From katie.anderson at state.or.us Mon Feb 1 08:57:55 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2016 16:57:55 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Learn about creating a mobile makerspace program on February 2nd, 9 a.m. PST (no-cost webinar) Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246474CA00@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Hi! I just learned about the following free webinar about mobile makerspaces and thought many of you who don't have resources to create a permanent makerspace might be interested.-Katie From: ARSL_Membership [mailto:ARSL_MEMBERSHIP at LISTSERV.AMRMS.COM] On Behalf Of Petersen, Carolyn Sent: Monday, February 01, 2016 7:24 AM To: ARSL_MEMBERSHIP at LISTSERV.AMRMS.COM Subject: [ARSL_LISTSERV] Free webinar: Creating a Mobile makerspace program , February 2nd, 9 a.m. PST Creating a Mobile makerspace program presented by Luke Ellington, North Central Regional Library, February 2, 2016, 9:00 AM PACIFIC North Central Regional Library (NCRL) developed its Mobile Makerspace program out of a desire to engage teen patrons with educational programming. To serve patrons in 30 branches across 5 counties, the program needed to be able to travel and operate with a limited number of employees. Join Luke as he describes the STEM/STEAM tools acquired and NCRL's makerspace-style approach. More importantly, he will identify the pitfalls and what NCRL is doing today. Join us as Luke describes the STEM/STEAM tools acquired and NCRL's makerspace-style approach. He'll also identify the pitfalls they discovered and what NCRL is doing today to steer clear of those in the future. * Instructions and Login for First Tuesdays session This free webinar will be archived. The archive is normally available after noon the same day. The archive is on the landing page for the First Tuesdays program. Carolyn Petersen Assistant Program Manager, Library Development Office of the Secretary of State/Washington State Library 1.866.538.4996/1.360.570.5560/Fax:360.586.7575 carolyn.petersen at sos.wa.gov ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Mon Feb 1 11:50:26 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Mon, 1 Feb 2016 19:50:26 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Youth services online learning opportunities in February Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246474D0C6@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Below is the email about free online learning opportunities coming up in April. Here are the ones specific to youth services for your convenience: Full descriptions and links to more information available on WebJunction CHILDREN & TEENS * Feb. 2: Explore and Discover: Nature-Based Spaces and Activities at your Library (WebJunction) * Feb. 2: Creating a Mobile makerspace program (Washington State Library) * Feb. 10: Bridging the Birth to 3rd Grade Workforce: Early Care and Education at the Crossroads of Transformation (Early Childhood Investigations) * Feb. 11: Books Build Better Brains: How Promoting Literacy Is Key to Early Brain & Child Development (Demco) * Feb. 17: Using Technology to Engage the Reluctant Reader (ISTE & School Library Journal) * Feb. 18: STEM-ing Out (Indiana State Library) * Feb. 24: Twig to Tree: Creativity, STEM, and the Connected School Library (AASL) * Feb. 23: Database of the Month: GoWYLD.net resources for Kids (K-8) (Wyoming State Library) * Feb. 26: Helping Homeschoolers (Colorado State Library) Other online trainings not specific to youth services, but I know many youth services librarians are interested in: * Feb. 2: Responding To Challenges -- Ensure Your Library Is Prepared (Texas State Library and Archives Commission) * Feb. 3: No-Cost Success Strategies (American Library Association, LLAMA) * Feb. 3: Excel for Grant Writers (4Good) * Feb. 3: Introduction to Fundraising Planning (GrantSpace) * Feb. 11: 2016 Knight News Challenge on Libraries (WebJunction) * Feb. 17: Major Gift Breakthrough Training (4Good) * Feb. 17: Introduction to Proposal Writing (GrantSpace) * Feb. 25: Creating a Comprehensive and Engaging Volunteer Training Program (VolunteerMatch.org) Thanks, Katie Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] From: Libs-Or [mailto:libs-or-bounces at listsmart.osl.state.or.us] On Behalf Of Darci Hanning Sent: Monday, February 01, 2016 10:14 AM To: Libs-Or at listsmart.osl.state.or.us Subject: [Libs-Or] February's Online Learning Opportunities! Greetings! There are over 50 free webinars being offered from a variety of organizations this month so now is time to get your learning on! This is was compiled by Jamie Markus, Interim Wyoming State Librarian for the Wyoming State Library. Do you have a free program that you would like to share? Add it to the Wyoming State Library calendar here: http://www.wyominglibraries.org/calendar.html. For upcoming WebJunction webinars check the WebJunction Events Calendar. NOTE: Full descriptions and links to more information available on WebJunction. Can't make it to a particular webinar? Many of these are archived, be sure to check the registration information for more details. ONLINE CONFERENCE * Feb. 26: Big Talk From Small Libraries - Multiple Programs (Nebraska Library Commission ADVOCACY * Feb. 3: Five Tips to Bring Your Organization's Story to Life Using Silk (TechSoup) * Feb. 11: Why Books Are Still A Good Library Brand (Library Journal) * Feb. 18: Strategies for Cross-Channel Marketing (idealware) CAREERS * Feb. 3: The Networking Game (Siera) CHILDREN & TEENS * Feb. 2: Explore and Discover: Nature-Based Spaces and Activities at your Library (WebJunction) * Feb. 10: Bridging the Birth to 3rd Grade Workforce: Early Care and Education at the Crossroads of Transformation (Early Childhood Investigations) * Feb. 11: Books Build Better Brains: How Promoting Literacy Is Key to Early Brain & Child Development (Demco) * Feb. 23: Database of the Month: GoWYLD.net resources for Kids (K-8) (Wyoming State Library) * Feb. 26: Helping Homeschoolers (Colorado State Library) COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT & MANAGEMENT * Feb. 2: Responding To Challenges -- Ensure Your Library Is Prepared (Texas State Library and Archives Commission) * Feb. 9: Building an E-book Collection (Infopeople) * Feb. 10: New Spring Nonfiction for the Library, Classroom and Home (School Library Journal) * Feb. 11: Introducing RDA: Resource Description and Access (American Libraries Live) * Feb. 16: 12 Things: New Directions for Collections Revisited (Montana State Library) * Feb. 23: What's New in Women's Fiction (Booklist) COMMUNICATION * Feb. 3: The Networking Game (Siera) * Feb. 5: People - Difficult or Different (Effectiveness Institute) * Feb. 9: All About Google (Utah State Library) * Feb. 10: Webinar: Podcasts and Information Professionals (Special Libraries Association) * Feb. 17: PNR Rendezvous: How Patients Use Social Media (National Network of Libraries of Medicine) DATABASES & eRESOURCES * Feb. 9: Building an E-book Collection (Infopeople) * Feb. 16: The National Agricultural Library: Agricultural Information for the 21st Century (Federal Depository Library Program) * Feb. 18: Authenticity of Information in GPO's Federal Digital System (FDsys) (Federal Depository Library Program) * Feb. 23: Database of the Month: GoWYLD.net resources for Kids (K-8) (Wyoming State Library) * Feb. 25: Genealogy Research Using the U.S. Congressional Serial Set (National Archives) DEVELOPMENT & MANAGING CHANGE * Feb. 3: Preparing Your Organization for Millennial Leaders (American Management Association) * Feb. 3: Five Tips to Bring Your Organization's Story to Life Using Silk (TechSoup) * Feb. 3: No-Cost Success Strategies (American Library Association, LLAMA) * Feb. 11: 2016 Knight News Challenge on Libraries (WebJunction) * Feb. 11: Why Books Are Still A Good Library Brand (Library Journal) * Feb. 16: Engaged Planning (University of Wisconsin-Madison SLIS) * Feb. 25: Conferences for Wyoming School Librarians (Wyoming State Library) * Feb. 26: Big Talk From Small Libraries (Nebraska Library Commission) FUNDRAISING * Feb. 3: Excel for Grant Writers (4Good) * Feb. 3: Introduction to Fundraising Planning (GrantSpace) * Feb. 11: 2016 Knight News Challenge on Libraries (WebJunction) * Feb. 17: Major Gift Breakthrough Training (4Good) * Feb. 17: Introduction to Proposal Writing (GrantSpace) LIBRARY SPACES * Feb. 2: Creating a Mobile makerspace program (Washington State Library) * Feb. 2: Explore and Discover: Nature-Based Spaces and Activities at your Library (WebJunction) MANAGEMENT * Feb. 2: Social Media and Volunteer Engagement (VolunteerMatch.org) * Feb. 3: Preparing Your Organization for Millennial Leaders (American Management Association) * Feb. 3: No-Cost Success Strategies (American Library Association, LLAMA) * Feb. 3: Excel for Grant Writers (4Good) * Feb. 9: Provoking Leadership vs Faking It (Training Magazine Network) * Feb. 17: Introduction to Proposal Writing (GrantSpace) * Feb. 18: Strategies for Cross-Channel Marketing (idealware) * Feb. 25: Creating a Comprehensive and Engaging Volunteer Training Program (VolunteerMatch.org) OUTREACH & PARTNERSHIPS * Feb. 11: Books Build Better Brains: How Promoting Literacy Is Key to Early Brain & Child Development (Demco) * Feb. 16: Engaged Planning (University of Wisconsin-Madison SLIS) * Feb. 17: PNR Rendezvous: How Patients Use Social Media (National Network of Libraries of Medicine) * Feb. 26: Helping Homeschoolers (Colorado State Library) PROGRAMMING * Feb. 2: Creating a Mobile makerspace program (Washington State Library) * Feb. 18: STEM-ing Out (Indiana State Library) * Feb. 24: Twig to Tree: Creativity, STEM, and the Connected School Library (AASL) READERS' ADVISORY * Feb. 10: New Spring Nonfiction for the Library, Classroom and Home (School Library Journal) * Feb. 23: What's New in Women's Fiction (Booklist) REFERENCE * Feb. 9: We(eding) the People Off Google - Using Government Information and Local Resources for Small Business Research (Federal Depository Library Progam) * Feb. 16: The National Agricultural Library: Agricultural Information for the 21st Century (Federal Depository Library Program) * Feb. 18: Authenticity of Information in GPO's Federal Digital System (FDsys) (Federal Depository Library Program) * Feb. 25: Genealogy Research Using the U.S. Congressional Serial Set (National Archives) SCHOOL LIBRARIES * Feb. 1: Researching 101 (TL Virtual Cafe) * Feb. 2: Responding To Challenges -- Ensure Your Library Is Prepared (Texas State Library and Archives Commission) * Feb. 2: Emerging Tech Trends in Libraries - Part 2 (Infopeople) * Feb. 3: Teaching Digital Literacy with TechBoomers.com and Other Online Resources (Nebraska Library Commission) * Feb. 3: Exploring the Engineering is Elementary Website to Enhance Your Engineering Curriculum (AASL) * Feb. 10: Bridging the Birth to 3rd Grade Workforce: Early Care and Education at the Crossroads of Transformation (Early Childhood Investigations) * Feb. 17: Using Technology to Engage the Reluctant Reader (ISTE & School Library Journal) * Feb. 17: Curation, Revisited: Aggregating Resources in 2016 (edWeb) * Feb. 17: Documenting Learning with Seesaw Digital Portfolios (AASL) * Feb. 24: Twig to Tree: Creativity, STEM, and the Connected School Library (AASL) * Feb. 25: Engaging Learners With Feedback and Collaborative Learning Environments (Education Week) * Feb. 25: Conferences for Wyoming School Librarians (Wyoming State Library) TECHNOLOGY * Feb. 2: Emerging Tech Trends in Libraries - Part 2 (Infopeople) * Feb. 3: Teaching Digital Literacy with TechBoomers.com and Other Online Resources (Nebraska Library Commission) * Feb. 9: All About Google (Utah State Library) * Feb. 16: Privacy, Society and the Internet of Things (O'Reilly) * Feb. 17: Getting Started with Digitization: An Introduction for Libraries (TechSoup for Libraries) * Feb. 17: Using Technology to Engage the Reluctant Reader (ISTE & School Library Journal) * Feb. 17: Documenting Learning with Seesaw Digital Portfolios (AASL) * Feb. 19: Wearables (Texas State Library and Archives Commission) * Feb. 24: Linked Data and Libraries: An Overview (Nebraska Library Commission) * Feb. 25: Engaging Learners With Feedback and Collaborative Learning Environments (Education Week) * Feb. 26: The Internet of Things (Texas State Library and Archives Commission) TRAINING & INSTRUCTION * Feb. 1: Researching 101 (TL Virtual Cafe) * Feb. 9: We(eding) the People Off Google - Using Government Information and Local Resources for Small Business Research (Federal Depository Library Progam) * Feb. 11: Introducing RDA: Resource Description and Access (American Libraries Live) * Feb. 18: STEM-ing Out (Indiana State Library) * Feb. 18: Authenticity of Information in GPO's Federal Digital System (FDsys) (Federal Depository Library Program) * Feb. 23: Altmetrics: An introduction to alternative metrics (University of Wisconsin-Madison SLIS) * Feb. 25: Genealogy Research Using the U.S. Congressional Serial Set (National Archives) VOLUNTEERS * Feb. 2: Social Media and Volunteer Engagement (VolunteerMatch.org) * Feb. 4: Managing Difficult Volunteer Transitions (VolunteerMatch.org) * Feb. 9: Writing Accurate and Useful Volunteer Position Descriptions (VolunteerMatch.org) * Feb. 11: Build Staff Buy-In for Volunteer Engagement (VolunteerMatch.org) * Feb. 25: Creating a Comprehensive and Engaging Volunteer Training Program (VolunteerMatch.org) Cheers! Darci [cid:image007.png at 01D15CD9.47C163D0] Ask me about the Edge Initiative! ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Darci Hanning * Technology Development Consultant Library Support and Development Services * Oregon State Library 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 503-378-2527 darci.hanning at state.or.us [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image003.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image005.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image005.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image006.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image006.