Taking time to smell the roses

Butterfly

I know, the picture doesn’t have a rose in it, but I’m very proud of this photo – taken just minutes ago while out “walking” the dog.  I’m REALLY enjoying my new Nikon D5000 camera!

This is Labor Day weekend.  Labor day “is dedicated to the social and economic achievements of American workers. It constitutes a yearly national tribute to the contributions workers have made to the strength, prosperity, and well-being of our country.” (US DOL.gov)  I planned to take this weekend off -  to sit back and relax, get some reading done, and generally be a sloth!  However, I just can’t seem to turn off my work switch.  There are so many things needing to be done and/or planned for in the upcoming weeks/months.

2 Read or Not 2 Read – Midland Valley and I have finally gotten our book club blog up and running.  I’m still waiting on some last minute approval before I can give out applications to my students; however, Midland Valley introduced the blog to their students this past week.  I’m VERY excited about having our students interact and share book reviews/discussions through blogging.

Library Card Sign-up Month – September is library cards sign-up month and I, along with the librarian from the Wagener public library, have been asked to visit/speak with the middle school English classes on Sept. 22nd.   We are supposed to share what we are doing/offering in our programs.  Still not sure what I’m going to speak about, but I was specifically asked to share the library’s web page, the new blog, and other “multimedia for 21st century skills” – hopefully I’ll figure out whatever that means by the 22nd!  Wish me luck.

SC Young Adult Book Awards – The nominees for the 2010-11 SC Young Adult Book Awards have been announced.  As always, there is a display of these title in the library.  In addition, I am on the SCYABA book award committee and have been reading a bunch of new YA titles.  I’m really excited about many of them and can’t wait to recommend them to our students.  Being on this committee forces me to read a wide variety of YA titles I wouldn’t normally read.

WSHS Book Club – tentatively, the first book club will meet this Friday, Sept. 10th, during both lunches.  We will be adopting the Midland Valley book club monthly themes – September’s theme is Mystery.  Please encourage your students to join the book club.

Technology Workshops - the new Technology Committee for WSHS has been tasked to provide workshops for the next Early Release Wednesday.  We’ve come up with a proposal and are waiting for the okay before developing our workshops.   All TC members are working on finding and reviewing web resources.  Right now, we are reviewing the AASL Top 25 Websites for Teaching and Learning (2009) to determine which of the blocked sites we want to petition to have unblocked.  The classroom teachers are supposed to review and provide feedback as to whether or not they would be useful in their classrooms.  I’ve created a Diigo account for WSHS where I’ve begun bookmarking these and other useful or interesting links.

These are just a few of the items on my mind this weekend.  Others include: library advocacy, August monthly report, WSHS Drama Club (meets this Wednesday); Banned Book Week (begins Sept. 25th); pull-out classes begin soon; Teen Read Week (Oct. 17-23); signing up for another photography class; submitting a proposal for the SC Association of School Librarians conference, and making plans to attend the SC Title 1 (Oct. 25-27) and  SC EdTech (Oct. 27-29) conferences.

*Sigh* – I think I’ll just go read a book instead!  Enjoy what’s left of the Labor Day weekend ya’ll!

Help Save SC Libraries and ETV!

Our school library listserv has seen a lot of messages lately about proposed budget cuts to SC Public Libraries and ETV.

Here is the South Carolina Library Association plea:

Dear SCLA Members:

On yesterday afternoon, Thursday, June 10, the SCLA Legislative Committee Chair, Dr. Curtis Rogers shared with the Listserv SCAPLA Action Alert regarding the current budget situation.  I think it is necessary as individuals and residents of South Carolina to express our concerns about the future of libraries and library services in South Carolina.  Please see the message below and act accordingly:

IMMEDIATE ACTION REQUIRED

The Governor’s vetoes (Veto 31 and 92) will be considered by the House on Tuesday, June 15.  If the House does not override the vetoes then the Senate will not even consider them. So, at this time, we must focus exclusively on the House, and we must be relentless.  If we do not “win” on Tuesday then over $6.5 million in State funds (including stimulus) is GONE, and we jeopardize losing $2.7 million in Federal LSTA funds.

Here are the details:

Veto # 31 on page 14 of the Governor’s memo is Aid to Public Libraries – $4,653,933

Veto #92 on page 28 of the Governor’s memo is Federal Stimulus Funds – $1,172,758 (.29/capita)

Here is the Message:

Cutting funds to public libraries will kill the economy.  Public libraries provide crucial educational and employment assistance and if this funding goes away so does our ability to educate and prepare students and the unemployed for the workforce.

Aid to Public Libraries is funding that supports direct public services;  [Insert how you spend State Aid here]

Federal Stimulus is used at the discretion of the County Library Boards to bridge gaps in technology, programs and the collection.

Here is the Contact Information:

South Carolina House Contact Info: http://www.scstatehouse.gov/html-pages/housemembers.html
When you look at the list of Representatives you will see that the home county of each Representative is in bold. We are asking you to take responsibility for those whose home county is your service area. House Fax Number: 803-734-2925

ALSO, Please remember: SCLA’s Legislative Action Alert page has CapWiz which allows you to contact your legislator. http://capwiz.com/ala/sc/home/

Sincerely,

Rayburne J.  Turner

SCLA President

www.scla.org

Here is ETV’s plea for assistance:

Your help is needed now! Contact your legislator before the Tuesday, June 15th vote.

Governor Sanford has proposed a cut of over $5.2 million from South Carolina ETV’s $9.6 million state budget appropriation. This is a 52% percent reduction. This would have a devastating impact on ETV and the services provided to public education and to every citizen.

