Okay middle school students, show the world complete sentences and thoughtful comments. Answer this (4 sentence min.):
What do you like to read about, and why?
 
 
Okay 5th graders. Show the world complete sentences and thoughtful comments. Answer this (3 sentence min.):
What do you like to spend your time reading, and why?
 
 
The Shallows: What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains
by Nicholas Carr
2010. 276 pp. $26.95 hc. W. W. Norton & Co., Inc. 9780393072228.

Part criticism, part it-is-what-it-is, this book is a condensed cultural history of technology filled with anecdotes about the movers and shakers of info-proliferation…and exploitation. Carr begins with a historic paradigm shift, a revolutionary advancement that re-wired our neurons. Socrates’ oral culture lost out to Plato’s written one. Gutenberg then revolutionized writing by introducing an invention that made it widely accessible. While Carr dissects the backstage of the brain and the discovery of neuroplasticity, the reader never feels shut out by obscure references to physiology. Using layman’s terms however, does not reduce the elegance with which Carr relates anecdotes such as Lee de Forest’s Audion, the “church” of Google, and computerized writing test assessment of British students. The Shallows, in the end, refers both to the limits of mechanized computations and the operational capacities of our brains when strung out over a myriad of media inputs. While Carr’s prose is not as hard-boiled as, say, Jared Lanier’s You Are Not a Gadget: A Manifesto, but he nonetheless spins a cautionary thread into this readable exploration of our brains on technology, from cuneiform to e-readers. Amid all our salivating and self-congratulations for the latest advancements, will we find an app for wisdom, creativity, and deep thinking? If so, where does that leave our intelligence? Ultimately, what sets us apart from HAL-like emoticons, from algorithms? Carr does not try to tackle these questions, rather, he gently challenges us to harken back to “deep reading,” that is to say, to consider our own interactions with technology and reflect how our own cognition may or may not be changing. Perhaps, ironically, one of the more objectively written accounts of how science and media studies are intermingling.

Finalist for the 2011 Pulitzer Prize in General Nonfiction.
Highly Recommended.
Jenny Gapp, Librarian.

 
 
Rotters
by Daniel Kraus
2011. 464 pp. $16.99 hc. Delacorte Press (Random House). 9780385738476. Grades 9-12

Mortality. In a modern take on Hamlet’s ode to Yorick , this gripping novel contemplates the fate of the body post-mortem, and visits the common YA motif of absent and estranged parents in a new and gruesome light. Through the voice of sixteen-year-old Joey “The Son” Crouch, artfully packed prose grapples with the beauty and horror of gore. “Rotters” refer to the rest of humanity who are not “Diggers,” those who make an art of disinterring human remains, removing valuables as a means to make a living. After his mother’s untimely death, Joey leaves Chicago for rural Bloughton, Iowa, where his father, Ken “The Garbage Man” Hartnett, lives in a squalid cabin eating onions like apples and plotting his next grave robbing expedition. In between trying to come to terms with his ‘Digger Dad’ Joey struggles to cope at his new high school: Woody, the privileged jock gets away with brutal hazing until he is disturbingly out pranked; Celeste, the girl with an incorruptible physique rotting internally with self-ambition; Foley, the metal head who teaches Joey “The Crotch” how to be invisible; Gottschalk, the sadistic Biology teacher; and Ted, the Band teacher who imparts the lesson of persistence. Kraus’ insight into the human spirit waxes out personalities that would be superficial in less masterful hands. Even so the truism that we are deeper than the sum of our exterior is turned on its head by the curious character of Boggs, a walking, talking putrefier who just wants to be loved. As the Diggers use their tools—Grinder, The Root, Harpakhrad—so the author renders the poetics of death. In the tradition of Poe and Hawthorne, the macabre has never been so delightfully solemn or so ghoulishly rewarding. Reluctant reader appeal. Boys will love this. Not for the squeamish.

Highly Recommended.
Jenny Gapp, Librarian
 
 
Materials for Conference Presentation Friday April 15th 2011
Glitteringly Direct: A Framework for the Integration of Media Studies
Based on an article published in the Spring issue of OCTE's Oregon English Journal.
glitteringly_direct.pptx
File Size: 5738 kb
File Type: pptx
Download File

media_literacy_in_the_21st_century_syllabus_draft.doc
File Size: 187 kb
File Type: doc
Download File

 
 
Download music for free...legally.
An article in The Oregonian today announced the launch of Multnomah County Library's new feature: Freegal Music, a download service. The catalog includes 500,000 songs, and you can download up to three songs per week. Once you download them, they're yours!!
Here's how to do it:
1) You need a Multnomah Co. Library Card. If you live in Washington Co. you can still get a card for Multnomah at no cost.
2) Go to www.multcolib.com/freegal
3) Enter your library card number and PIN
4) Search for the song you want to download.

Article on Freegal at Oregon Live.
 
 
While we are a private school, it is important to note how VCS stacks up against the Minimum Criteria for Quality School Libraries as determined by the Quality Education Commission (governed by the Oregon Department of Education).
The minimum Middle & High School criteria is 1.0 FTE Certified School Librarian and 1.0 FTE Library Support Staff with a total expenditure of $31 per middle school student and $36 per high school student. The expenditure includes books & periodicals, both print & electronic. We have about 450 kids (both middle and high). For the 2009-2010 school year we are spend ing about $7,000 on print books & periodicals(including film & audiobooks), or $15.50 per student; however when we add the $8,000 and some we spend on electronic databases, that figures to an expenditure of $33 per student--right in the QEM ballpark. There is, however, room for improvement.  As for staffing, we fall short in the area of support staffing as Ms. Fellows is not full time; she receives 950 hours per year which places her somewhere between .5 and .75 FTE.


Read the 2010 QEM Report on Public School Libraries
 
Book Awards 11/18/2010
 
The National Book Award: 2010
The National Book Awards were handed out last night, with Mockingbird, by Kathryne Erskine taking top prize for Young People's Literature (not to be confused with Mockingjay (Hubger Games series) by Suzanne Collins). Among the other nominees was Ship Breaker, recently featured in a VCS library display on dystopia novels. The top prize in adult fiction was for Jaimy Gordon's Lord of Misrule, a novel about the world of horse racing.

The Pulitzer Prize: Fiction
The Booker Prize
Nobel Prize in Literature

Michael Printz Award
YRCA Young Reader's Choice Award
(Pacific Northwest Library Association)
ORCA Oregon Reader's Choice Award
(Oregon Library Association)
 
 
Start a conversation about a book that changed your life. Post a comment between November 1st and 30th and receive a kiss from the library! (a chocolate one) Respond as a comment. I've done one as an example...

Check out
The Book That Changed My Life: 71 Remarkable Writers Celebrate the Books That Matter Most to Them
Find it in the VCS Library at 028 BOO in the non fiction stacks.
(or ask the librarians, it may be on display)
Picture
 
 
Lesson Plan (for teachers)
Booktalk Vlog Timeline (aprox. 9 hours of student contact time required)
Parental Permission Slip (for parents & teachers)
Booktalk Evaluation Guide  (for students)
Peer/Self Review Rubric 
(for students)