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image007.png Type: image/png Size: 2223 bytes Desc: image007.png URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Tue Feb 2 15:59:29 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Tue, 2 Feb 2016 23:59:29 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Vote on the Oregon summer reading certificates by January 9th Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246474E19E@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Attention Oregon school and public library staff! It is time to vote to select the children's, teen, and all-ages 2016 Oregon Summer Reading Certificates! Please keep in mind these will be edited a little to clean things up like the black square behind the state seal before they are made available with the important signature to download and print. HOW TO VOTE: 1. View the summer reading certificate options online at: http://www.oregon.gov/osl/LD/Pages/youthsvcs/summerreading/summerreadingcertificates.aspx 2. Email the number and name of the one children's, one teen, and one all-ages certificate you want to cast your vote for to Katie Anderson (katie.anderson at state.or.us) by the end of the day January 9, 2016. Please type "Oregon Summer Reading Certificate" as the subject of your email. The winning certificates will be announced and available to download and print at the beginning of March via an email sent out on this listserv. Oregon Summer Reading Certificates will be available to download and print only (read why below if you're interested). Thank you to the librarians who designed these certificates. Regardless of which certificates win, you all did a wonderful job! Katie Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] ________________________________ Q: Why aren't hardcopies of the certificates available anymore? A: In the past, printing and distributing hardcopies of the summer reading certificates was paid for by a donation. The donation funds are no longer available. The State Library surveyed public libraries to ask if they thought printing and distributing the certificates was a good use of State Library funds. The results of the survey were shared with the executive boards of OLA's Children's Services Division and Oregon Young Adults Network, and both organizations recommended that the State Library 1) discontinue printing and distributing hardcopies, 2) make a black-and-white certificate available to download for those who don't have a color printer, and 3) provide a few local funding suggestions. The State Library decided to follow these recommendations. Q: What did libraries think of the print-only option last year? A: Libraries printed and distributed 11,563 Oregon summer reading certificates last summer! * 21 libraries reported that the certificates aren't important enough to pay for locally * 5 libraries said they didn't like the certificate designs last year, but may print them in future years if they like them * 3 libraries reported that they wanted to print the certificates, but couldn't find money locally to do so * 0 libraries reported technical issues preventing them from printing certificates -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Tue Feb 2 16:02:10 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2016 00:02:10 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Date correction: Vote on the Oregon summer reading certificates by February 9th Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246474E205@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Attention Oregon school and public library staff! It is time to vote to select the children?s, teen, and all-ages 2016 Oregon Summer Reading Certificates! Please keep in mind these will be edited a little to clean things up like the black square behind the state seal before they are made available with the important signature to download and print. HOW TO VOTE: 1. View the summer reading certificate options online at: http://www.oregon.gov/osl/LD/Pages/youthsvcs/summerreading/summerreadingcertificates.aspx 2. Email the number and name of the one children?s, one teen, and one all-ages certificate you want to cast your vote for to Katie Anderson (katie.anderson at state.or.us) by the end of the day February 9, 2016. Please type ?Oregon Summer Reading Certificate? as the subject of your email. The winning certificates will be announced and available to download and print at the beginning of March via an email sent out on this listserv. Oregon Summer Reading Certificates will be available to download and print only (read why below if you?re interested). Thank you to the librarians who designed these certificates. Regardless of which certificates win, you all did a wonderful job! Katie Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] ________________________________ Q: Why aren?t hardcopies of the certificates available anymore? A: In the past, printing and distributing hardcopies of the summer reading certificates was paid for by a donation. The donation funds are no longer available. The State Library surveyed public libraries to ask if they thought printing and distributing the certificates was a good use of State Library funds. The results of the survey were shared with the executive boards of OLA?s Children?s Services Division and Oregon Young Adults Network, and both organizations recommended that the State Library 1) discontinue printing and distributing hardcopies, 2) make a black-and-white certificate available to download for those who don?t have a color printer, and 3) provide a few local funding suggestions. The State Library decided to follow these recommendations. Q: What did libraries think of the print-only option last year? A: Libraries printed and distributed 11,563 Oregon summer reading certificates last summer! ? 21 libraries reported that the certificates aren?t important enough to pay for locally ? 5 libraries said they didn?t like the certificate designs last year, but may print them in future years if they like them ? 3 libraries reported that they wanted to print the certificates, but couldn?t find money locally to do so ? 0 libraries reported technical issues preventing them from printing certificates ________________________________ Oregon Library Association ? PO Box 3067, La Grande, Oregon 97850, United States Unsubscribe ? Privacy Policy [http://ola.memberclicks.net/message2/image/fe96001d-1a25-401e-a26c-ee139f7f534d] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Wed Feb 3 09:51:48 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2016 17:51:48 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] =?utf-8?q?Resource=3A_7_Ways_to_Cultivate_Students?= =?utf-8?q?=E2=80=99_Problem-Solving_Skills_=28K-12=29?= Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246474EB53@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> I know many of you are trying to integrate more opportunities for children and teens to do problem solving in your programs and other interactions with youth, below are 7 tips from the Search Institute that you may be interested in. If you can see the email below, view it online here. ?Katie ________________________________ [Search Institute] [red-gradient-bar] [7 Ways to Cultivate Students' Problem-Solving Skills]Parents, teachers, and other adults have developed a lot of skills and knowledge that can make it easy for us to solve problems. We've seen the situation before, and the solution may seem obvious to us, but young people are likely encountering the challenge for the first time. How do we help them tackle the problems themselves so that they develop the expertise they'll need to solve other problems in the future? Use these tips to help you think about how you support young people in solving challenges they encounter. 1. Encourage "playing with" the problem. Encourage young people to throw out lots of ideas, make conjectures, and consider many different possibilities--even some that are outlandish. Look at the problem from many perspectives. This flexible thinking is an important skill for forming better solutions than the first that come to mind. 2. Guide the young person to break a big problem into its parts. Then focus on aspects of the problem that the young person doesn't understand or that seem like they have more potential to be solved. 3. Ask the young person to work through the problem out loud. Not only does this help you coach the young person, but it also slows down the thinking process. 4. Model and talk about the problem solving process, rather than focusing on getting the right answer. Talk through the steps you take and ask the young person to do the same so that it's easier to learn. 5. Have the student work through the problem on her or his own. Give only as much assistance as you need to when the young person is really stuck. And when you do so, limit your guidance to questions or suggestions that will help the young person move through a specific issue without solving the whole problem for her or him. 6. Ask open-ended questions. Instead of, "Do you think that will fit in there?" you might ask a more open-ended question, such as, "What do you think it will take to get everything to fit inside?" Ask follow-up questions that encourage the young person to articulate their problem-solving process. This not only helps you learn and guide, but it reinforces the skills. 7. Give positive reinforcement when young people overcome an obstacle or master a new problem-solving skill. Be specific in highlighting what they have done or learned. [Positive Classroom Tools]Looking for more ways to motivate and inspire youth? Right now, all of the products included in the Positive Classroom Tools section of the Search Institute Store are 15% off.* Save on posters, bookmarks, and handouts to share with youth, parents, coworkers, mentors, or other caring adults. Visit the store now >> Copyright ? 2016 Search Institute?, 615 First Avenue NE, Suite 125, Minneapolis, MN 55413, USA; 1?800?888?7828; www.search-institute.org. All rights reserved. ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Wed Feb 3 10:08:19 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2016 18:08:19 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] How can the summer reading manual be improved? Let us know by 2/20 Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246474EC1F@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Attention Oregon public library staff who plan and implement the summer reading program at your library: The Collaborative Summer Library Program (CSLP) wants to get ideas from you about ways they can improve the summer reading manual and other resources they provide to help you plan your summer reading program. If you have ideas about how the summer reading manual and/or CSLP website can better help your library and other libraries, please take this survey by February 20th. If you don?t have any ideas for improving the summer reading resources provided by CSLP, then just delete this email now. Below is the email from CSLP with more details about the survey and why they are conducting it. Thanks, Katie All Oregon public, volunteer, and tribal libraries are members of the Collaborative Summer Library Program (CSLP), and receive a free summer reading manual. To get the most out of your membership, create an account on the CSLP website (http://www.cslpreads.org/) and you will be able to access additional summer reading resources. CSLP membership dues and manual fees are paid for by the State Library with Library Services and Technology Act funds. Summer reading manuals are distributed by OLA?s Children?s Services Division summer reading chair, summer reading feedback and suggestions are collected by OLA?s Young Adult Network CSLP Liaison, and all three of us listed below represent you on CSLP committees and at the CSLP annual meeting. For more information contact one of your CSLP representatives: * Kristy Kemper Hodge, CSD Summer Reading Incoming Chair: kristy.kemperhodge at corvallisoregon.gov * K?Lyn Hann, OYAN CSLP Liaison: klyn.hann at newbergoregon.gov * Katie Anderson, CSLP Oregon State Representative: katie.anderson at state.or.us Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] From: Karen Day [mailto:karen.day at cslpreads.org] Sent: Tuesday, February 02, 2016 6:21 AM To: statereps > Subject: CSLP Survey about Summer Manual Content for public libraries CSLP State Representatives: Please forward this message to the libraries in your state. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dear CSLP Member Librarians, CSLP strives to provide member libraries with the highest quality summer library program manual possible. It is important to us to offer useful formats that are both cost-effective and flexible. In order to keep our content relevant and available via platforms our members regularly use, we need your input. We know the communities and patrons you serve are diverse in so many ways and we are looking to be responsive to your community's unique composition. Our plan is to deliver a program manual that is genuinely helpful and regularly consulted. Your honest and open answers to these questions will help us know what our members need to plan and present a successful summer library program. Your response is vital for future planning and production of the manuals. We estimate the survey will take approximately 15 minutes for Member Librarians. Please respond by Saturday, February 20, 2016. You can find the survey by visiting https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/CSLPSurvey2016. If you have any questions about the content of the survey or experience any problems with the survey, please contact Matt McLain, mmclain at slcolibrary.org. Thank you for your time and attention! Collaborative Summer Library Program Mac Buntin, President Sherry Siclair, Executive Director Our Mission: The Collaborative Summer Library Program (CSLP) is a consortium of states working together to provide a unified summer reading theme along with professional art and evidence-based materials so that member libraries can provide high-quality summer reading programs at the lowest possible cost and to play a significant role in literacy initiatives. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Wed Feb 3 12:02:56 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2016 20:02:56 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Interested in easier outcome based evaluation? Consider Project Outcome! Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246474F057@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> ALA?s Public Library Association is offering a free webinar in which two libraries will talk about their experience using Project Outcome. They will talk about how they were able to use their results for short- and long-term programmatic changes. You will also learn how to closely analyze open-ended survey feedback to make the most of your data. This webinar is free, but registration is required and space is limited. Forgot what Project Outcome is? Read my original email about it below. Questions about the webinar? Contact the Public Library Association at plawebinars at ala.org or 800-545-2433. Questions about Project Outcome? Ask me (katie.anderson at state.or.us) or Project Outcome staff via phone 312-280-5857 or this email form. Thanks, Katie Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] From: Katie Anderson Sent: Friday, November 13, 2015 3:30 PM Subject: Frustrated by outcome based evaluation? Project Outcome for public libraries is a no-cost resource that may help! If you answer ?yes? to any of the following questions, then Project Outcome might be right for your public library! ? Do you have anxiety about conducting a proper outcome based evaluation? ? Does your public library need to do outcome based evaluation, but you don?t have the time or resources to do it from scratch? ? Are you struggling to find a good survey tool to gather information about your programs for outcome based evaluation reports? ? Are you unsure how to effectively analyze and present the results of an outcome based evaluation? ? Are you considering paying to subscribe to Impact Survey? Project Outcome is free for public libraries until at least 2017 (maybe longer!) and also gives public libraries free access to Impact Survey. Learn more: https://www.projectoutcome.org/ Interested in trying Project Outcome? Talk with your library director about it. All public library directors should have received this email on 11/5/2015. If you want more information about how Project Outcome aligns with what?s going on in the Oregon public library community, read on! If not, skip the rest of this email. Project Outcome evaluates four desired outcomes across seven types of library services and programs. The four outcomes evaluated are patrons? changes in 1) knowledge, 2) skills, 3) behavior, and 4) attitude as a result of using library services. The seven library service areas these four outcomes are evaluated in are: ? Civic/community engagement ? Digital inclusion ? Early childhood literacy ? Economic development ? Education and lifelong learning ? Job skills ? Summer reading (all ages!) As an Oregon public library, you might use Project Outcome to conduct outcome based evaluations associated with: ? Edge Initiative (digital inclusion, education and lifelong learning, job skills) ? Ready to Read grant (early childhood literacy, summer reading) ? Statewide databases (education and lifelong learning, job skills) ? Optional: Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) competitive grants (Project Outcome service areas would vary depending on your LSTA grant) Questions about using Project Outcome for statewide programs? Contact: ? Darci Hanning, darci.hanning at state.or.us (Edge Initiative) ? Katie Anderson, katie.anderson at state.or.us (Ready to Read) ? Arlene Weible, arlene.weible at state.or.us (Statewide Database Licensing Program) ? Ann Reed, ann.reed at state.or.us (LSTA) Thanks, Katie -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Wed Feb 3 14:21:33 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Wed, 3 Feb 2016 22:21:33 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Congratulations to The Dalles Library on your Teen Tech Week grant! Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246474F5D2@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> 2016 Teen Tech WeekTM Grant recipients announced ALA Member News Tue, 02/02/2016 Contact: Anna Lam Communications Specialist Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) alam at ala.org CHICAGO - The Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA), a division of the American Library Services Association (ALA) has announced the recipients of its 2016 Teen Tech Week Grants. The recipients were selected from among a pool of 52 applicants, and are as follows: * Amazing, Sarah; Warren-Trumbull County Public Library; Warren, Ohio * Blair, Jennifer; Covina (California) Public Library * Brinkley, Morgan; Arlington (Texas) Public Library * Buck, Megan; Dickinson County Library; Iron Mountain, Michigan * Collins, Molly; Tewksbury (Massachusetts) Public Library * Cox, Joanna; Davidson County Public Library; Lexington, North Carolina * Crowley, Stephen; Putnam County Library System; Palatka, Florida * Dunston, Beth; Paris (Kentucky) -Bourbon County Library * Ewell, Stephanie; Wicomico Public Libraries; Salisbury, Maryland * Gomez, Guadalupe; Haskett Library; Anaheim, California * Hoak, Megan; Dalles-Wasco County Library; The Dalles, Oregon * Holzweiss, Kristina; Bay Shore (New York) Middle School * Hones, Kay; Hilltop Pregnant Minors; San Francisco, California * Jimenez-Barrios, Ariadna; Spring Valley (California) Branch San Diego Library * Knisely, Jennifer; Altoona (Pennsylvania) Area Public Library * Mays, Marian; Washington Talking Book & Braille Library; Seattle, Washington * McKean, Kelly; Gilroy (California) Library * Richard, Jasmine; Lockport (Louisiana) Public Library * Sweany, Rachel; Louisville (Ohio) Public Library * Webb, Rebecca; Tanana Middle School; Fairbanks, Alaska Each recipient will receive a grant of $1,000 to support Teen Tech Week digital literacy programming for and with underserved or marginalized teens. Grant recipients will blog about their experience on the YALSAblog. Teen Tech Week will take place March 6-12, 2016 with the theme of "Create it at your library." Library staff are encouraged to visit and join the official Teen Tech Week website for access to free planning and promotional resources, such as digital, themed posters and bookmarks, as well as to exchange ideas with fellow library staff. Best Buy is the official national sponsor of the 2016 Teen Tech Week. As part of their support, Best Buy employees will be conducting web-making workshops for teens in more than 30 cities across the country during Teen Tech Week. To learn more, visit and sign up for a free account at www.ala.org/teentechweek. For more than 50 years, YALSA has worked to build the capacity of libraries and library staff to engage, serve and empower teens. For more information about YALSA or to access national guidelines and other resources go to www.ala.org/yalsa, or contact the YALSA office by phone, 800-545-2433, ext. 4390; or e-mail: yalsa at ala.org. About Best Buy As the leading provider of technology products and services, Best Buy is committed to igniting human potential and empowering people through technology. In the community, these efforts center around grassroots programs that support underserved teens by encouraging a passion for technology in future education and career choices. Since launching nearly a decade ago, Best Buy Teen Tech Centers and Geek Squad Academy camps have touched the lives of thousands of teens across the U.S. and Canada. Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Fri Feb 5 10:19:08 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Fri, 5 Feb 2016 18:19:08 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] 2016 American Indian Youth Literature Awards Winners Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA24647515F8@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> More from the book award season for collection development and readers? advisory consideration. From: alsc-l-request at lists.ala.org [mailto:alsc-l-request at lists.ala.org] On Behalf Of Debbie Reese Sent: Friday, February 05, 2016 10:09 AM Subject: [alsc-l] American Indian Library Association announces winners of its 2016 American Indian Youth Literature Awards Good afternoon! I'm pleased as can be to pass along winners of the American Indian Library Association's 2016 Youth Literature Award. They were announced today: Picture Book Award Winner Little You Written by Richard Van Camp Illustrated by Julie Flett Published in 2013 by Orca Book Publishers Picture Book Honor Sitting Bull: Lakota Warrior and Defender of His People Written and illustrated by S.D. Nelson Published in 2015 by Abrams Books for Young Readers Middle School Award Winner In the Footsteps of Crazy Horse by Joseph Marshall III Written by Joseph Marshall III Published in 2015 by Amulet Books Middle School Honor Dreaming in Indian: Contemporary Native Voices Edited by Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale Published in 2014 by Annick Press Young Adult Winner House of Purple Cedar Written by Tim Tingle Published n 2013 by Cinco Puntos Press Young Adult Honor Her Land, Her Love Written by Evangeline Parsons Yazzie Published in 2016 by Salina Bookshelf Link to AILA's page: http://ailanet.org/2016-aiyla-announced/ Link to AICL's page: http://americanindiansinchildrensliterature.blogspot.com/2016/02/2016-winners-of-american-indian-library.html These are terrific books! Debbie ?___________________________? Debbie Reese, Ph.D. Tribally enrolled: Nambe Pueblo Publisher of American Indians in Children's Literature Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/debreese Email: dreese.nambe at gmail.com ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Mon Feb 8 08:26:32 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2016 16:26:32 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Gotta Read This: Secondary Videos, New Books to Connect to the Curriculum Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA2464752B71@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Posted on behalf of Cathy Camper. Welcome to Gotta Read This! Are you looking for good, new books to use in your middle or high school classroom? Watch these videos, in which librarians from the Multnomah County Library School Corps introduce recently-published titles to use in the curriculum. https://multcolib.org/gotta-read We've broken them down by subject for convenience in viewing. Feel free to share the videos with other educators, too! Here?s the complete list of titles from this workshop: https://multcolib.bibliocommons.com/search?commit=Search&display_quantity=25&page=5&q=%22gotta+read+this+secondary%22+2015&search_category=tag&t=tag&utf8=%E2%9C%93 Elementary educators - if you're looking for similar titles to use in the classroom for grades K-5, here's a complete list for 2015: https://multcolib.bibliocommons.com/search?utf8=%E2%9C%93&t=tag&search_category=tag&q=%22gotta+read+this+elementary%22+2015&commit=Search -- Cathy Camper School Corps Librarian Multnomah County Library Phone:503.988.6012 Fax: 503.988.5441 cathyc at multcolib.org www.multcolib.org Follow us on Facebook and Twitter facebook.com/multcolib twitter.com/multcolib -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Mon Feb 8 15:12:00 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Mon, 8 Feb 2016 23:12:00 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Grant opportunity: Apply for $1, 000 to develop new library programs that raise awareness of multicultural literature among young people (K-12) Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246475386A@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> If you?re excited about the We Need Diverse Books campaign, but have limited resources to make the big changes you?d like to see in your library or school? you might consider applying for the Virginia Hamilton and Arnold Adoff Creative Outreach Grant for Teachers and Librarians. Read the following email for details.?Katie ________________________________ From: alsc-l-request at lists.ala.org [mailto:alsc-l-request at lists.ala.org] On Behalf Of Marianne Martens Sent: Monday, February 08, 2016 2:59 PM To: ALSC-L Listserv Subject: [alsc-l] Apply Now: Virginia Hamilton and Arnold Adoff Creative Outreach Grants for Teachers and Librarians Please excuse duplicate posts. The Virginia Hamilton Conference on Multicultural Literature for Youth is now accepting applications for the Annual Virginia Hamilton and Arnold Adoff Creative Outreach Grants for Teachers and Librarians. Each year, we offer two grants up to $1,000 each for projects to develop new classroom or library programs that raise awareness of multicultural literature among young people; particularly, but not exclusively, through the works of Virginia Hamilton. Each year, we will award one grant to a K-12 teacher and one to a school library or youth services librarian in a public library. APPLY NOW. APPLICATION DEADLINE IS FEB. 28, 2016. Eligible applicants must currently work with or plan to work with children or adolescents in any grade from preschool through high school or in a public or school library. Applicants must submit an application form, a professional reference and a proposal detailing the development of a new classroom or library program that: ? Promotes awareness of multicultural themes and issues through outstanding literature; ? Illustrates the use of exemplary multicultural literature, particularly but not exclusively the works of Virginia Hamilton; ? Demonstrates effective organization, methods and/or library service; ? Includes a plan for documenting the development of the program throughout the grant period. ? Get more information about the Outreach Grant application requirements. <><>><> Register now for the Virginia Hamilton Conference, April 7&8, 2016. All best wishes, Marianne Martens, Ph.D. Kent State SLIS ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Contact Beth Yoke at byoke at ala.org. ________________________________ Teen Creative Writing & Art Contest for Teen Tech Week As part of Teen Tech Week, YALSA is teaming up with the Connected Learning Alliance, Deviant Art, National Writing Project, and Wattpad for the Twist Fate challenge. The challenge is to get young people (ages 13-17) telling stories about what happens when a hero becomes a villain, or a villain a hero (through writing, video, digital art, animation, etc.) and sharing them across the Deviant Art and Wattpad platforms. It's happening March 6-April 6th, and to ramp up for it there will be a series of free webinars with guests including Mimi ito, Christina Cantrill, Candice Mack, Josh Wattles from DeviantArt, and Jing Jing Tan from Wattpad: Connecting the Creative Sparks of Young Makers to Supportive Communities of Practice Feb. 11, 7pm EST Storytelling and Making Redefined: Get to Know the Wattpad Community Feb. 18, 7pm EST Meet the "Deviants": Networked Artists and Makers of DeviantArt Feb. 25, 7pm EST Beth Yoke, CAE Executive Director Young Adult Library Services Association 50 E. Huron St. Chicago, IL 60611 1.800.545.2433 x4391 fax: 312.280.5276 byoke at ala.org @yalsa_director Read our report on the future of library services for & with teens www.ala.org/yaforum/project-report Connect with YALSA online: [1311194202_facebook][1311194304_twitter][1311194378_youtube][1311194466_flickr][Wordpress] ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 1082 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.png Type: image/png Size: 964 bytes Desc: image002.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.png Type: image/png Size: 1407 bytes Desc: image003.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.png Type: image/png Size: 776 bytes Desc: image004.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image005.png Type: image/png Size: 1693 bytes Desc: image005.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image006.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image006.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image007.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image007.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image008.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image008.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image009.