Sentences with phrase «teacher librarians who»

Public outcry over those changes resulted in retention of seven full - time teacher librarians who shared teaching responsibilities, provided information technology training and helped manage programs district - wide that assisted library clerks in each school.
Here we speak to the architect behind the award - winning library and the teacher librarian who now manages it.

Not exact matches

The gop has alienated so many people from so many walks of life that the only voter represented by them will be a 50 year old white man who mistrusts minorities and women and unions and non christians and seniors and government employees and teachers and librarians and nurses and postal workers and immigrants and firefighters and I have probably left out quite a few of you who they have managed to insult this past year.
His mother was a librarian / teacher who also kept strict order at home, from cooking their meals to even ironing their sheets.
Will teachers and librarians who direct students toward books decide to challenge them with a nonfiction book that has so many words in it?
Here Comes The Sun Yoga, is offering this one - day course for teachers, administrators, camp counselors, parents, child psychologists, librarians, or any professionals who work with children and want to introduce yoga, mindfulness and meditation into their classrooms, careers and lives.
Teacher and librarian - types, mommies who read bedtime stories to their babies, and general readers of all shapes and sizes... climb up here and settle in for this review of a fabulous read.
I am a librarian / teacher who has two grown children.
There's Lucinda Bond (Joan Cusack), a loony librarian who can't drive straight; May Dooley (Jane Krakowski), a down - and - out dance teacher in need of a shoulder to lean on; and Jefferson Jasper Renee Berk (Stanley Tucci), a masterful magician with tons of tricks up his sleeve.
«We knew already there was a passionate inner circle of people - librarians, teachers, university professors - who upheld children's literature but also realized there was a whole vast crowd of people who aren't quite giving children's book their due,» he said.
As the school librarian and a teacher who is keenly interested in literacy, I want my students to think of themselves as writers.
Others are chosen because they are librarians or computer lab teachers who can go to coordinator meetings without requiring substitutes.
Most of the site's users are teachers, school and public librarians, information technology users, parents, and parents who teach their children at home, according to Skufca.
Now, with a new resource from the Harvard Family Research Project (HFRP), the case - study method is being brought into the field of family engagement, with the introduction of a toolkit that allows teachers, librarians, afterschool staff, or anyone who works with kids to write their own cases and begin to use them to develop their practice
This can be used by History teachers and Librarians who wish to teach Year 7 or 8 students how to research a period of History using only Library r...
Above all, I am a pragmatist who works (and lives) with real teachers, real librarians, real administrators, and real students on a day - to - day basis, and I recognize that normal people tend to think about technology a great deal less than technology enthusiasts do.
K — 12 schooling already employs a large number of school - based personnel who are not teachers; support staff (including aides, librarians, guidance counselors, and so forth) account for about 30 percent of school employees.
It's worth pointing out that teachers, librarians, counselors and coaches make the list of people who might opt to use a pseudonym online.
Review: Smore offers a discounted educator membership ($ 59 / year)-- meant for teachers, librarians, consultants, church members, parents, volunteers, or anyone who will use the site for educational purposes (and is not selling anything).
Institutes offer district leaders, technology directors, principals, librarians, and teacher leaders opportunities to build a network of peers who work together to solve problems, share feedback, and offer practical support and training, regardless of where a district is in the journey to become future ready.
Among the thousands of participants who engaged in professional education at HGSE this past summer, new college presidents worked together to prepare for their roles as leaders of higher education institutions; scores of academic librarians met to discuss the challenges facing their ever - changing field; and over 100 early career principals developed leadership skills to better support teacher development and student achievement.
Students who attend schools with certified teacher - librarians and quality library facilities perform better on standardized tests and are more likely to graduate, even after controlling for school size and student income level.
Of course, the greater the attention to teachers and principals, the less notice has been taken of the many other adults who work in schools and districts: nurses, librarians, instructional coaches, principal supervisors, social workers, guidance counselors, human resource directors, bus drivers, and the list goes on.
Loertscher looked at two groups of teachers: one group who teach alone, and another group who co-teach with their school's teacher - librarian.
Teacher - librarians who teach information literacy skills, collaboratively plan with their teaching colleagues and facilitate professional learning have a direct impact on student success.
