In this Show: Gretchen from the Mommycast at PodcampEDU Produced By: Andy Bilodeau
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Blog: Critical Literacy in Practice - CLIP Podcast (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Critical Literacy in Practice - CLIP Podcast (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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In this show: Stephanie Stockman at PodcampEDU Produced by : Andy Bilodeau

Blog: Critical Literacy in Practice - CLIP Podcast (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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In this show: Joel Mark Witt at PodcampEDU

Blog: Critical Literacy in Practice - CLIP Podcast (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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In This Show: Tammy Munson at PodcampEDU

Blog: Critical Literacy in Practice - CLIP Podcast (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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In this show: Andy Carvin at PodcampEDU

Blog: Summer Friend (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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We forced one of my brothers to go with us to hit the boutiques last week. He and I got caught up in some discussion while my mom and sister traipsed ahead. And that's when I said it, something brilliant:
Brother: That's brilliant!
Me: Really?
Brother: Yeah, that's really good . . . so true. [He begins to expound upon my brilliant point.]
Me: Maybe I'll save it for one of my stories.
We catch up to Mom and M.
Brother: Hey, listen to what Danette said: Lkdjjf 9e kdkjkjfhgidanv, and so lkdi ncien kdfjjiaodfn andinn eienfirumey.
[Mom nods. M is awestruck by the sheer wisdom of my words.]
I was thinking about this last night. Mainly because I cannot remember what I said. My brother does not remember what I said either. I know better than this--I keep a notebook by my bedside and parts of Violet Raines were written on the backs of grocery receipts--I should have written it down! Whatever I said was enough to impress my brother, and he's a tough audience. Now mankind is forever bereft of that piece of brilliance. I guess John Bartlett will not be calling me after all.

Blog: Crazy For Kids Books (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Even though this is above the age level I usually write about, it is such an awesome way to spread a love of books that I had to pass it along. This young man shares the books that he's found meaningful and have helped shape his view of the world. Classics (in the original sense of Marcus Aurelius), science fiction, philosophy, pop culture, psychology, sociology, current fiction, poetry, etc. which, when set to music ["Slow Motion(Explicit Version)" from "Third Eye Blind: A Collection (Remastered)"] become social commentary.
My son is working on his personal music biography, and this is somewhat the same idea. This would be a great reading list for anyone, but for young people coming of age at this time in this culture, the titles are particularly appropriate. I am fascinated by the communication opportunities that new social media communities like YouTube present to all of us. This is just as valid a way to communicate the importance of books in our lives as any other. It's also going to reach a lot more people than BookTV. Check it out. I'd love to hear your comments.