If the legislature does not override these vetoes it would have a crippling affect on services and programs.

  • ETV provides technology training and learning opportunities to 65,000 teachers, all 86 school districts, and their students. In addition, over 6,500 K-12 teachers receive hands-on, face to face training annually. This service would be drastically impaired or eliminated.
  • ETV would be forced to discontinue its public safety and local government training. More than 13,000 law enforcement personnel  this includes local police and sheriff departments, SLED, and corrections officers.
  • ETV’s local and national programming would be significantly impaired, and some services eliminated all-together. Television and radio programs that focus on SC issues and concerns would be in grave jeopardy.
  • ETV is a valuable asset available to every South Carolina citizen, a key component in the state’s educational, cultural and economic development. Many deem ETV as a jewel of South Carolina and a good example of what is good about our state.

Your help is critical to our ability to retain core educational service for every SC citizen. It’s imperative that these vetoes be overturned. We need your help  please contact your legislator today to save ETV!

http://www.scstatehouse.gov/cgi-bin/zipcodesearch.exe

Thank you!

Here is the letter I sent to my representatives:

Dear Representative Ott:

It has come to my attention that there is action pending from our illustrious Governor Mark Sanford to cut funding for both public libraries and public television (ETV). Services I’m almost positive he’s never needed to use, but a vast majority of South Carolina’s citizens do use and depend upon on a daily basis. While the sad state of our economy is forcing many hard decisions, I don’t understand how these funding cuts will benefit our state or our citizens.

Public libraries are a refuge for many people who have been hurt financially by the economy. The library provides entertainment (books, DVDs, CDs, storytime, etc.) as well as programs to assist the homeless and unemployed (resume writing, interviewing skills, money management, tax services, etc.) The library provides services and materials and works with public schools, colleges, and universities to assist students and educators. Cutting funding, specifically Veto #31 and Veto #92, will also jeopardize our state receiving federal funds such as Federal LSTA funding. Local/County funding alone cannot support an adequate library system, much less the exemplary ones I’ve been fortunate to use so far in my years as a South Carolina resident: Richland County Public Library, Orangeburg Public Library, and ABBE Public Library.

Public television (ETV) provides technology training and learning for education, public safety, and local government. ETV is an asset to our educational, cultural, and economic development. Cutting funding would mean valuable TV, online, and radio broadcast programs would have to be eliminated. The services they provide to our schools – both on air and via school visits – would also be reduced and/or eliminated.

On a personal level, the economy has affected my own ability to make ends meet. I utilize both the public library and ETV to help save money. I patronize the library for professional as well as pleasure reading, since I can’t afford to buy books. Inter Library Loan is wonderful at finding me the professional books I need to stay current. I borrow movies since the cost of movie admission is exorbitant for a family outing. My students and I use the databases provided by both the public library and through DISCUS in our research projects.

As a library media specialist, I utilize the free ETV technology workshops at the ETV studios, as well as those given at conference and through ETV site workshops, to keep myself and my fellow teachers up to date in areas of technology and best practices. I can’t afford to take college classes and even the tech school classes are out of my price range. I/We also use the ETV programming in our school to supplement and compliment our curriculum; thereby saving money to spend on more pressing funding needs.

In short, cutting funding for public libraries and ETV would be devastating to the people of South Carolina. Please support libraries and ETV by not allowing these budget cuts to be passed.

And since you’ve gotten this far, how about stop cutting the education budget, too! It is bleeding and on life support already.

Sincerely,

Heather Loy

I also sent one to Senator Hutto.  Feel free to use/adapt if you want.  I wasn’t very politically correct, in fact I was a bit snarky, but this whole situation is getting out of hand.  I’m neither a Republican nor a Democrat, or a part of any party, but by gosh, we need to stop the insanity.  Raise taxes and put education funding back as part of property tax and not sales tax.  So what if people complain about paying school tax when they don’t have kids.  Or library tax and they are fortunate enough not to have to patronize the public library.  The kids they support through taxes will one day be the politician, bankers, doctors, lawyers, teachers, police and rescue workers all working/supporting us.  I don’t know about you, but I’d sure want the doctor of my future to have the best darn education he/she can have and that I can help pay for so I receive the best of care.  How about you?  And whose is to say this economy isn’t going to get so much worse that you’ll loose your job and need to cut back on your cable, ISP, movie night out, and book buying habits?  You’ll sure be glad the public library is around then now wont you?

2010-11 South Carolina Young Adult Book Award Nominees

UntitledHere are the titles up for consideration for next year’s SC Young Adult Book Award.  Please encourage the teens in your life to read and vote. They make great summer reading novels!

All We Know of Heaven by Jacquelyn Mitchard
Artichoke’s Heart by Suzanne Supplee
Bewitching Season by Marissa Doyle
Climbing the Stairs by Padma Venkatraman
Confessions of a Triple Shot Betty by Jody Gerhman
The Dead and the Gone by Susan Beth Pfeffer
Defying the Diva by Anne D. Love
The Devil’s Paintbox by Victoria McKernan
The Devouring by Simon Holt
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau by Banks by E. Lockhart
How to Build a House: A Novel by Dana Reinhardt
The Hungar Games by Suzanne Collins
If I Stay by Gayle Forman
Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco Stork
My Most Excellent Year: A Novel of Love, Mary Poppins and Fenway Park by Steve Kluger
Princess Ben by Catherine Gilbert Murdock
Princess of the Midnight Ball by Jessica Day George
Something Wicked by Alan Gratz
Sunrise Over Fallujah by Walter Dean Myers
Two Girls of Gettysburg by Lisa Klein

You can find booktalks here.