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Each year in April, originally just out of curiosity, I run a report to determine which books are the most circulated. I usually can guess, but sometimes there are surprises – this year, not so much. The report also provides me with a great bulletin board and display option for the end of the year. This year the top 10 titles are:
“Bobby’s carefree teenage life changes forever when he becomes a father and must care for his adored baby daughter.” This is the third year the book has been on the list.
“Having fallen for a human boy, a beautiful teenage werewolf must battle both her packmates and the fear of the townspeople to decide where she belongs and with whom.” This is the first time Blood and Chocolate book has been on the list. I attribute the revised interest in this older title to be due to the Twilight phenomenon. The Silver Kiss by Klause is also on the top 25 list.
“A traumatic event near the end of the summer has a devastating effect on Melinda’s freshman year in high school.” Speak has been on the list off and on over the last seven years.
“Rob, the charismatic leader of the senior class, provokes unexpected violence when he turns the school nerd into Prince Charming.” I have to plead guilty to “pushing” this title every year. It is one of the two that I can usually entice the fellas into reading. Ms. Giles made it so easy for me by writing such a grabbing opening paragraph. I simply have the unsuspecting male read it and they’re hooked. In case you haven’t picked this one up, the opening lines are:
“Simon Glass was easy to hate. I never knew exactly why, there was too much to pick from. I guess, really, we each hated him for a different reason, but we didn’t realize it until the day we killed him.”
“Originally published as The gun. Bluford freshman Tyray Hobbs, the class bully and tormentor of Darrell Mercer, is determined to get revenge on Darrell, the only boy who ever stood up to Tyray.” The Bluford High series is a relatively new series for WS. I was lucky enough to receive a small monetary donation from our local public library’s “Friends of the Library” association to purchase two sets of the series. Townsend Press is a godsend by selling them for only $1 each. All of the titles in the series are constantly checked out!
“After the death of the uncle who had been his guardian, fourteen-year-old Alex Rider is coerced to continue his uncle’s dangerous work for Britain’s intelligence agency, MI6.” This is another title I “push” with my male/reluctant readers. I tell them it’s like reading an action-adventure television show – constant action. Usually, they’ll come back for the rest of the books in the Alex Rider series. Very few have ever brought it back unread.
“Bella must choose between her friendship with Jacob, a werewolf, and her relationship with Edward, a vampire, but when Seattle is ravaged by a mysterious string of killings, the three of them need to decide whether their personal lives are more important than the well-being of an entire city.”
“When the Cullens, including her beloved Edward, leave Forks rather than risk revealing that they are vampires, it is almost too much for eighteen-year-old Bella to bear, but she finds solace in her friend Jacob until he is drawn into a “cult” and changes in terrible ways.”
“Continues the story of the human Bella and the vampire Edward whose love is threatened by their difference, a werewolf named Jacob, and other outside influences.”

“When seventeen-year-old Bella leaves Phoenix to live with her father in Forks, Washington, she meets an exquisitely handsome boy at school for whom she feels an overwhelming attraction and who she comes to realize is not wholly human.”
No shock to me that the most circulated book would be Twilight. I guess to be fair, I should have grouped all of the Twilight saga together in order to give at least 3 other books a chance to be in the top 10, but I wanted to be absolutely correct in the top 10 list. We also have a copy of The Host by Meyer and it is in the top 25 list.
For the first time since I’ve been running the report, there isn’t a Sarah Dessen title on the top ten list. Sara Dessen and Melody Carlson books are EXTREMELY popular with the girls; however, no single title from these authors made the top 25 this year.
Wired: “Where Gadgets Go To Die: Facility Strips, Rips and Recycles” – interesting look at how a facility sorts and recycles old electronic equipment.
Library of Congress YouTube Channel – “Timeless treasures and contemporary presentations from the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. As the world’s preeminent reservoir of knowledge, we are the steward of millions of recordings dating from the earliest Edison films to the present…”
World Digital Library – looks interesting and will become active on April 21st. “The World Digital Library will make available on the Internet, free of charge and in multilingual format, significant primary materials from cultures around the world, including manuscripts, maps, rare books, musical scores, recordings, films, prints, photographs, architectural drawings, and other significant cultural materials…”
New York Times: “A Story of a Teenager’s Suicide Becomes a Best Seller” – article about the origins of the book TH1RTEEN R3ASONS WHY by Jay Asher. This title is on our South Carolina Young Adult Book Award Nominee list this year. The article also mentioned the YouTube video campaign that shows someone listening to Hannah Baker’s tapes.
Chicago Tribune: “Annoying ‘mosquito’ noise keeps students moving” – the article shares how an Indiana high school uses the mosquito machine to deter students from socializing in an area of the hallway between classes and instead get to classes on time. I’ve written previously about this machine here and the mosquito ringtone here. I am opposed to this device being used, especially INSIDE a school, and not just because I can still hear the tone. There are other ways to ensure students keep it moving in the hallways – HELLO, teachers, stand at your doors and don’t let the kids stop to chat. When I stand at the library doors, the students don’t loiter between classes. When I’m not there, the do – doesn’t take a genius to figure that one out.
Education Jargon Maker – Angela Maiers shared this one via Twitter. Sure wish we’d known about it while we were still writing our ERT documentation! Have some fun typing in a phrase and seeing how it is converted, ex: math skills translates as “deliver visionary critical thinking.”
If you don’t already follow her blog or twitter feeds, you NEED TO ADD HER RIGHT NOW!
Go on.
I’ll wait.
Hmmm, Hmmm, Hmmm, Hmmm.
Done?
Good.
Once you follow her you’ll find she shares a bunch of excellent educational resources as well as thought provoking posts. While I was over on her page just now, I happened to see the following YouTube video “Goomoodleikiog” (Google, Moodle, Wikis, Blogs), which is a great introduction to an ideal virtual classroom ala CommonCraft style. I SOOOOO, would love to develop something like this with one or more of my teachers (ahem! Mr. Forston, you reading this???) I’ve attempted to embed the video below, but it is YouTube, meaning it is blocked by our district and you’ll have to watch from home. Sorry, it hasn’t been posted in TeacherTube yet.
There is also a “sequel” for students “Goomoodleikiog 4 students” that is just as good, if not better, with two sock puppet students discussing the classes virtual classroom.
I hope you enjoyed the videos and have taken a moment to subscribe to Angela Maiers blog and twitter. You won’t regret it! I’ve got a bunch more resources to share, but I’ll pass them along in another Odds & Ends post later. I was just too excited to share these to do a “proper” odds & ends piece!