Blog: Here in the Bonny Glen (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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I confess that when I first heard about Twitter, I rolled my eyes. The concept seemed to me the ultimate in navel-gazing. Sharing our thoughts via blogs and feeds isn't enough? We need little widgets for zapping out little thought-bulletins so that no writer need wait for the 20-minute chunk of time it takes to write a blog post? Do we really need more undeveloped, spontaneous fragments of one another's thoughts flitting across our screens?
Then came the wildfires, and I became a Twitter convert, just like that. All week, the KPBS Twitter feed has provided the fastest updates on fire and evacuation news. Whoever is manning that feed is doing the work I don't have time to do: listening to scanners, sifting through the TV and government-agency reports, compiling all the bits and pieces of information so crucial during an event like this—and getting that info out to the public as fast as it comes in.
This is practical information, not commentary or reflection. It's topical, timely, a sort of 21st-century twist on the old phone tree. "
Tower 23 in Pacific Beach is offering 12 hotel rooms to evacuees for the next 2 nights- call now 858-270-2323," twitters KPBS. If I were looking for a place to stay, this would be just the kind of pertinent, just-the-facts-ma'am information I would need.
Jonathon Mulholland ponders our changing news needs:
We really are approaching a turning point in news dissemination. We want information quicker than traditional media sources can deliver, we want it pushed to us at point of the event, and we want to be able to engage with it as it happens.
I was shocked to realise yesterday that I now consider even traditional web news outlets to be ‘old’ and slow. I was frustrated that I was getting quicker/better updates on the fires from Twitter than from bbc.co.uk/news - and I’m of the generation that would rather look up the news on BBC or CNN than wait till the evening bulletin!
Surely traditional news outlets, and official news suppliers such as government agencies, fire departments etc will start using new/social media services as channels for disseminating official information. A FEMA Twitter account, properly managed, would be a valuable service. Easy for affected citizens to opt in or out of, and a quick fire method for sending advice, updates and warnings.
This week's fire news-watch has me reconsidering my initial dismissal of Twitter's usefulness. I'm still not interested in the kind of breezy, trivial "right now I'm sitting in a Starbuck's about to renew my library books online" kind of Twittering I saw when I first visited the home page." I mean, enjoy your latte, but honestly I could put the three seconds it took to read that to much better use.
But event- or crisis-Twittering, there's an idea with potential. You can set up your Twitter feed to be public or selected-viewers-only. That means that if there were a family crisis, you could get information out to your loved ones (and only your loved ones) rapidly, easily, instantly.
I'm thinking about other ways this technology could be useful. The "Blogging for a Cure" event, for example. Many of us across the kidlitosphere are posting regular updates with links to each day's Robert's Snow posts, and some bloggers have even set up post-schedules in their sidebar. It's been great, having so much access to the information—but it does mean a lot of us have been duplicating efforts. (And I for one have dropped the ball on many a day.) Is there a way to use Twitter to update with links to each post as it airs? I don't know; I'm just thinking out loud here.
In any case, Twitter is definitely an application with possibilities for good. The KPBS feed has made that quite clear.
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Blog: Just One More Book Children's Book Podcast (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: childrens books, Lorie Ann Grover, ReaderGirlz, empowerment, social media, Podcast, Interviews, Add a tag
In the days before the Internet and online social media tools, authors were extremely inaccessible; fans and book clubs functioned in isolation. Now, entire networks exist that relate to specific books and book genres.
On this edition of Just One More Book!, Mark speaks with Lorie Ann Grover, author and co-founder of ReaderGirlz, an online community that exists to empower young female readers and promote the authors that contribute.
Participate in the conversation by leaving a comment on this interview, or send an email to [email protected].
Photo: readergirlz.com
Tags:childrens books, empowerment, Lorie Ann Grover, ReaderGirlz, social mediachildrens books, empowerment, Lorie Ann Grover, ReaderGirlz, social media
I keep a pad by the side of my bed to write down all my brilliant thoughts and dreams. Then when I go to see what I have written, damned if I can read my own handwriting. There ought to be a better way, but if there is, it has eluded me thus far. Perhaps a tape recorder? I'd probably manage to get the tapes all messed up or fail to press some vital button...
I thought I detected a chill in the air right about that time. Your brilliant statement must have disturbed the aether. So don't worry if you can't remember it. It's already out there in the world having it's effects.
It'll come back. Right in the middle of the night or while you are taking a shower, somewhere completely nonconducive to write the thought down, but it will come back. Just be ready!!
The thought faery has given it to me. And yes, it is quite brilliant. I've already written a chapter around it.
;-)
p.s. I really hate when that happens. I try to capture dialogue between my kids so my writing sounds more authentic. Sometimes I forget a key word or phrase and it bothers me for days.
That reminds me of the old story about the pot smoker to whom a great secret of the universe would occur at the peak of every high, just before he passed out. Unfortunately, the next morning he wouldn't be able to recall it.
One evening, at the height of his daily stupor, giggling and wolfing down munchies, he stumbled over to his desk and managed to write the great secret down before collapsing onto the floor.
The next morning he eagerly grabbed the sheet of paper and read:
"There is a funny smell in the room."
Hi Mary,
I've thought about that tape recorder before: Note to self.
Charles,
Ha! Good to know!
I have learned my lesson, Ello. BE READY!
Ha! Church Lady LOL!
Stephen,
I know what you mean. I can only hope if the thought returns to me, that it's as brilliant in person as it's been in absentia.
Go to a quiet place, take a couple of deep breaths and start running through the conversations that you had with your brother and it will come back to you...
I also keep a notepad by the bedside...I started keeping one of those little book lights next to it because I would try to write down my thoughts in the dark to keep from waking hubby...couldn't read a thing the next day...the light helps me write without bothering him...
I am sad for the lost piece of brilliance, but on the other hand this is a perfect excuse to by a really nifty looking pocket sized notebook. There is nothing more fun than indulging in writing stuffs! In my humble opinion.
Damn! Bummer. I'll be looking out for it and if it comes my way, I'll let you have it right back.
I keep a notebook next to my bed and carry a bitty one in my purse, though I've jotted down my ideas on anything handy - napkins, backs of receipts, etc. I bet it will come back to you yet.
Happy New Year!a