Friday, May 27, 2011

Pixton for Schools


As I've mentioned before, I'm slightly obsessed with Pixton.com, and it seems that a lot of educators are.  I have used it for my grad school classes and for fun, and I hope I will have a chance to give my students the same opportunity to use it as a satisfying outlet for their ideas and creativity as I have.  Even in my interim between grad school and my first teaching job, I still log onto Pixton fairly regularly because I love the site.  This following video should help you understand the benefits of using Pixton in the classroom and might even hook you as a personal user.


One of my favorite Pixton comics, ebabin, writes about her experiences in her classroom, and they are always very entertaining.  She sets her comic characters and props against a background of photos from her classroom, which gives her comics an authentic feel.




Another great Pixon educator comic is slickscience, who creates comics to use with students to teach them science concepts such as physical and chemical changes as seen below.



Take some time to check out the rest of ebabin and slickscience's comics, as well as Pixton's other top authors.  And while you're at it, you could always look through my comics, too!

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Strategy Tutor

One of the coolest teaching resources I discovered while in grad school was Strategy Tutor, a website that allows teachers to create web-based units with built-in text entry boxes that allow students to complete assignments online within the site, and interactive, animated coaches that teach students different reading strategies: summarize, predict, question, clarify, visualize, feeling, reflect, web evaluation, media literacy, and journal.

Strategy Tutor was created by a group of educators including one of my favorite professors at Vanderbilt, Dr. Dalton.  (Their blog, Literacy Beat, is listed in the sidebar.)  Strategy Tutor is a free website, but you must create an account to be able to access all of the features.  As a member, you can create your own lessons and units, share your work with other teachers, and adapt other teachers' work to meet the needs of your classes.  The site is really easy to use after taking a little time to get to know it, and it gives you a medium to create safe, guided web-based learning activities.  Please explore the site, and I highly recommend you join. Here's a link to a mini unit I created for one of my grad school classes, but as a guest, you will not be able to see it now exactly as you and your students will once you all become registered. 

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Listopia on Goodreads.com

In my last post, I mentioned that you can use the book lists on Goodreads.com to help you find the next book to read.  After some more exploring, I'm even more obsessed with Goodreads and the book lists provided by Listopia.  I spent several hours yesterday exploring the lists and came up with a long list of my own of books I need to read soon.  In the process, I discovered that you can vote for your favorite books to be added to and moved up on different lists and consequently wasted even more time. 

But the point of this post is to share some of the most useful lists I found.  By browsing by tags (on the right hand column), I found pages and pages of lists dedicated to the best young adult books, the most popular of which being Best Young Adult Books.  The lists are divided by genre, subject, year, etc., and are extremely user friendly for teachers and students alike.  One list in particular students might enjoy is YA Novels by Goodreads Authors.  A Goodreads author is one who is an active participant on Goodreads.com.  Authors can blog on their pages; embed videos, pictures, and other media; and link to their personal websites and blogs.  I think students will appreciate the accessiblity to their favorite authors that Goodreads provides, and the list can help them find more books to read if this accessibility is important to them.  I greatly look forward to sharing Goodreads with my future students.

Some other lists that kept me occupied yesterday for longer than I would have liked, but I just couldn't quit:
Best Books of the Decades: 2000's
Books That Everyone Should Read at Least Once
Best Books of the 20th Century

Enjoy!

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

What Next?

Having just finished grad school coming straight out of college coming straight out of high school, this year has been the first in my life that hasn’t been filled with assigned reading.  I started out excited because I had always complained that I never got to read what I wanted to, but now I miss being handed really great literature without having to do any research to find it for myself.  Sure, I always had my summers to read whatever I wanted, but I mostly spent my time catching up on the classics I thought I needed to read that we had missed in school.  But after discovering the hilarity of Dave Eggers, David Sedaris, Augusten Burroughs, Chuck Klosterman, and the list goes on, I realized I what had been missing out on: reading for pure enjoyment, no higher purposes.  They took me back to the days I first fell in love with Harry Potter back in middle school.  (Yes, I’m showing my age here.)  I’ve missed that thrill of reading, and have been working on getting it back.

