorial Library System. Jennifer is passionate about community building and how the public library can be central to a thriving community. Jennifer’s background includes over 10 years working for OCLC where she honed her skills in library advocacy, marketing and public relations. While at OCLC Jennifer helped to develop and then manage the Geek the Library advocacy program. Jennifer also worked with public libraries to extend access to e-books via the Big Shift project, create vibrant outdoor spaces and events via the Redbox funded Outside the Box program and taught libraries how to use community based advocacy to extend their reach to their communities and stakeholders. Jennifer also worked with many library consortia to develop and implement OCLC products and services. Jennifer has also worked for Ingram Library Services as manager of their cataloging division, was a publicist at Rutledge Hill Press in Nashville and worked at the greatest independent bookstore in the entire world—Square Books in Oxford, MS. Jennifer currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Association for Rural and Small Libraries as the Vice President/President Elect of the Association. She is also active in her community as a member of the Lewisburg Rotary Club, the Lewisburg Community Development Board, the Marshall County Imagination Library Board, the Marshall County Health Council and the Lewisburg Downtown Alliance. Jennifer is married to Scott Pearson, the Associate Editor for the Marshall County Tribune, and together they have 3 children.

Melanie S Toledo
Library Manager, Ak-Chin Indian Community
Opening Keynote

Melanie Toledo has been the Library Manager of the Ak-Chin Indian Community Library since 2008. The Ak-Chin Library was a recipient of the 2013 Guardians of Culture and Lifeways: Library Institutional Excellence Award (from the Association of Tribal Archives, Libraries and Museums). The Ak-Chin Indian Community is located 36 miles south of Phoenix in the northwestern corner of Pinal County within the Santa Cruz Valley of south-central Arizona. The Ak-Chin Indian Community consists of the Tohono O’odham people and the Gila River Pimas. There are currently 1,100 enrolled Ak-Chin members and the languages spoken in the community are English and Tohono O’odham. Melanie received her MA in Information Resources and Library Science from the University of Arizona (UA) and her BA in History and Minor in Ethnic Studies from Arizona State University. She was in the inaugural Knowledge River class at the School of Information Resources and Library Science. Knowledge River was a program initially started to recruit Hispanic and Native American librarians. Melanie is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation (Diné) from Low Mountain, Arizona; she is Táchii'níí clan, born of the Tánéészahníí clan. She is currently the co-chair of the Gathering of Arizona Tribal Libraries and the Arizona Library Association’s Native American Library Interest Group.

Dianne Connery (@PottsboroLib)
Director - Pottsboro Library
Opening Keynote + Concurrent Session 

Dianne Connery is the director of the Pottsboro (Texas) Area Public Library. She was a corporate trainer and entrepreneur before moving to a rural community ten years ago. On the verge of closing its doors, Dianne led a group of dedicated volunteers who transformed it into the vibrant community institution it is today.

Crosby Kemper (@IMLSDirector)
Director, Institute of Museum and Library Services
Closing Keynote: What Does Community Mean in the Age of the Coronavirus?

Crosby Kemper is the sixth director of Institute of Museum and Library Services. He was commissioned by the White House on January 24, 2020, following his confirmation by the United States Senate. IMLS, an independent government agency, is the primary source of federal support for the nation's museums and libraries. Kemper is a dedicated advocate for education and learning for people of all ages and backgrounds. He comes to IMLS from the Kansas City Public Library, where as director, he established the library as one of the city’s leading cultural destinations and a hub of community engagement. Under his direction, the library made special event programming a high-profile focus, with more than half a million people attending its evening programs or visiting exhibits in the art galleries. During his tenure, the Kansas City Public Library received multiple awards, including IMLS’s National Medal for Museum and Library Service in 2008. Kemper also recently served as chair of the board of directors of the Schools, Health, & Libraries Broadband Coalition, which supports open, affordable broadband connections for local community organizations. Kemper’s career began in banking; he most recently served as CEO of UMB Financial Corporation. Kemper has received the Difference Maker Award from the Urban League of Kansas City, the William F. Yates Medallion for Distinguished Service from William Jewell College, and the 2010 Harmony Humanitarian Hoffman Legacy Award. His board service has included the Kansas City Symphony, the Black Archives of Mid-America, Union Station Kansas City, the Heart of America Shakespeare Festival, the Rabbit hOle—a center promoting children’s books—and the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, which operates Monticello. Kemper is the editor of and a contributor to Winston Churchill: Resolution, Defiance, Magnanimity, Good Will, published by the University of Missouri Press. He holds a bachelor’s degree in history from Yale University.