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image009.jpg URL: From amalynai at yahoo.com Wed Feb 10 11:15:43 2016 From: amalynai at yahoo.com (Caroline OBrien) Date: Wed, 10 Feb 2016 19:15:43 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [OYAN] Time to Book the Annual SCBWI Oregon Conference!!! References: <511828262.1776415.1455131743222.JavaMail.yahoo.ref@mail.yahoo.com> Message-ID: <511828262.1776415.1455131743222.JavaMail.yahoo@mail.yahoo.com> Society of Children?s Book Writers and Illustrators Oregon Chapter presents: BETWEEN THE PAGES! The SCBWI-Oregon spring 2016 conference, Between The Pages, is a conference you?ll want to book! Ever wondered what it takes to create a children?s book from first idea to finished product? Come meet and mingle with local authors, illustrators, editors, and agents on Saturday and Sunday, May 21st and 22nd, at the Holiday Inn in Wilsonville. There will be workshops on the writing craft & the illustration process, keynote speakers, raffles, book sales, a Saturday evening party, and more! It?s also a perfect opportunity to learn more and ask questions about the publishing industry.? This year?s faculty includes: Kelly Delaney, editor?Katherine Harrison, editorSylvie Frank, editor?Danielle Chiotti, agentVictoria Marini, agentTaylor Martindale Kean, agentMartha Rago, art director?Kevan Atteberry,?author/illustratorKate Berube, author/illustratorKarl Newsom Edwards,?author/illustratorMatt de la Pe?a, author and?keynote speaker ? and recent Newbery?Award Winner!Victoria Jamieson, author and keynote speaker ? and recent Newbery Honor Award Winner!Ruth Musgrave, author?Carol Riggs, authorRosanne Parry, authorGretchen Brandenburg McLellan, authorRay Ballantyne, author WOW! What a lineup!?You do not want to miss this event.? You are welcome to attend for one or both days. Lunches are included in the registration fees. For more information or for pricing, please visit?SCBWI-Oregon?s webpage?at: | ? | | ? | | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | | Oregon | Between the Pages 2016 Annual Spring ConferenceDate/Time Date(s) - 05/21/2016 - 05/22/2016 12:00 am Location Holiday Inn Portland South (Wilsonville) 25425 SW 95th Ave - Wilsonville, OR 97070 Conference ... | | | | View on oregon.scbwi.org | Preview by Yahoo | | | | ? | https://oregon.scbwi.org/events/between-the-pages-2016-annual-spring-conference/ Hope to see you there! Caroline Adele O'Brien SCBWI-Oregon Library Liaison -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From iduncanson at beavertonoregon.gov Wed Feb 10 17:13:58 2016 From: iduncanson at beavertonoregon.gov (Ian Duncanson) Date: Thu, 11 Feb 2016 01:13:58 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Draft of Winter Meeting Minutes Message-ID: <857888AC5E44C64FA470F9BA6C1357D798F1C086@COBMAILBOX2010.beaverton.bug.org> Hello, Please see the draft of the winter meeting minutes and let Amy know if you have any changes. Thanks for a great meeting! --Ian Ian Duncanson Young Adult Librarian | Youth Services Beaverton City Library | 12375 SW 5th Street | Beaverton OR 97005-2883 p: 503.350.3610 | f: 503.469.9258 | www.BeavertonLibrary.org Work Days: Tuesday - Saturday [cid:image001.jpg at 01CDF89F.2796DFA0] PUBLIC RECORDS LAW DISCLOSURE This e-mail is a public record of the City of Beaverton and is subject to public disclosure unless exempt from disclosure under Oregon Public Records Law. This email is subject to the State Retention Schedule. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2383 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Winter meeting 1-22-16 - Minutes (Draft).docx Type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Size: 176763 bytes Desc: Winter meeting 1-22-16 - Minutes (Draft).docx URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Thu Feb 11 10:12:01 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Thu, 11 Feb 2016 18:12:01 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Summer reading ideas from the 2015 Ready to Read grant reports Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA2464774EE7@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> I just finished the 2015 Ready to Read Annual Report-read it here. While reviewing all your grant reports, I created a list of things you are doing that other libraries might want to know about. You are all doing good work so it was hard to choose, but here are a few that particularly jumped out at me-enjoy! * Best YA Books Read This Summer Booklist: We used a new teen summer reading log where participants rate the books they read over the summer with 1-5 stars. At the end of the summer, we compiled a Best of YA Books Read This Summer list and displayed them in the young adult section. * Engaging Outreach: At free lunch sites we weren't getting people to listen to stories or participate so we started a raffle. At every visit we asked youth to fill out a raffle entry with their name and what they like about summer reading. After storytime we would draw a couple names and those kids would get superhero capes and free books. This immediately increased the number of people participating in storytime at the free lunch site from 12 to 40-50 people. The prizes pulled them in, but once they started participating in storytime they got into it and would ask for favorite books to be read and re-read. After a few weeks the raffle entry forms quickly turned to, my favorite thing about summer reading is... "My sister reads me books at the park." and "I like it when my mom reads to me at night." I knew the program was a success when a little girl asked me, "Are you going to be here next week to read to us?" * Good Partnerships: "I was at a counseling appointment with my son and asked his counselor what we should do all summer. The counselor handed me your flyer and told me to go to the library!" * Library Fine Voucher: We gave out $5 library fine vouchers as summer reading prizes and they were very popular, 410 people used them at the time of this report. They have no expiration date so they may continue to be used throughout the year. * Non-Finishers Follow-up: We are following up with the families who signed up for the summer reading program, but didn't complete the reading activity. Our Friends of the Library agreed to pay all postage to mail a survey to these families with a postage paid envelope for their return responses. * Promotional Capes: Librarians wore superhero capes with the library's logo on it everywhere--during school visits, storytimes in the community, at the reference desk, etc. It immediately made library staff identifiable as being special and having an important message. Children paid attention! When they came to the library children saw everyone wearing capes and made the connection, "Oh, capes! Capes at the library! I remember someone came to my school wearing a cape and talked about the summer reading program. I want to join!" This year staff want jerseys with numbers and the Deschutes Library logo. * School Heroes: I asked each local school to pick a hero from their staff. We took 'Read' photos of them and made posters, bookmarks, and buttons. When I visited schools to promote summer reading, the kids were thrilled to see their school represented. We use buttons as prizes (like earning scouting badges or digital badges) and the kids were anxious to earn their hero button each week. This was a great way to get the schools excited about our summer reading program. * Survey Incentive: Families who turned in completed surveys at the end of summer were emailed a photo taken of their child "flying" in the library. Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Tue Feb 16 09:33:50 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Tue, 16 Feb 2016 17:33:50 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] 2016 LSTA Grant Proposals: drafts due 2/24 for review (optional), final applications due 4/15 (required) Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA24647879B6@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Posted on behalf of my supervisor, Susan Westin. Greetings - We are now in the 2016 LSTA grant application process. Since this is now a one-step process, the State Library is offering the opportunity for you to receive comments on your preliminary proposals. This step is optional. If you wish to take advantage of this opportunity, please submit your proposals by end of business on Wednesday, February 24, 2016, as a word document via email ONLY to Ferol Weyand at ferol.weyand at state.or.us. Between March 1st and 18th, members of the Advisory Council and the Library Support staff will review the submitted proposals and offer high-level feedback. The Council members and staff will not be proofreading or editing the proposal. The grant review opportunity is not a guarantee of a future high rating of the proposal nor will it be a chance to explain the proposal and have someone else improve the writing. By Mach 25th, comments will be sent back to those who submitted a preliminary proposal. Final applications must be submitted to Ferol Weyand by April 15, 2016 by 1:00 p.m. in PDF or Word format via email or mail. The LSTA Advisory Council will be meeting in mid-May to review the proposals and make funding recommendations to the OSL Board, who will be meeting on June 10. Grants will start on July 1st and end on June 30th. If you have any questions, please call or email myself or Ann Reed at 503-378-5027 or ann.reed at state.or.us. Thank you Susan Westin Susan Westin Program Manager Oregon State Library 503-378-5435 susan.b.westin at state.or.us -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Tue Feb 16 10:40:26 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Tue, 16 Feb 2016 18:40:26 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Resource: Tools for evaluating diverse children's and teen materials Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA2464787D32@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Attached are two documents for evaluating diverse content in children?s and teen materials. These documents were created by Alicia Long, an adjunct professor at University of South Florida?s Library and Information Science program. These aren?t the only two tools out there for evaluating multicultural materials, but if you don?t have time to search for and review others? these should meet your need well-enough! Thanks, Katie Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: CriteriaMulticulturalEvaluationsUSFSI.docx Type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Size: 16873 bytes Desc: CriteriaMulticulturalEvaluationsUSFSI.docx URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Wed Feb 17 11:40:28 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Wed, 17 Feb 2016 19:40:28 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Youth Services Librarian Job Opening at Winona Public Library (MN) Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA2464788FA7@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Forwarded from ALA?s Association for Library Services to Children listserv.?Katie ________________________________ Historic library in beautiful Winona, Minnesota seeking applicants: Winona Public Library Youth Services Librarian: This professional service position provides, maintains, and promotes youth services to the public, plans and develops a unified program that educates the public in the use and availability of library materials and services and promotes early literacy through collaborations, partnerships, and community committees. Advanced degree equaling a master?s in library and information science along with two (2) years of library experience required. Training in educational theories, child development, programming, or storytelling. Salary range: $54,298 to $67,872 City of Winona application must be postmarked by Friday, February 26, 2016. Initial examination will consist of a supplemental questionnaire. Applications and questionnaires available from Human Resources Office, 207 Lafayette, PO Box 378, Winona, MN 55987;507/457-8234 or www.cityofwinona.com E-mail: molson at ci.winona.mn.us EOE ------ Lezlea Dahlke Library Director Winona Public Library 151 W 5th St Winona, MN 55987 507-452-4582, ext. 376 ldahlke at selco.info ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Thu Feb 18 08:22:42 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Thu, 18 Feb 2016 16:22:42 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Grant opportunity to do book club with at-risk teens, application due 4/15 Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA24647918EB@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> I thought many of you working with at-risk teens may be interested in the Great Stories Club program for at-risk teens that is supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and ALA's Public Programs Office. There is a new grant opportunity for libraries to get books and training to run a Great Stories Club in their community. Eligible libraries are located within or working in partnership with organizations that serve at-risk youth, such as alternative high schools, juvenile justice organizations, homeless shelters, foster care agencies, teen parenting programs, residential treatment facilities and other nonprofit and community agencies. Below is the original information I received. Grant deadline: April 15, 2016 More information: http://programminglibrarian.org/articles/apply-now-great-stories-club-art-change Grant application: https://apply.ala.org/greatstories Questions: Email ALA's Public Programs office at publicprograms at ala.org Thanks, Katie Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -----Original Message----- From: Sarah Ostman > To: sagersuzanne > Sent: Wed, Feb 17, 2016 1:05 pm Subject: Pls share - Apply now for the Great Stories Club Hi Suzanne, We in ALA's Public Programs Office have just announced a new grant opportunity. Would you mind sharing it with your colleagues and members? You may have heard of the Great Stories Club, a book club program for at-risk teens, created with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities. We are now offering a new theme of the Great Stories Club under the theme "The Art of Change: Creation, Growth and Transformation." This round features three books with protagonists that use the arts to overcome personal challenges. You can find more information about the grant on the Programming Librarian website: http://programminglibrarian.org/articles/apply-now-great-stories-club-art-change. Thanks, as always, for your help! Sarah Ostman Communications Manager ALA Public Programs Office -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From jennifer.maurer at state.or.us Fri Feb 19 11:02:06 2016 From: jennifer.maurer at state.or.us (Jennifer Maurer) Date: Fri, 19 Feb 2016 19:02:06 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Easy Survey to Help w/ Study about Goal Setting & New Year's Resolutions Message-ID: Please pardon the cross-posting. The survey described below is for anyone who works in a library. It took me 5 minutes to complete. If you want to help, be aware that the survey closes on February 29th at 4 pm Pacific. https://universityofalabama.az1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5pUEgGchaLBbcO1 FYI, Jen Jennifer Maurer School Library Consultant Oregon State Library 250 Winter Street NE Salem, OR 97301 503.378.5011 jennifer.maurer at state.or.us OSLIS || www.oslis.org Learn to research. Research to learn. FOLLOW US: [facebookSmall.png] From: alscpubsch-request at lists.ala.org [mailto:alscpubsch-request at lists.ala.org] On Behalf Of Leo Lo Sent: Friday, February 19, 2016 9:53 AM To: diversity-l at lists.ala.org; uls-l at lists.ala.org; lita-l at lists.ala.org; alscpubsch at lists.ala.org; alsc-l at lists.ala.org; rusa-l at lists.ala.org; acr-igts at lists.ala.org; alctscentral at lists.ala.org Subject: [alscpubsch] Reminder: Goal Setting and New Year's Resolutions study Dear Colleagues, You are invited to participate in a survey examining New Year?s Resolutions and goal-setting habits of library employees. Leo Lo (University of Alabama) and Amelia Anderson (Florida State University) are conducting a study called New Year?s Resolutions Survey. They wish to find out library staff?s habits and behaviors of setting goals during the new year period. Taking part in this study involves completing a web survey that will take about 10 minutes. This survey contains questions about respondent demographic, goal setting habits , and new year?s resolution perceptions. The researchers will protect your confidentiality by not collecting your name. Only the researchers will have access to the data. Only summarized data will be presented at meetings or in publications. There will be no direct benefits to you (or describe benefit or incentives). The findings will be useful to the library profession for developing goal-setting programs for employees and users. The chief risk is that some of the questions may make you uncomfortable. You may skip any questions you do not want to answer. If you have questions about this study, please contact Leo Lo at leolo at ua.edu. If you have questions about your rights as a research participant . contact Ms. Tanta Myles (the University Compliance Officer) at (205) 348-8461 or toll-free at 1-877-820-3066. If you have complaints or concerns about this study, file them through the UA IRB outreach website at http://osp.ua.edu/site/PRCO_Welcome.html. Also, if you participate, you are encouraged to complete the short Survey for Research Participants online at this website. This helps UA improve its protection of human research participants. By clicking on the link below you are agreeing to participate in this survey. https://universityofalabama.az1.