Still keeping up my teacher preparations in my off-year, I try to alternate one adult book just for fun with a young adult book or two to add to my repertoire.  Young adult books are easy to find; I’ve bought enough of them over the years to fill my future classroom library that Amazon does a pretty great job recommending good ones to me.  But I don’t buy as many of my adult books because I don’t have a reason to keep them, so Amazon can’t do me as much good there.  To help me in my search for good books, I started looking for a website with rating and recommendation features similar to Netflix.  Netflix makes it so easy to find movies and TV shows I’ll love, and I thought we book lovers deserve the same service.  While I haven’t found anything quite as easy and detailed as Netflix for books, I have come across a few helpful sites.

Literature Map is an easy-to-use web of authors.  When you enter one of your favorite authors, a cloud of other authors appears around your author.  The closer two authors’ names are together, the more likely a reader will like both.  Within webs, you can click on different authors to quickly view their webs as well.  The Map is always evolving to add new authors and uses information site visitors enter to populate the web, so there are some mistakes.  For example, Stephenie Meyer appears in some webs several times with her name spelled different ways, and I shouldn’t be judgmental because I just had to correct the way I spelled her name.  I found that the webs did a good job of grouping many of my favorite authors together, so the site seems to be fairly accurate.  Although you cannot use the Literature Map to see any of the books the authors have written or view any biographical information, the Map is a good starting point when looking for new authors to explore.


Literature Map for Franz Kafka
 

This is a really straightforward site in which you enter a book you like, and it gives you a long list of books that are similar.  This site is also run by reader input, so I can’t be sure how close the recommendations are to what you enter, but I will probably try a couple of them.  Big picture: It’s free, it’s easy, and it gives you actual book titles instead of just author names.  There is an option to register, which may give you more information and control over your recommendations, but I’ve been too afraid of being bombarded by emails to try.  Let me know if you’re braver than I am.


Sample list of recommendations.
 
This is by far the most elaborate and accurate site of the three, and I have been a registered member for several months.  Members can rate books they’ve read, create bookshelves to organize those books by categories you choose, enter books you are reading and plan on reading, and of course receive recommendations for new books to read.  One drawback is that the site does not automatically recommend books based on your ratings like Netflix does: you can explore books to read by browsing bookshelves of members who like some of the same books you do and looking through the many helpful lists of books, or you can ask a Goodreads friend (you know, like Facebook friends) to recommend something for you.  On Goodreads you can also participate in discussion groups and book clubs and recommend books to your friends.  So far, I love it!

Some featured book lists. 
(I'm particularly attracted to the best strange and twisted memoirs.)
 Hope you find these helpful!  I think young adult readers would find these helpful, too.  Let me know if you know of any other or better book recommendation sites.

the hunt is on...

It’s been over a year since I updated this blog, and I think the time is right to take it in a new direction.  I have finished my graduate program at Vanderbilt with and M.Ed.  Yay!  Unfortunately, graduating in August, writing my thesis during prime job hunting time, and having no idea where I wanted to live until late July resulted in no teaching job for me this school year.  I’ve worked a couple of unrelated but pretty cool jobs to fill the year and my bill collectors’ pockets.

My first stop was in a preschool for kids with developmental delays.  I loved those kids, but apparently a masters degree in secondary English education does not help you one bit in teaching itty bitty kiddos.  They walked all over me, and in the end, I decided that they really needed someone who could do a much better job for them than I could.  Plus, I needed to retain my sanity for the kids I can hopefully do much better with.

My current job is working for the Bureau of Legislative Research at the Arkansas State Capitol.  During the legislative session, I proofed bills before they went to the House and Senate to be voted on.  Now we’re getting all the new laws edited and ready to be sent off to the publisher and checking to make sure the publishers don’t make mistakes.  There was a pretty big controversy last session in which an unintended ”not” made it legal for Arkansans of any age, babies on up, to get married.  Whoops!  That’s why they need me and my awesome coworkers.