David Loertscher and Carol Koechlin have created this website to inform, challenge, and provide many resources to teacher librarians, school administrators, and classroom teachers who want to transform their traditional school libraries into Library Learning Commons.
These one - week summer seminars, held at prestigious universities and historic sites around the United States are open to full - time K - 12 history, social studies, and English language arts teachers; community college faculty; school librarians; National Park Service interpreters and New Teacher Fellows (students about to graduate from college with a degree in history or education, who intend to pursue a teaching career).
There are a number of teacher librarians in the San Francisco school district who know how to coteach.
«How many more students won't reach their full potential because they won't have access to counselors, librarians and other programs and supports; how many children will become needlessly sick — or worse — because there are no nurses available; and how much more can possibly be asked of our teachers and school employees, who have already stretched themselves beyond reasonable limits to educate our children?»
KAPPAN: After we announced the theme of this month's issue of Kappan — on the many adults, beyond teachers and principals, who matter to student success — we received manuscripts about a variety of people who work directly with children: Librarians, counselors, nurses, social workers, bus drivers... but no manuscripts about the people who work in school district central offices (behind the scenes, in a sense).
A teacher is someone (including for example, a school librarian or guidance counselor) who provides elementary or secondary school students with direct services directly related to classroom teaching.
Yes, we were fortunate to have good teachers and school librarians (who are also certified teachers, by the way), who worked together on lessons and made us realize there are «curricular connections».
Sabrina Jankowski is a 5th grade classroom teacher at Mountain View Elementary who worked with Ms. Gibney both when Ms. Gibney was a teacher - librarian and in her role as a digital - literacy teacher.
«This is required reading by every teacher librarian, because as you recognize a teacher like Mark in your building who is doing something different, pounce on that person to help out and partner in the experimentation!»
LGHS English Teacher Tonya McQuade decided to tackle the project after meeting with Los Gatos Town Librarian Henry Bankhead, who was looking for ways to promote authorship in the community when he teamed up earlier with Smashwords.
Over the course of our conversations, this student who had just recently started working as a new school librarian mentioned that she had gotten affirmation from a teacher about how she was already doing more than the previous librarian had done.
Unfortunately, it isn't the first time I've heard a teacher quick to praise the new school librarian who is supposedly doing so much more than the former one, especially in the case of a younger person replacing an older person.
Here is a timely — and time - saving — guide for teachers, librarians, and school media specialists who need to get quickly up - to - speed on podcasting.
Several studies prove the positive effect of having licensed media specialists (school librarians who are both licensed teachers and librarians).
JoKnowles: The #NerdyBookClub and all the teachers and librarians who help get our books into readers» hands #kidlit # 3gr8things
We're creating the newsletter for parents, grandparents, teachers, librarians, young readers and adults who love kid lit.
Teachers, librarians, and parents can access the additional features by being one of the first 10,000 to sign up in the US; those who work with young readers in some for outside of the classroom or outside of the US but are still interested in the club's additional features will be able to download them from the website.
Students who complete the program are eligible to apply for the Teacher Librarian added endorsement.
Include solo building librarians, school librarians who travel between multiple campuses, paraprofessionals acting alone on campuses, certified teachers pursuing librarian credentials, nonprofessional assistants, district directors, and department heads.
It's especially satisfying when I hear that from people who are now librarians, editors, teachers, and bloggers.
Parents, teachers and librarians needed a book recommendation guide for those precocious tweens — ages 11 or 12 — who are looking for a book that challenges their advanced reading skills but avoids the sex and swearing that frequently can be found in contemporary young adult (YA) lit.
She said: «It's really gratifying for me now to hear from adult fans who read the books when they were kids, who have now grown up to be writers themselves, to become editors, teachers, librarians.
If you are a teacher or librarian, and you want students who are reading a copy of a book that is shared among six Kindles, the answer to the question for you may very well be YES.
In the case of a YA novel or children's book, look around for be age - appropriate relatives, neighborhood kids, or the children of your friends — or perhaps you know a teacher or librarian who would be willing to read some or all of it aloud to students and collect feedback.
Because the «gatekeepers» in this case are adults who happen to be teachers and parents and librarians who have personal experience with adult indie books (or young adult indie).
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