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_5pUEgGchaLBbcO1 The survey closes on February 29th, 2016 at 6pm (Central Standard Time). Thank you, Leo Lo and Amelia Anderson -- Leo Lo Associate Professor/Head, McLure Education Library University of Alabama Tuscaloosa, AL 35487 leolo at ua.edu about.me/leoslo ________________________________ Oregon Library Association ? PO Box 3067, La Grande, Oregon 97850, United States Unsubscribe ? Privacy Policy [http://ola.memberclicks.net/message2/image/7a5ee5c8-f56c-41ee-835d-8e2759b72d7e] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 660 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Fri Feb 19 11:05:59 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Fri, 19 Feb 2016 19:05:59 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Grant opportunity to do book club with at-risk teens, application due 4/15 Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA24647BCAA5@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Posted on behalf of Garnetta Wilker.-Katie I used a Great Stories grant a few years ago with a group of adjudicated youth who attended the local high school. It was an easy program to implement, so librarians should not be wary. Working with the partner organization really ensured a successful program. ><((((?>???`?.? .???`?.. ><((((?>?.???`?.?.???`?...?><((((?>???`?.? Garnetta Wilker Co-chair, Intellectual Freedom Committee, Oregon Library Association K-12 Representative, Oregon Statewide Database Licensing Advisory Committee Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] From: Katie Anderson Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2016 8:23 AM To: 'OYAN' ; 'oasl-all at ola.memberclicks.net' Subject: Grant opportunity to do book club with at-risk teens, application due 4/15 I thought many of you working with at-risk teens may be interested in the Great Stories Club program for at-risk teens that is supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities and ALA's Public Programs Office. There is a new grant opportunity for libraries to get books and training to run a Great Stories Club in their community. Eligible libraries are located within or working in partnership with organizations that serve at-risk youth, such as alternative high schools, juvenile justice organizations, homeless shelters, foster care agencies, teen parenting programs, residential treatment facilities and other nonprofit and community agencies. Below is the original information I received. Grant deadline: April 15, 2016 More information: http://programminglibrarian.org/articles/apply-now-great-stories-club-art-change Grant application: https://apply.ala.org/greatstories Questions: Email ALA's Public Programs office at publicprograms at ala.org Thanks, Katie Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -----Original Message----- From: Sarah Ostman > To: sagersuzanne > Sent: Wed, Feb 17, 2016 1:05 pm Subject: Pls share - Apply now for the Great Stories Club Hi Suzanne, We in ALA's Public Programs Office have just announced a new grant opportunity. Would you mind sharing it with your colleagues and members? You may have heard of the Great Stories Club, a book club program for at-risk teens, created with support from the National Endowment for the Humanities. We are now offering a new theme of the Great Stories Club under the theme "The Art of Change: Creation, Growth and Transformation." This round features three books with protagonists that use the arts to overcome personal challenges. You can find more information about the grant on the Programming Librarian website: http://programminglibrarian.org/articles/apply-now-great-stories-club-art-change. Thanks, as always, for your help! Sarah Ostman Communications Manager ALA Public Programs Office -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From jennifer.maurer at state.or.us Fri Feb 19 11:54:36 2016 From: jennifer.maurer at state.or.us (Jennifer Maurer) Date: Fri, 19 Feb 2016 19:54:36 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] School Libraries Work! => Compendium of Research & Support Updated for 2016 Message-ID: Please pardon the cross-posting. For well over a decade, Scholastic has published a compendium called School Libraries Work!, and they updated it in 2016. To download your free copy, go to http://www.scholastic.com/SLW2016/index.htm. After you enter your name and work info, you will receive a download passcode by email. This is how Scholastic describes the 30-page resource: School Libraries Work! seeks to empower librarians, classroom teachers, school and district leaders, policy makers, parents and communities by arming them with the most powerful research-based frameworks, recommendations, and support for school library programs. The 2016 compendium updates and builds upon the 2008 edition, reinforcing the most relevant themes from that report while highlighting recent research at both the national and state levels. All told, the research included in this compendium continues to show that school libraries and school librarians are a powerful force in the lives of America's children. As a side note, pages 23 and 28 reference the 2001 Oregon study done by Keith Curry Lance and others. School Libraries Work! could be useful to those who are trying to explain or demonstrate the value of strong school library programs to school and district administrators, parent or community groups, and more. Have a great weekend! Jen Jennifer Maurer School Library Consultant Oregon State Library 250 Winter Street NE Salem, OR 97301 503.378.5011 jennifer.maurer at state.or.us OSLIS || www.oslis.org Learn to research. Research to learn. FOLLOW US: [facebookSmall.png] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 660 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: From iduncanson at beavertonoregon.gov Sat Feb 20 16:48:53 2016 From: iduncanson at beavertonoregon.gov (Ian Duncanson) Date: Sun, 21 Feb 2016 00:48:53 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] OYAN - Snappy Slogans or Sayings? Message-ID: <857888AC5E44C64FA470F9BA6C1357D7BCFF443C@COBMAILBOX2010.beaverton.bug.org> Greetings OYANers, I'm working on a pull-down banner for the OLA table, which will feature the logo and the addresses of the Web site and blog. The only problem - we still have space to fill! I'm looking for a snappy slogan to add to it. So far, we have: "One for all and all for Teens" (via the Wordpress blog) Any other ideas? I'd like to get a few options and then put it out to the membership for a Survey Monkey vote. Please e-mail any ideas to me. Thanks! --Ian Ian Duncanson Young Adult Librarian | Youth Services Beaverton City Library | 12375 SW 5th Street | Beaverton OR 97005-2883 p: 503.350.3610 | f: 503.469.9258 | www.BeavertonLibrary.org Work Days: Tuesday - Saturday [cid:image001.jpg at 01CDF89F.2796DFA0] PUBLIC RECORDS LAW DISCLOSURE This e-mail is a public record of the City of Beaverton and is subject to public disclosure unless exempt from disclosure under Oregon Public Records Law. This email is subject to the State Retention Schedule. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2383 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From violetag at multco.us Mon Feb 22 11:30:56 2016 From: violetag at multco.us (Violeta GARZA) Date: Mon, 22 Feb 2016 11:30:56 -0800 Subject: [OYAN] OYAN Raffle-- looking for prize donations! Message-ID: Why hello there, OYAN. You're looking great today. As expected, I'm reaching out to ask for your help on soliciting prize donations for the raffle. New locations/items are as welcome as old ones. Please email me with your plans so I can update the spreadsheet. If you'd like more information, please let me know! Thank you for your help! Violeta -- Violeta Garza Preferred pronouns: "she" and "her" Bilingual Youth Librarian | Bibliotecaria Biling?e para Ni?os y J?venes Troutdale Library | Biblioteca de Troutdale Multnomah County Library | Biblioteca del Condado de Multnomah 2451 SW Cherry Park Rd. Troutdale, OR 97060 503.988.5355 violetag at multco.us http://www.multcolib.org Work schedule: Tuesday-Saturday "What if stories were for everyone? What if the cover of a book that looked 'different' or 'too girly' or 'too ethnic' was seen not as a deterrent, but an invitation to step outside of oneself?" --Renee Watson, author -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: From violetag at multco.us Tue Feb 23 11:29:36 2016 From: violetag at multco.us (Violeta GARZA) Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2016 11:29:36 -0800 Subject: [OYAN] OYAN Raffle-- looking for prize donations! In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: By the way, here is a sample letter with our tax ID number. Thanks to Bobbye for sharing this with me! Violeta On Mon, Feb 22, 2016 at 11:30 AM, Violeta GARZA wrote: > Why hello there, OYAN. You're looking great today. > > As expected, I'm reaching out to ask for your help on soliciting prize > donations for the raffle. New locations/items are as welcome as old ones. > Please email me with your plans so I can update the spreadsheet. > > If you'd like more information, please let me know! > > Thank you for your help! > Violeta > > -- > Violeta Garza > Preferred pronouns: "she" and "her" > Bilingual Youth Librarian | Bibliotecaria Biling?e para Ni?os y J?venes > Troutdale Library | Biblioteca de Troutdale > Multnomah County Library | Biblioteca del Condado de Multnomah > 2451 SW Cherry Park Rd. > Troutdale, OR 97060 > 503.988.5355 > violetag at multco.us > http://www.multcolib.org > Work schedule: Tuesday-Saturday > > "What if stories were for everyone? What if the cover of a book that > looked 'different' or 'too girly' or 'too ethnic' was seen not as a > deterrent, but an invitation to step outside of oneself?" > --Renee Watson, author > -- Violeta Garza Preferred pronouns: "she" and "her" Bilingual Youth Librarian | Bibliotecaria Biling?e para Ni?os y J?venes Troutdale Library | Biblioteca de Troutdale Multnomah County Library | Biblioteca del Condado de Multnomah 2451 SW Cherry Park Rd. Troutdale, OR 97060 503.988.5355 violetag at multco.us http://www.multcolib.org Work schedule: Tuesday-Saturday "What if stories were for everyone? What if the cover of a book that looked 'different' or 'too girly' or 'too ethnic' was seen not as a deterrent, but an invitation to step outside of oneself?" --Renee Watson, author -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: Raffle Appeal Letter Sample.docx Type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Size: 77711 bytes Desc: not available URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Tue Feb 23 12:37:34 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Tue, 23 Feb 2016 20:37:34 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Seeking writer and editors for CSLP Spanish-language Early Literacy Mini Manual Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA24647BF1B2@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Forwarded on behalf of the Collaborative Summer Library Program (CSLP).?Katie From: Reforma_or [mailto:reforma_or-bounces at listsmart.osl.state.or.us] On Behalf Of Marti?n Blasco Sent: Tuesday, February 23, 2016 12:33 PM To: reforma_or at listsmart.osl.state.or.us Subject: [Reforma_or] FW: Seeking writer and editors for CSLP Spanish-language Early Literacy Mini Manual Hi all, We have an exciting new initiative for the 2017 CSLP manual?a standalone Spanish-language Early Literacy Mini-Manual! This will be coordinated by the Inclusion Committee, in partnership with the Early Literacy Manual Committee. This Mini Manual will be up to 25 pages front/back, 50 total pages of text, entirely in Spanish. It will keep the same arrangement as the English-language manual: an introductory chapter; followed by a chapter for infants, one for toddlers, and one for preschoolers. The Spanish manual will be shorter (about 1/3 the pages) than the English manual, with the thought that bilingual staff can get some content from the English-language manual, but use the Spanish-language manual for program ideas and implementation. We are seeking a writer, who will be paid by CSLP, for this manual. All of the details are in the attached job description. Since our deadline for having the manual written is the end of April, this work is on a very short deadline. I am hoping that you all might be or know bilingual librarians who would qualify and be interested for this position. Please share this job description widely and encourage people you know to apply. Thank you for your help with this task. We?re also seeking a small editing committee (3-4 librarians) to accept the chapters from the writer, read them, edit, and provide feedback on a tight schedule. Demco does not have Spanish-speaking staff to edit, so we are creating our own committee. The timelines for reading and responding are on the job description. We are working with the Inclusion Committee on this project, so a few editors might come from their group as well. Applications for the writer position will go to Cheryl Space, CSLP Inclusion Committee Chair, as stated in the job description. If you?re interested in serving on the volunteer editing committee, please let either me or Cheryl know. If you or other interested parties have questions, please contact Cheryl, cspace at provcomlib.org, or me. Thanks so much for your assistance with this project! Beth Beth Crist Youth & Family Services Consultant Colorado State Library, Library Development [cid:imagebd7b4a.PNG at cafbca2b.43a8b03c] P 303.866.6908 201 East Colfax Avenue, Room 309, Denver, CO 80203 Crist_B at cde.state.co.us | www.cde.state.co.us [cid:imaged0e607.PNG at f509c5fa.4285fc22] [cid:imagea727a8.PNG at 6a2f841a.4c80ffd7] [cid:imageb666a0.PNG at cee4d367.418cbeec] [cid:image43faf5.PNG at 497dbe6b.4a846738] Email cannot be guaranteed to be secure or error-free as information could be intercepted, corrupted, lost, destroyed, arrive late or incomplete, or contain viruses. Therefore, email cannot be used to transfer files containing personally identifiable information of educators or students. Contact the intended recipient to mutually determine enhanced security options for transferring such information. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: Spanish Early Literacy Manual Writer Job Description 2016.docx Type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Size: 66479 bytes Desc: Spanish Early Literacy Manual Writer Job Description 2016.docx URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Wed Feb 24 09:27:40 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2016 17:27:40 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Open eBooks Opens World of Digital Reading to Children--free eBooks for low-socioeconomic youth (PreK-12th Grade)! Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA24647CBF89@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> The Open eBook initiative makes eBooks available for free to low-socioeconomic youth (PreK-12th Grade) via public libraries and schools who are registered with First Book. This is not a collection of public domain books! ?Publishers have generously contributed thousands of titles to Open eBooks. In order to ensure that Open eBooks provides books that speak to America?s diverse population and range of perspectives, librarians coordinated by the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) curate the collection. The goal is to create a compelling and appropriately targeted set of thousands of titles?stories that could potentially spark a lifetime love of reading.? Is my public library eligible to provide free Open eBooks to youth? First Book?s website says, ?If your library hosts a program specifically focused on supporting children from low income families, you can register that particular library program. In step one of registration, select ?At least 70% of the children I serve come from low-income families.? Then, indicate which eligibility criteria your partner uses to verify low income status.? Need more information? Read the following email and visit the Open eBooks website Want to get started? Sign-up now! Questions? The First Book Help Team can be reached at help at firstbook.org or by phone at (866) 732-3669 (8am ? 6pm EST). ________________________________ Open eBooks Opens World of Digital Reading to Children Major publishers contribute thousands of titles to benefit students in need February 24, 2016 ? Open eBooks, a new initiative and e-reader app that will make thousands of popular, top-selling eBooks available to children in need for free, is launching today. First Lady Michelle Obama is releasing a video today raising awareness of the new opportunity for children. The initiative is designed to address the challenge of providing digital reading materials to children living in low-income households, and offers unprecedented access to quality digital content, including a catalog of eBooks valued at more than $250 million. President Obama announced a nongovernmental eBooks effort in support of the ConnectED Initiative at the April 30 Kids Town Hall held by the White House at the Anacostia Branch of the District of Columbia Public Library. ConnectED is multi-pronged effort designed to provide all youth with access to high-quality digital learning tools. Since it launched, over 20 million more students have been connected to high-speed broadband in their schools and libraries and millions more are taking advantage of its free private sector resources. Open eBooks complements the new digital infrastructure to provide an opportunity for kids in need to have a world-class eLibrary in their homes. A coalition of literacy, library, publishing and technology partners joined together to make the Open eBooks program possible. The initiative?s partners ? Digital Public Library of America (DPLA), First Book, and The New York Public Library (NYPL), with content support from digital books distributor Baker & Taylor ? created the app, curated the eBook collection, and developed a system for distribution and use. They received financial support from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) and content contributions from major publishers. National Geographic announced today that they will provide all of their age-appropriate content to the app, joining publishers Bloomsbury, Candlewick, Cricket Media, Hachette, HarperCollins, Lee & Low, Macmillan, Penguin Random House, and Simon & Schuster, who made commitments providing thousands of popular and award-winning titles last year. The books in the Open eBooks collection were selected by the DPLA Curation Corps, which was established to ensure a diverse, compelling, and appropriately targeted set of thousands of titles?something from which every child could read, enjoy, and learn. The Curation Corps was selected through a competitive process from a pool of more than 140 applicants from across the country, and they bring their extensive experience helping children select titles in school and public libraries. Adults who work with children in need through libraries, schools, shelters and clinics, out-of-school programs, military family services, early childhood programs and other capacities can qualify for Open eBooks credentials by first signing up with First Book and then requesting Open eBooks access for the children they serve. Students can download the free Open eBooks app to their individual devices from the App Store or Google Play and enter their access code to start enjoying Open eBooks. ?We are thrilled to be a part of this fantastic initiative that will bridge a major gap in our society and help all children discover a love of reading,? said Dan Cohen, DPLA?s executive director. ?Maximizing access to our culture has been the Digital Public Library of America?s goal from its inception, and we are so delighted to join together with such great partners to make eBooks much more widely available.? ?The Open eBooks initiative recognizes the critical need for books ? in all forms ? among children growing up in families in need,? said Kyle Zimmer, president and CEO of First Book. ?We?re proud to support this ground-breaking effort to put high quality digital content into the hands of those who need it most, and to welcome the teachers and program leaders seeking access to these resources into the largest national network of educators serving kids in need.? ?The New York Public Library is proud to work with these partners on the Open eBooks initiative, in support of the White House?s ConnectED initiative that is perfectly aligned with NYPL?s mission to provide free and open access to information, education, and opportunity,? said Tony Marx, president and CEO of The New York Public Library. ?This program is the result of an extraordinary public-private partnership, which could not have been made possible without the support of many committed partners, particularly those in our libraries who really stepped forward to help move this vision into reality,? said IMLS Director Kathryn K. Matthew. ?Digital books open new doors to learning opportunities for students and can underpin brighter educational futures. IMLS is very proud to be a part of this unique initiative.? ?We hope that by donating our technology to this innovative program, we help expand access to information and create new reading opportunities for school-age children throughout America,? said George Coe, president and CEO of Baker & Taylor. In the future, the partners will expand the initiative by adding to the collection with new and enhanced content from publishers and public domain titles; broadening the network of Title I schools, preschools, libraries, and other programs; incorporating new features into the app; and researching and sharing the effort?s impact and best practices. Access and Equality The Open eBooks initiative is a significant step toward more equitable digital access for all U.S. residents, addressing the need for free, quality digital content for children in pre-kindergarten through high school. Specifically targeting youth in need, Open eBooks aims to ensure that any device can be enjoyed as a tool to deepen a child?s love of reading. While Internet access and device availability remain major hurdles in closing the digital divide, a recent study funded by the Gates Foundation and published by the Joan Ganz Cooney Center finds 85% of families below the poverty line have a mobile device (tablet or smartphone) in surveyed households with children aged 6 to 13. Additionally, a growing number of students can access and borrow electronic reading devices, and connect to the Internet at school and local public libraries. Open eBooks is designed to complement the Wi-Fi, computer, and physical book offerings of public libraries and school libraries, and serve as a gateway to more reading. The Open eBooks Collection The catalog of content in the Open eBooks initiative includes contributions of the most exciting, top-selling titles from publishers. Using Open eBooks, children will be able to build their own virtual collection of favorites and access single titles. The major publishers have committed to make thousands of popular and award-winning titles available to students over a three-year period include: Bloomsbury, Candlewick, Cricket Media, Hachette, HarperCollins, Lee & Low, Macmillan, National Geographic Kids, Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster. Snapshot of the Open eBooks initiative Each partner has made, and will continue to make, a unique contribution to the success of this initiative: * The app: The New York Public Library developed the app that allows users to easily access the full text and illustrations of thousands of titles generously contributed by publishers. * The distribution services: Baker & Taylor provided support with publisher relations, content management and the digital distribution technology. * The eBook collection: The Digital Public Library of America recruited and enlisted a team of expert librarians to curate the collection to ensure a diverse, compelling, and appropriately targeted set of thousands of titles?something for every child at any age and reading level to read, learn from, and enjoy. * Reaching the children: First Book, a non-profit social enterprise that provides books and educational resources to classrooms and programs serving kids in need, will tap into its network of more than 225,000 schools and programs to reach children in Title I schools, Head Start programs, military families, after school or community programs, and others serving low-income families. Qualifications The Open eBooks app is available through Title I and Title I-eligible schools as well as libraries, preschools, and community after school programs serving a minimum of 70 percent children in need. The program will also be available through schools and programs serving children whose families are enlisted in the armed forces, or serving special needs children. How do programs and classrooms get started? The Open eBooks initiative site, at www.openebooks.net, has full program instructions, including Frequently Asked Questions and links to program registration. From there, qualifying educators, librarians, community program directors, and others working with low-income children and youth must register their organization with First Book. Next, users will request a code and PIN combination for every student they serve or device available, and they should indicate the student?s grade level from one of three categories: elementary, middle or high school. Qualifying educators will be able to obtain enough codes to cover all of the students that they serve. Codes will correspond to Open eBooks Elementary Collection (for PreK ? Grade 4), Open eBooks Middle School Collection (for Grades 5 ? 8), Open eBooks High School Collection (for Grades 9 ? 12). An All Ages code will also be available. The registrant will receive a confirmation email with the codes and a letter for families and caregivers with instructions on how to download the Open eBooks app and input the code and PIN combination for their child. The app requires a device with an iOS 8.0 or later operating system or Android equivalent. The Open eBooks app allows users to instantly borrow up to 10 eBooks at a time to their digital device. Each borrowed eBook will be available for 56 days before it must be renewed, or the eBook will be automatically returned. Because of this automatic return process, there are no late fees or penalties for Open eBooks users. Students and their families can choose eBooks based on the topics that get them excited about reading and learning, and sort by reading level, grade level, or title. The app can be used anywhere with an Internet connection. The First Book Help Team can be reached at help at firstbook.org or by phone at (866) 732-3669 (8am ? 6pm EST). Information and updates on the initiative will be shared on the Open eBooks website and on Facebook and Twitter. About the Digital Public Library of America Launched in April 2013, the Digital Public Library of America brings together the riches of America?s libraries, archives, and museums, and makes them freely available to the world. Connecting digital collections of a growing network of the nation?s libraries, archives, and museums, the DPLA provides access to this collection, free to all, through its website and API. Learn more about the DPLA by watching this brief video or by visiting their website at http://dp.la. About The New York Public Library The New York Public Library is a free provider of education and information for the people of New York and beyond. With 92 locations?including research and branch libraries?throughout the Bronx, Manhattan, and Staten Island, the Library offers free materials, computer access, classes, exhibitions, programming and more to everyone from toddlers to scholars, and has seen record numbers of attendance and circulation in recent years. The New York Public Library serves more than 18 million patrons who come through its doors annually and millions more around the globe who use its resources at nypl.org. To offer this wide array of free programming, The New York Public Library relies on both public and private funding. Learn more about how to support the Library at nypl.org/support. About First Book First Book is a non-profit social enterprise that has distributed more than 135 million books and educational resources to programs and schools serving children from low-income families throughout the United States and Canada. By making new, high-quality books and educational resources available on an ongoing basis to its network of educators and program leaders, First Book is transforming the lives of children in need and elevating the quality of education. For more information, please visitfirstbook.org or follow the latest news on Facebook or Twitter. About Baker & Taylor Baker & Taylor, LLC is the premier worldwide distributor of books, digital content and entertainment products. The company offers cutting-edge digital media services and innovative technology platforms to thousands of publishers, libraries, schools and retailers worldwide. Baker & Taylor also offers industry-leading customized library services and retail merchandising solutions. Charlotte, N.C.-based Baker & Taylor is majority owned by Castle Harlan Partners IV, L.P., an institutional private equity fund managed by Castle Harlan, Inc., a leading private equity investment firm. For more information, please visit www.baker-taylor.com. Press Contacts: Info at openebooks.net The Open eBooks team is proud to support President Obama?s ConnectED Initiative. Learn more at www.wh.gov/ConnectED. ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image011.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image011.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Wed Feb 24 11:54:18 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Wed, 24 Feb 2016 19:54:18 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] =?utf-8?q?White_House_to_Recognize_OregonASK_as_=E2=80=9CC?= =?utf-8?q?hampions_of_Change_for_Summer_Opportunity=22?= Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA24647CC3F0@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Beth Unverzagt, executive director of OregonASK, is being recognized by the White House as a ?Champion of Change for Summer Opportunity? for her work, including the Summer Learning, Summer Library, Summer Lunch program (SL3). OregonASK has partnered with the Oregon Library Association and State Library to implement SL3 for past three years. OregonASK has also engaged the Oregon Library Association, State Library, and other partners in efforts to create summer learning policy for Oregon that would build on effective existing programs such as the statewide summer reading program. Thank you to all of you school and public librarians who have been involved in this work, and congratulations to Beth for her work and leadership to improve and increase summer learning opportunities for all Oregon youth, especially those who are underserved. Please read the following press release from the White House to learn more about the ?Champions of Change for Summer Opportunity.? Thanks, Katie THE WHITE HOUSE Office of Communications FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE February 23, 2016 White House to Recognize Summer Opportunity ?Champions of Change? WASHINGTON, D.C. ? On Friday, February 26, the White House will recognize nine individuals from across the country as ?White House Champions of Change for Summer Opportunity.? These individuals were selected by the White House for their leadership on investing in, operating or advocating for high-quality summer learning, meals, job opportunities, and violence prevention. They recognize that the summer ?opportunity gap? contributes to gaps in achievement, employment, and college and career success, particularly for low-income students. In recognition of the innovative and effective summer jobs, learning, and meals partnerships in cities, towns and counties, the White House will convene this Champions of Change event to highlight leaders who are turning summer from a time of loss into a time of great gain. The program will feature remarks from Administration officials and private sector leaders on their commitments to summer opportunity. Following the morning program, the Champions will participate in an afternoon Summer Opportunity Workshop with mayors and local leaders from around the country to collaborate on best practices. Administration participants include: ? Senior Advisor to the President Valerie Jarrett ? Assistant to the President, White House Cabinet Secretary and My Brother?s Keeper Task Force Chair Broderick Johnson ? Deputy Assistant to the President and Director of the Office of Intergovernmental Affairs Jerry Abramson. ? Secretary of Agriculture Tom Vilsack ? Secretary of Labor Tom Perez ? Acting Secretary of Education John King The Champions of Change program was created as an opportunity for the White House to feature individuals doing extraordinary things to empower and inspire members of their communities. The President?s My Brother?s Keeper Task Force has prioritized supporting summer learning and employment opportunities as part of its efforts to ensure all young people are reading at grade level by third grade and successfully enter the work force. Most of the individuals selected come from communities that accepted the President?s My Brother?s Keeper Community Challenge, and have created cradle to college and career strategies to address these and other opportunity gaps facing youth. The morning portion of the event will be live streamed on the White House website at www.whitehouse.gov/live/ on Friday, February 26, at 10:30 AM ET. Follow the conversation at #WHChamps. Chekemma J. Fulmore-Townsend?Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Chekemma J. Fulmore-Townsend, MSW serves as the President and CEO of the Philadelphia Youth Network (PYN), a nonprofit that builds and connects systems to equip young people for academic achievement, economic opportunity and personal success. Under Chekemma?s leadership, PYN has transformed the youth employment system and played a critical role in surpassing the city?s goal of 10,000 summer jobs in 2015. Since its inception, PYN has created more than 150,000 summer and year round opportunities for Philadelphia?s hardest to reach young people, with scalable models and collective impact strategies that have been replicated nationally and recognized globally. Bill Hanawalt?Tacoma, Washington Bill Hanawalt is the Executive Director of Peace Community Center in the Hilltop neighborhood of Tacoma, Washington, a position he has held since the Center?s opening 15 years ago. The Center supports and encourages youth historically underrepresented in college to cultivate their academic and leadership talents through in-school, after-school and summer programs for students in elementary through post-secondary education, including mentoring, tutoring, leadership development, college readiness preparation, and social and emotional skill development. Peace Community Center serves over 350 students each year and provides nearly 200 elementary, middle and high school students with summer programming. Bill also served for six years on the Board of Directors of Lutheran Services in America, is currently the Co-Chair of Tacoma?s summer and after-school network, and a member of the state-wide Expanded Learning Opportunities Council. Alec Lee?San Francisco, California Alec Lee is the co-founder and Executive Director of Aim High, an educational nonprofit serving middle school youth in the San Francisco Bay Area. For the last 30 years, Aim High has worked to narrow the opportunity and achievement gaps prevalent among students from under-resourced communities. Aim High engages students in a multi-year, free summer learning program that blends academics, enrichment, and college and career preparedness. Under Alec?s leadership, more than 9,000 students have participated since the program began in 1986. In 2016, Aim High will oversee seventeen summer campuses in five regions and serve over 2,000 students. In 2016, Aim High launched Vision 2020, a five-year plan to serve 6,000 more students, while also training hundreds of new teachers and educational leaders, and elevating support for students and alumni through strategic partnerships. Victor Francisco Lopez?Albuquerque, New Mexico Victor Francisco Lopez founded Learners Chess in 2010. Learners Chess operates with a social business model to use the game of chess as a medium through which its coaches serve as mentors to children in the Albuquerque, New Mexico metropolitan area. Over 5,300 students have participated in Learners' summer chess camps and after-school chess programs and nearly 800 students have received financial assistance through Learners' need-based scholarship fund. Victor has recruited, trained, and mentored over 30 chess coaches since 2010. Victor previously worked as a community organizer through The Center for Community Change and U.S. PIRG. Laura Huerta Migus?Arlington, Virginia Laura Huerta Migus is the Executive Director of the Association of Children's Museums (ACM), the world's largest professional society promoting and advocating on behalf of children's museums and children?s museum professionals. Throughout her career, Laura has been devoted to the growth and education of children, particularly those from underserved and under-resourced communities. Under her leadership, ACM pursues innovative and effective partnerships to leverage the power of children?s museums. The latest manifestation of this approach is ACM?s partnership with the Ultimate Block Party, which emphasizes the importance of play for healthy academic, social, and emotional development, all critical elements in addressing summer learning loss for the youngest learners. Previously, Laura served as the Director of Professional Development and Equity Initiatives at the Association of Science-Technology Centers, Inc. Riya Rahman?Waco, Texas Riya Rahman is a senior political science student at Baylor University. For the last two years, she has worked to end child hunger with the Texas Hunger Initiative (THI) and Share Our Strength?s No Kid Hungry campaign. During the 2014-15 school year, she was a No Kid Hungry Youth Ambassador on Baylor?s campus to increase child hunger awareness and advocacy among college students. This summer, she worked at THI?s Dallas Regional Office as an AmeriCorps VISTA Summer Associate, where she promoted the Summer Meals Program. Currently, Riya works at the THI Central Office as an undergraduate policy analyst where she focuses on child nutrition policy at a state and federal level. Lauren Reilly?New York, New York Lauren Reilly is the Program Director at Practice Makes Perfect (PMP), a nationally recognized summer school operator. She joined the PMP team in early 2014 after teaching in the Bronx and Harlem's charter schools. During her time at PMP, she has created the programmatic framework that has positioned the organization as a highly scalable solution to our nation's summer school crisis. In addition to improving the quality of training, Lauren oversaw the integration of a home visits program, a merit-pay system, and one of the most selective internship programs in the US, with just a 4% selection rate for the summer of 2014. Olis Simmons?Oakland, California Olis Simmons is the founding President and CEO of Youth UpRising, a multi-service youth leadership development organization started in 2005. Youth UpRising provides comprehensive, fully integrated health, wellness, educational, career, arts, and cultural programming to Alameda County youth and young adults, ages 13-24. Under Olis?s leadership, Youth UpRising has served over 13,000 youth in the East Oakland area, including over 2,100 internship placements. In 2014, Simmons partnered with the Oakland Unified School District to found Castlemont Community Transformation Schools, a cradle-to-career continuum that holds students as drivers of neighborhood improvement. Beth A. Unverzagt?Wilsonville, Oregon Beth Unverzagt has served as the Director of OregonASK since 2005. OregonASK is a collaboration of 65 public and private partners which seek to improve the quality, increase sustainability and create system support for out-of-school time programs in Oregon. Beth coordinates state level efforts around afterschool and summer programming, including OregonASK?s Summer Learning, Summer Library, Summer Lunch program, which operates at 30 sites around Oregon and focuses on high need children reading below grade level. Beth also educates policy makers, local and state representatives, educational stakeholders and afterschool professionals around the issues and resources for the field of afterschool and advocates for systemic change within statewide systems. Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA24647CC5E6@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> An Oregon public librarian just talked to someone at First Book about public library eligibility for Open eBooks and learned that if all the schools in a library?s service area are Title 1 schools, then the library may register for Open eBooks and First Book. If not, then public libraries can only register the programs they implement that target low socioeconomic youth?like Head Start Storytime or Summer Reading Outreach. Being registered for Open eBooks also allows public libraries to use other First Book resources, including books for book giveaway. The librarian was advised by First Book to spread the word, and given these instructions: ? If all the schools in your service area are Title 1, then ? Register as a non-profit ? Explanation: All elementary and middle school is Title I (or whatever is appropriate for your library service area) ? It asks for percentage low income: no matter what, put down at least 70% ? If you have any questions, please contact the First Book Help Team at help at firstbook.org or by phone at (866) 732-3669 (8am ? 6pm EST). Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] From: Katie Anderson Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2016 9:28 AM To: kids-lib at listsmart.osl.state.or.us; 'OYAN' ; Libs-Or at listsmart.osl.state.or.us Subject: Open eBooks Opens World of Digital Reading to Children--free eBooks for low-socioeconomic youth (PreK-12th Grade)! The Open eBook initiative makes eBooks available for free to low-socioeconomic youth (PreK-12th Grade) via public libraries and schools who are registered with First Book. This is not a collection of public domain books! ?Publishers have generously contributed thousands of titles to Open eBooks. In order to ensure that Open eBooks provides books that speak to America?s diverse population and range of perspectives, librarians coordinated by the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA) curate the collection. The goal is to create a compelling and appropriately targeted set of thousands of titles?stories that could potentially spark a lifetime love of reading.? Is my public library eligible to provide free Open eBooks to youth? First Book?s website says, ?If your library hosts a program specifically focused on supporting children from low income families, you can register that particular library program. In step one of registration, select ?At least 70% of the children I serve come from low-income families.? Then, indicate which eligibility criteria your partner uses to verify low income status.? Need more information? Read the following email and visit the Open eBooks website Want to get started? Sign-up now! Questions? The First Book Help Team can be reached at help at firstbook.org or by phone at (866) 732-3669 (8am ? 