Now I’m working my booty off trying to get a real teaching job for the fall.  I’ve had a few interviews and some great responses to my inquiries, but so far no news.  It amazes me how long schools drag this out!  One school district I’ve contacted says they won’t even start looking until June.  Come on people, you’re making my hair turn white.  I’m really ready for some certainty in my life for a while.  And so ready to use what I’ve been studying for 5+ years now.

Wish me luck!

Vanderbilt Reflection

One of my last assignments for my Vanderbilt career was to write a reflection on my online experiences with educators.  I made a comic on Pixton.com, a really cool, easy-to-use online comic builder.  I have used it for several comics, including my series about my old cat Smelly (I think they’re pretty entertaining.  Check them out!), and can’t wait for an opportunity for students to create their own Pixton comics.

To view the online teaching community comic, click and drag the comic side-to-side to see hidden panels.

Discworld Series


The Discworld series by Terry Pratchett has been around for nearly thirty years now, but it is new to me and probably to many young adult readers. The series, which features wizards, wordplay, and wit, is a hilarious look into an alternate universe of magic. I think any young reader (or adult) who loves fantasy and silliness would enjoy this series. It should be appropriate for readers as early as seventh grade. Enjoy!

Books for Reluctant Readers

ALA’s website has a section for YA literature with booklists updated every year, including one for reluctant readers.  There are tons of recommendations that look great.  The “Top Ten” lists are especially helpful.  This site is not the easiest to navigate, but the content is totally worth it.
I’d love to hear of any other great book lists (perhaps more condensed) for reluctant YA readers if you know of any!

Rodman Philbrick Online

Philbrick is probably best know in the young adult literature world for Freak the Mighty, the story of an unusual pair of friends who go on adventures. I highly recommend this book. Philbrick’s website is a great resource for kids. It offers the standard information about the author, the books, and the awards, but it is obvious that Philbrick genuinely cares about his fans. He has posted pictures of himself, listed his mailing address and promised to read and reply to every letter he receives, answers the top ten questions he is asked, links teaching guides for his books that he has received, and encourages young authors to write and try to get published. He included links for the Scholastic writing contests with advice to be very careful about following the rules for entry because it is very easy to be disqualified. His links to information about the movie made from Freak the Mighty, information about the medical condition one of the boys in that book has, and to his personal blog are all a great touch for the site.

I am most impressed, however, by the fact that he shares the play he has written for Freak the Mighty. He says that he has heard from many teachers who have staged versions of the book and movie, and he thinks it is wonderful. When one of his close friends wanted to stage the book, he wrote a one-act and later a two-act version. He tried to get the play published, but when it was rejected, he decided to just give it to anyone who wants it. If you send him an email address, he will send the scripts for either the one-act or two-act versions in a PDF file for free. It is exciting to see a young adult author who is so willing to help kids and teachers.

This is a great site for a great author.  Check it out!

Two New Books

I’ve come across two new books I know students will love: Pride and Prejudice and Zombies by Seth Grahame-Smith (and Jane Austen) and I Am a Genius of Unspeakable Evil and I Want To Be Your Class President by Josh Lieb.  I really enjoyed both books and am excited to share them with students.

In P&P&Z, Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy still find time to love and hate each other, but only in their time off from being action stars who must fight off zombies.  Girls will love Austen’s romance, and boys will be enthralled with the ninja zombie-killing skills.  This book could be great scaffolding into Jane Austen, but also just fun.

Click here for Goodreads review.
 In Genius, readers are told that we are being given a rare view into seventh-grader Oliver Watson’s plot to take over the world starting with his middle school.  This wildly funny book shows us that all of us, even the evil geniuses among us, deal with the same annoying struggles such as trying to make our parents proud and finding the acceptance we didn’t know we cared about.


Click here for Goodreads review.


Blog

This is a blog I’ve created for my Reading and Learning with Print and New Media class.  I’m interested in learning all I can about teaching middle school English, particularly ways to help kids become better readers.  I’d love to see any ideas you have about ways to help students develop their reading skills and anything fun you’ve come across that kids might like to read.  I’m collecting books for a classroom library and would love suggestions.  Thanks!