SESSION PRESENTERS:

Cindy Altick Aden (@cindycpaa)
Washington State Library/Office of Secretary of State

SESSION: Libraries and ebooks; challenges and opportunities
What is the ebook landscape for libraries? Is there an opportunity to make it more favorable to libraries—and to authors? Why did a major publisher embargo its books? For the answer to this and other questions, please join me for an overview of the issues. 

Cindy Aden has been the Washington State Librarian since 2016. Before that she worked in business development for OCLC, making connections between Silicon Valley companies and libraries. She was Amazon's first librarian, but she started her career at Library of Congress and University of Washington.

Janessa Esquivel
Library Media Technician Sr., Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation

SESSION: Building Stronger Relationships with Tribal Libraries
Tribal libraries come in many shapes and sizes, but are embedded in tribal communities. By building stronger relationships with tribal libraries, public libraries and other entities can better serve and communicate with those communities as well. This session will cover foundational knowledge needed to take steps to initiate contact and collaborate with a tribal library.

Janessa Esquivel (they/them) is a sənpʕʷilx uł nspilm uł snʕáyckstx citizen of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation. Since 2017, Janessa has served their tribes as Library Media Technician Senior operating three libraries. Janessa is committed to promoting libraries as free spaces for the public, decolonization and reIndigenization of community structures, and the responsible transmission of ancestral knowledge and technologies.

Winona B. Flynn
Yates County Treasurer/County Administrator

SESSION: Park It Right Here: Creating Welcoming Grounds at Rural Public Libraries
Learn about how and why a rural library came to have a horse run-in shed and an electric vehicle charging station placed in its parking lot. Hear about community collaborations that made it possible and other amenities situated on the library grounds.


Winona 'Nonie' Flynn has worked in finance for more than forty years, including the last eleven in municipal government. She has worked for Yates County since 2012. In her position as County Administrator for Yates County, Nonie has worked to expand public service to every area of the county working with others to make Yates County a wonderful place to live for all.

Jennie Garner (@GarnerJennie)
Library Director, North Liberty Library

SESSION: Nitty Gritty Policy Makeover
We'll look at policy vs. procedures and learn simple strategies to overhaul policies to give staff decision-making power translating to better service. Discussion will include working with staff and your library board member to rewrite and condense policies and make them proactive and positive rather than reactive and punitive.

Jennie Garner has held a variety of roles at North Liberty Library (IA) for 25 years. In her role as library director the past six years, Jennie has worked to cultivate a positive workplace which she firmly believes creates a stronger organization and better serves the community. She is passionate about leadership and dedicated to empowering staff to deliver excellent customer service supported by good policies and procedures. Jennie has been active in the Association for Small and Rural Libraries for eight years. She is a staunch advocate for small and rural libraries and the impact libraries have on their communities. When she’s not working in the library or volunteering in the community, Jennie enjoys time with family and friends, camping, bicycling, and, of course, reading.

Stephanie Gerding (@librarygrants)
Library Consultant and Owner, 4Libraries

SESSION: Winning Grants for Small & Rural Libraries
Learn practical tips for grant work! You will learn the basic process of grant work, how to quickly locate grant opportunities through free resources, find out what funders are looking for in a successful grant proposal, and discover easy grants for beginners (some only a few pages long). A valuable resource list will be shared. You’ll be excited, motivated, and ready to start winning grants for your library! Stephanie Gerding’s grant webinars are known for being easy to understand, motivating, and full of valuable tips and resources.


Stephanie Gerding, MLIS, (http://stephaniegerding.com), has over 20 years of professional library experience and loves working with small and rural libraries. Stephanie is the author of four books including the ALA Editions best seller, Winning Grants, Second Edition: A How-To-Do-It Manual For Librarians. She has in-depth knowledge and practical experience with grants, having worked on all sides of the grant process as a grant writer, reviewer, funder, and project coordinator. She’s been a lead grant reviewer of LSTA and state grants at two state libraries, and reviewed grants for nonprofits, including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. She’s the Executive Director of Act of Giving, a small nonprofit giving circle. Stephanie finds grant work exciting and challenging and loves helping others learn to enjoy it as well. She lives in beautiful Seattle, WA with her husband and their spunky twelve-year-old daughter.

Angela Gonzalez (@PYPL)
Library Director, Penn Yan Public Library

SESSION: Park It Right Here: Creating Welcoming Grounds at Rural Public Libraries
Learn about how and why a rural library came to have a horse run-in shed and an electric vehicle charging station placed in its parking lot. Hear about community collaborations that made it possible and other amenities situated on the library grounds.


