Joyce Valenza’s Neverending Search

American Libraries: the kerfuffle, the resolution

March 30, 2007 · 5 Comments

The cover story of the March issue of American Libraries (the magazine of the American Library Association) explored librarians who blog. Despite the fact that school librarians represent a major segment of the membership, the story did not list a single school library blogger.

Doug Johnson and Peter Milbury wrote eloquent letters to the editor and the response was an article for the May 2007 issue based on questions submitted by the LM_NET listserv.

Here are my responses to AL’s questions and the responses of some of my colleagues:

What differentiates blogging for library media specialists from writing for the generalist biblioblogs?

I don’t understand what generalist biblioblogs are. Are you specifically referring to blogs written by public, academic, law, medical, business librarians? Don’t school librarians’ blogs automatically fit this category? I do separate my professional blogging from the blogging I do with students and classes.

What are your professional objectives for blogging?

I blog to learn. I blog to lead.

As a blogger I am part of a dialog far bigger than any I could engage in locally. Some of the comments I get are in languages I cannot easily translate. Blogging allows me to cross professions and to cross ALA divisions. Through my blog, I connect with as many classroom teachers, academics, and ed tech folks as I do with librarians. When I blog, I grow ideas. I count on the comments of regular readers to enhance and to challenge the ideas I put out. My blog allows me to fully bake many of my half baked ideas. Through the synthesis of what I get from my blogroll–what I read about what others are doing–and the comments I receive, I am able to bring better practice back to the classroom.

How much time do you devote to blogging?

I blog for about one or two hours a week. It varies. When I have nothing to say, I say nothing. I stopped blogging twice this year–when we had a crisis at school and when I was writing my dissertation.

How does having a professional blog impact your work with students?

Most of my students do not read my blog. I am always flattered to find that some do and say, “interesting post last night, Mrs. V!” But they are not the audience for my professional blog. My own blog gave me the confidence to lead our teachers in blogging over the past two years. It represented our school’s first step into the 2.0 world. It’s part of my job as technology integrator and scout. School librarians experiment and then help to translate emerging tools to meet learning objectives. My blog was a prototype. Folks really don’t see the other blogs I help set up. Many of our classroom projects now take blog (or wiki) form—our students manage and reflect on their research through research blogs. Our literature circles discuss their readings through group blogs. The characters in Hamlet discuss each scene as they live it in our Hamlet community blogs. Our seniors discuss global issues, films, and provocative readings in their class blogs. The blogs led to a great number of wikis. Among the most effective were the wikis we used plan a “live from Salem podcasts” and the wiki that supports lacrosse team intelligence.

What are the pitfalls for a school librarian to be writing a blog?

I don’t know yet. Many of my colleagues tell me they cannot read my blog because most blog sites are blocked by their schools’ filters.

How does blogging affect your interaction with nonlibrarian colleagues?

I suspect my blog is read by as many classroom teachers–especially edtech folks–as it is by librarians. I am frequently invited to speak at Web and face-to-face conferences outside the library world as a result of my blog. I hope that my blog helps to represent the role of school librarians in the educational community. When I visit ISTE or the Alan November conference this summer, I will connect with so many nonlibrarian colleagues—our writings are linked through our blogs. And I feel as though I’ve collaborated with them for years. My blogging introduced me to the community that is developing Terry Freedman’s upcoming Coming of Age 2.0 online book–http://web2booklet.blogspot.com/ I’ll be contributing a piece on Information Fluency Meets Web 2.0. My blog led me to become a member of the EdTechTalk community. You can hear my guest speaker spot on EdTechTalk here: http://www.edtechtalk.com/EdTechTalk53

It led to several visiting podcasts, for instance a podcast on resource evaluation for the Illinois Math and Science Academy’s Information Fluency Project http://21cif.imsa.edu/.

What has been the response of your faculty and/or administration to your blog?

My administration has been very encouraging. They are proud of my professional achievements. Springfield supports its library program and it supports professional growth.

What is the greatest benefit to blogging about school libraries?

My school library blog helps to present school libraries and school librarians to the larger educational blogospere and the biblioblogosphere. It allows me to play in the other blogging sandboxes. For school librarians, blogging is an effective way to demonstrate the talents and our value. Many more of us should be blogging.

How do you see the evolution of blogging (i.e., the growth of online video) as intersecting with the job of school media professionals?

My learners create knowledge products in multiple media—it’s the essence of synthesis and communication—it’s the culmination of the research process. I want to celebrate their efforts and share their streaming media learning objects with the larger learning community. I use blogs to gather their productions. This makes perfect sense—using the Virtual Library as a knowledge management tool. I recently created the Springfield Video Blog to gather and organize our growing collection of student-produced media. The blog features videos on using Google more powerfully, how to search databases. It hosts our new grammar series as well as our library orientation video. It also hosts a growing archive of book trailers. We now feature my introduction podcast and two student podcasts. This stuff is going to grow—bigtime! Students are proud to share this work. We use other 2.0 tools as well. We are moving our pathfinders to wiki format. We post our schools’ events, archived images, and our art gallery via Flickr. We post all of these knowledge products on the Virtual Library.

Doug’s responses.

Alice’s responses.

Sara Kelly Johns’ responses

Chris Harris’ responses

Francis Jacobson Harris’ responses

Rob Darrow’s responses 

Categories: 2.0 · About blogging · About libraries

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5 responses so far ↓

  •   Blogging for everyone - and school librarians, too | 240 Things // Mar 31st 2007 at 3:51 pm

    [...] Posted on March 31, 2007 I enjoyed reading Joyce Valenza’s post on why she blogs. She also links to some thoughtful posts by other teacher-librarians about blogging. Oops–American Libraries seems to have overlooked school librarians in their recent article about the biblioblogosphere. [...]

  •   Cheryl E. Hill // Mar 31st 2007 at 5:48 pm

    The idea of blogging as a professional development tool is new and glorious! I enjoy reading your blog Joyce. The library district administrators in my school district began referring the school librarians to read your blog.

    Often, the American Library types make me feel way out of my league and/or half baked. After teaching for many years, I came into librarianship rather late in my educational career. I held a Master’s degree in education for many years before having the opportunity to become trained/certified as a school librarian through an approved alternative program in my school district and state. So, naturally, when the American Library types place so much emphasis on having a MLS from an accredited American Library Association School of Library Science, if one should ever contemplate advancement, I feel so— excluded and nonexistent.

    Although, not a MLS librairan from an accredited American Library Association School of Library Science, I have, nonetheless, been successful in my role of school librarian.

    Moving on to another topic or, perhaps, returning to the original topic, blogging for professional enhancement, I was turned on to blogging as a professional tool when I attended a wonderful in-service with Walter Betts in the fall of the year. Finally, during spring break, I created my blog:
    http://www.empoweringchildrentoread.blogspot.com.

  •   Adding to other voices...add yours, too « California Dreamin’ by Rob Darrow // Apr 1st 2007 at 6:05 am

    [...] Adding to other voices…add yours, too Published March 31st, 2007 library Thanks to Doug Johnson (on his blog) and Peter Milbury (on LM_NET), I was also asked to share the reasons why I blog. I am certainly the newby to this group…and after reading what Joyce Valenza wrote…and Doug and Alice Yucht and Sara Kelly John …I would invite other school library bloggers to share your responses to these questions as well. Here were my responses to Beverly Goldberg’s “school library” blog questions for American Libraries: [...]

  •   A Library By Any Other Name » Blog Archive » 371.33 School Librarians Who Blog: The Whys and Wherefores // Apr 2nd 2007 at 3:08 am

    [...] If you still are not sure about the value of blogging and how some bloggers use the technology to benefit their students, here is a partial list of the bloggers who have posted their answers to the American Libraries questions: Doug Johnson at Blue Skunk Christopher Harris at Infomacy Joyce Valenza’s NeverEndingSearch California Dreamin’ by Rob Darrow Alice (Yucht) in Infoland (her page may load with lots of blank space?–scroll down) From the Inside Out by Sara Johns Kelly (ALA president-elect!) Gargoyles Loose in the Library I will add any others who post their answers to the magazine questions if I come across them. [...]

  •   Doug's letter published in AL « California Dreamin’ by Rob Darrow // Apr 16th 2007 at 2:39 am

    [...] Joyce Valenza [...]

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