Currently Director of Penn Yan Public Library (PYPL) located in the New York State Finger Lakes region, Angela has been serving patrons in upstate rural libraries for over 20 years. She believes libraries are a real benefit to those trying to improve their daily lives either by accessing information or recreational services. She and staff continually work with community members to assess and improve PYPL programming. Angela was the first chair of the New York State Library Association Rural Libraries Roundtable and is active in regional organizations.

Bailee Hutchinson (@lilhutch14)
Branch Manager of Altus Public Library

SESSION: Virtual Storytime
Working in small and rural libraries may mean that you are balancing how to provide children's programming on top of the six other hats you wear at work. Doing virtual storytime doesn't have to be daunting! A little goes a long way. If all you have are some good books and a willing spirit, you have the makings for a great program. In this session, attendees will hear about some of the creative ways libraries are embellishing virtual story times with green screens, puppets, musical instruments and other props. But they will also hear about how to just be you, connecting with the kids and reading a great story!

Bailee Hutchinson is a Branch Manager at the Altus Public Library who listens closely to the community, takes a fearless approach to community engagement, and creates lifelong learners. Before starting a career in librarianship, Bailee worked as a mental health case manager at a homeless shelter. Bailee serves on the Association for Rural and Small Libraries Board and is active in Oklahoma Library Association. Bailee is currently completing her MLIS online through the University of Oklahoma. Bailee enjoys spending time with her family, traveling, and of course reading.

Veronda J. Pitchford (@vjpitch )
Assistant Director, Califa Group

SESSION: Library learning in the time of COVID: resources and tips for library people
Rural and small libraries are community connectors and the place to be for computer access, learning, entertaining and educational programming, and leisure reading. But where do busy library people go for learning when they are doing more than ever before in a world impacted by a global pandemic? And when do they have time? Join us for some quick tips and free online learning resources to help library people keep pace with what’s new and next to support library people and their learning needs to better serve their communities.


Veronda is the Assistant Director of the Califa Group, nonprofit library membership consortium representing 230 libraries in California committed to unleashing the impact of libraries. She is an active ALA member and has participated on many ALA Advisory Committees and Boards including United for Libraries and the Center for the Future of Libraries. She was named awarded the 2018 American Library Association Cathleen Bourdon Service Award and in 2005 she was named a Library Journal Mover and Shaker with no recognition of her moves on the dance floor. She has a master’s degree in library and information science from North Carolina Central University, a historically black college in Durham, North Carolina. Veronda is a die-hard library chick.

Mary Soucie
State Librarian, North Dakota State Library

SESSION: Library Reopening Plans

Mary Soucie has been a librarian for 26 years and has been the North Dakota State Librarian for six of those years. Her main job is to advocate for libraries with local, state and national governments, but she also serves as director of the state library, which has a large circulating collection including best sellers, the largest large print collection in the state and a large talking book collection. Her library passions include mentoring colleagues at all levels and from all types of libraries and connecting people. She has done a number of trainings in active shooter drills and also managing disruptive patrons and safety policies and procedures. She's also co-chair of the ARSL Governance Committee where she is collecting shared phased reopening plans from different libraries across the country.

Patrick Sweeney (@pcsweeney)
Political Director, Everylibrary.org

SESSION: Understanding Political Power and Influence
In this session, we'll explore the underlying theory and strategy to rebuild political power and influence that allows us to secure the funding small and rural libraries need to serve our communities. Over 98% of library funding is political in nature. 90% comes from the will of local voters and politicians, 3-5% comes from the State legislators and 3-5% comes from the Federal legislators. In the last 10 years, we've lost almost 20% of voter support for libraries putting our funding at risk therefore risking our ability to continue to serve our communities. In order to ensure that we have continued funding, we need to understand political power and influence.

Patrick Sweeney is a tireless and innovative advocate for libraries. A 2007 graduate of the San Jose School of Library and Information Sciences, Mr. Sweeney is the former Administrative Librarian of the Sunnyvale (CA) Public Library and was Executive Director of EveryLibrary California, a statewide initiative to support library Propositions. He was awarded Library Journal’s “Movers and Shakers” award in 2015 for his library advocacy work. He is co-author of “Winning Elections and Influencing Politicians for Library Funding” as well as “Before the Ballot; Building Support for Library Funding.” He was recently recognized with a “40 Under 40” award by the American Association of Political Consultants for his work fighting for libraries at EveryLibrary. He is a lecturer at the San Jose Information School where he teaches courses on politics and libraries. He is active across social media as PC Sweeney.


MORE INFORMATION:
The School of Information at San José State University is the founding conference sponsor. Please register as a member of the Library 2.0 network to be kept informed of future events. Recordings from previous years are available under the Archives tab at Library 2.0 and at the Library 2.0 YouTube channel.