6pm EST). ________________________________ Open eBooks Opens World of Digital Reading to Children Major publishers contribute thousands of titles to benefit students in need February 24, 2016 ? Open eBooks, a new initiative and e-reader app that will make thousands of popular, top-selling eBooks available to children in need for free, is launching today. First Lady Michelle Obama is releasing a video today raising awareness of the new opportunity for children. The initiative is designed to address the challenge of providing digital reading materials to children living in low-income households, and offers unprecedented access to quality digital content, including a catalog of eBooks valued at more than $250 million. President Obama announced a nongovernmental eBooks effort in support of the ConnectED Initiative at the April 30 Kids Town Hall held by the White House at the Anacostia Branch of the District of Columbia Public Library. ConnectED is multi-pronged effort designed to provide all youth with access to high-quality digital learning tools. Since it launched, over 20 million more students have been connected to high-speed broadband in their schools and libraries and millions more are taking advantage of its free private sector resources. Open eBooks complements the new digital infrastructure to provide an opportunity for kids in need to have a world-class eLibrary in their homes. A coalition of literacy, library, publishing and technology partners joined together to make the Open eBooks program possible. The initiative?s partners ? Digital Public Library of America (DPLA), First Book, and The New York Public Library (NYPL), with content support from digital books distributor Baker & Taylor ? created the app, curated the eBook collection, and developed a system for distribution and use. They received financial support from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) and content contributions from major publishers. National Geographic announced today that they will provide all of their age-appropriate content to the app, joining publishers Bloomsbury, Candlewick, Cricket Media, Hachette, HarperCollins, Lee & Low, Macmillan, Penguin Random House, and Simon & Schuster, who made commitments providing thousands of popular and award-winning titles last year. The books in the Open eBooks collection were selected by the DPLA Curation Corps, which was established to ensure a diverse, compelling, and appropriately targeted set of thousands of titles?something from which every child could read, enjoy, and learn. The Curation Corps was selected through a competitive process from a pool of more than 140 applicants from across the country, and they bring their extensive experience helping children select titles in school and public libraries. Adults who work with children in need through libraries, schools, shelters and clinics, out-of-school programs, military family services, early childhood programs and other capacities can qualify for Open eBooks credentials by first signing up with First Book and then requesting Open eBooks access for the children they serve. Students can download the free Open eBooks app to their individual devices from the App Store or Google Play and enter their access code to start enjoying Open eBooks. ?We are thrilled to be a part of this fantastic initiative that will bridge a major gap in our society and help all children discover a love of reading,? said Dan Cohen, DPLA?s executive director. ?Maximizing access to our culture has been the Digital Public Library of America?s goal from its inception, and we are so delighted to join together with such great partners to make eBooks much more widely available.? ?The Open eBooks initiative recognizes the critical need for books ? in all forms ? among children growing up in families in need,? said Kyle Zimmer, president and CEO of First Book. ?We?re proud to support this ground-breaking effort to put high quality digital content into the hands of those who need it most, and to welcome the teachers and program leaders seeking access to these resources into the largest national network of educators serving kids in need.? ?The New York Public Library is proud to work with these partners on the Open eBooks initiative, in support of the White House?s ConnectED initiative that is perfectly aligned with NYPL?s mission to provide free and open access to information, education, and opportunity,? said Tony Marx, president and CEO of The New York Public Library. ?This program is the result of an extraordinary public-private partnership, which could not have been made possible without the support of many committed partners, particularly those in our libraries who really stepped forward to help move this vision into reality,? said IMLS Director Kathryn K. Matthew. ?Digital books open new doors to learning opportunities for students and can underpin brighter educational futures. IMLS is very proud to be a part of this unique initiative.? ?We hope that by donating our technology to this innovative program, we help expand access to information and create new reading opportunities for school-age children throughout America,? said George Coe, president and CEO of Baker & Taylor. In the future, the partners will expand the initiative by adding to the collection with new and enhanced content from publishers and public domain titles; broadening the network of Title I schools, preschools, libraries, and other programs; incorporating new features into the app; and researching and sharing the effort?s impact and best practices. Access and Equality The Open eBooks initiative is a significant step toward more equitable digital access for all U.S. residents, addressing the need for free, quality digital content for children in pre-kindergarten through high school. Specifically targeting youth in need, Open eBooks aims to ensure that any device can be enjoyed as a tool to deepen a child?s love of reading. While Internet access and device availability remain major hurdles in closing the digital divide, a recent study funded by the Gates Foundation and published by the Joan Ganz Cooney Center finds 85% of families below the poverty line have a mobile device (tablet or smartphone) in surveyed households with children aged 6 to 13. Additionally, a growing number of students can access and borrow electronic reading devices, and connect to the Internet at school and local public libraries. Open eBooks is designed to complement the Wi-Fi, computer, and physical book offerings of public libraries and school libraries, and serve as a gateway to more reading. The Open eBooks Collection The catalog of content in the Open eBooks initiative includes contributions of the most exciting, top-selling titles from publishers. Using Open eBooks, children will be able to build their own virtual collection of favorites and access single titles. The major publishers have committed to make thousands of popular and award-winning titles available to students over a three-year period include: Bloomsbury, Candlewick, Cricket Media, Hachette, HarperCollins, Lee & Low, Macmillan, National Geographic Kids, Penguin Random House, Simon & Schuster. Snapshot of the Open eBooks initiative Each partner has made, and will continue to make, a unique contribution to the success of this initiative: * The app: The New York Public Library developed the app that allows users to easily access the full text and illustrations of thousands of titles generously contributed by publishers. * The distribution services: Baker & Taylor provided support with publisher relations, content management and the digital distribution technology. * The eBook collection: The Digital Public Library of America recruited and enlisted a team of expert librarians to curate the collection to ensure a diverse, compelling, and appropriately targeted set of thousands of titles?something for every child at any age and reading level to read, learn from, and enjoy. * Reaching the children: First Book, a non-profit social enterprise that provides books and educational resources to classrooms and programs serving kids in need, will tap into its network of more than 225,000 schools and programs to reach children in Title I schools, Head Start programs, military families, after school or community programs, and others serving low-income families. Qualifications The Open eBooks app is available through Title I and Title I-eligible schools as well as libraries, preschools, and community after school programs serving a minimum of 70 percent children in need. The program will also be available through schools and programs serving children whose families are enlisted in the armed forces, or serving special needs children. How do programs and classrooms get started? The Open eBooks initiative site, at www.openebooks.net, has full program instructions, including Frequently Asked Questions and links to program registration. From there, qualifying educators, librarians, community program directors, and others working with low-income children and youth must register their organization with First Book. Next, users will request a code and PIN combination for every student they serve or device available, and they should indicate the student?s grade level from one of three categories: elementary, middle or high school. Qualifying educators will be able to obtain enough codes to cover all of the students that they serve. Codes will correspond to Open eBooks Elementary Collection (for PreK ? Grade 4), Open eBooks Middle School Collection (for Grades 5 ? 8), Open eBooks High School Collection (for Grades 9 ? 12). An All Ages code will also be available. The registrant will receive a confirmation email with the codes and a letter for families and caregivers with instructions on how to download the Open eBooks app and input the code and PIN combination for their child. The app requires a device with an iOS 8.0 or later operating system or Android equivalent. The Open eBooks app allows users to instantly borrow up to 10 eBooks at a time to their digital device. Each borrowed eBook will be available for 56 days before it must be renewed, or the eBook will be automatically returned. Because of this automatic return process, there are no late fees or penalties for Open eBooks users. Students and their families can choose eBooks based on the topics that get them excited about reading and learning, and sort by reading level, grade level, or title. The app can be used anywhere with an Internet connection. The First Book Help Team can be reached at help at firstbook.org or by phone at (866) 732-3669 (8am ? 6pm EST). Information and updates on the initiative will be shared on the Open eBooks website and on Facebook and Twitter. About the Digital Public Library of America Launched in April 2013, the Digital Public Library of America brings together the riches of America?s libraries, archives, and museums, and makes them freely available to the world. Connecting digital collections of a growing network of the nation?s libraries, archives, and museums, the DPLA provides access to this collection, free to all, through its website and API. Learn more about the DPLA by watching this brief video or by visiting their website at http://dp.la. About The New York Public Library The New York Public Library is a free provider of education and information for the people of New York and beyond. With 92 locations?including research and branch libraries?throughout the Bronx, Manhattan, and Staten Island, the Library offers free materials, computer access, classes, exhibitions, programming and more to everyone from toddlers to scholars, and has seen record numbers of attendance and circulation in recent years. The New York Public Library serves more than 18 million patrons who come through its doors annually and millions more around the globe who use its resources at nypl.org. To offer this wide array of free programming, The New York Public Library relies on both public and private funding. Learn more about how to support the Library at nypl.org/support. About First Book First Book is a non-profit social enterprise that has distributed more than 135 million books and educational resources to programs and schools serving children from low-income families throughout the United States and Canada. By making new, high-quality books and educational resources available on an ongoing basis to its network of educators and program leaders, First Book is transforming the lives of children in need and elevating the quality of education. For more information, please visitfirstbook.org or follow the latest news on Facebook or Twitter. About Baker & Taylor Baker & Taylor, LLC is the premier worldwide distributor of books, digital content and entertainment products. The company offers cutting-edge digital media services and innovative technology platforms to thousands of publishers, libraries, schools and retailers worldwide. Baker & Taylor also offers industry-leading customized library services and retail merchandising solutions. Charlotte, N.C.-based Baker & Taylor is majority owned by Castle Harlan Partners IV, L.P., an institutional private equity fund managed by Castle Harlan, Inc., a leading private equity investment firm. For more information, please visit www.baker-taylor.com. Press Contacts: Info at openebooks.net The Open eBooks team is proud to support President Obama?s ConnectED Initiative. Learn more at www.wh.gov/ConnectED. ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 859 bytes Desc: image002.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image003.gif Type: image/gif Size: 794 bytes Desc: image003.gif URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image004.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2098 bytes Desc: image004.jpg URL: From iduncanson at beavertonoregon.gov Thu Feb 25 13:31:51 2016 From: iduncanson at beavertonoregon.gov (Ian Duncanson) Date: Thu, 25 Feb 2016 21:31:51 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] OYAN - Vote for a Banner Slogan! Message-ID: <857888AC5E44C64FA470F9BA6C1357D7C306E554@COBMAILBOX2010.beaverton.bug.org> Hello, I have a Survey Monkey up - vote for a slogan for the OYAN banner! Please vote by the end of the day on Monday, February 29 - quick turnaround because I want to have this in time for OLA. https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/N77WK3L If anyone has any brilliant, last-minute ideas for me to add, please let me know ASAP. Thanks! --Ian Ian Duncanson Young Adult Librarian | Youth Services Beaverton City Library | 12375 SW 5th Street | Beaverton OR 97005-2883 p: 503.350.3610 | f: 503.469.9258 | www.BeavertonLibrary.org Work Days: Tuesday - Saturday [cid:image001.jpg at 01CDF89F.2796DFA0] PUBLIC RECORDS LAW DISCLOSURE This e-mail is a public record of the City of Beaverton and is subject to public disclosure unless exempt from disclosure under Oregon Public Records Law. This email is subject to the State Retention Schedule. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2383 bytes Desc: image001.jpg URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Mon Feb 29 08:32:06 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Mon, 29 Feb 2016 16:32:06 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] Gale and LearningExpress Library Training in March In-Reply-To: <203B0B8CF6665A4B822F17E789DD1AD164609D5F@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> References: <203B0B8CF6665A4B822F17E789DD1AD164609D5F@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246483C779@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Posted on behalf of my State library colleague Arlene Weible. The following free national webinars are also available to learn more about Gale products and LearningExpress Library. Click on the links listed below to register. Prefer in-person training? Contact Arlene Weible to arrange a training session for your library staff! [Gale Virtual Reference Library image icon]Gale Virtual Reference Library (GVRL) Learn more about this database of encyclopedias and specialized reference sources for multidisciplinary research. Oregon has access to over 300 e-book reference titles. March 3, 7:00 am - 8:00 am (PT) - This webinar is focused on customizing the display of eBook titles for your library March 9, 8:00 am - 9:00 am (PT) March 14, 10:00 am - 11:00 am (PT) March 16, 11:00 am - 12:00 pm (PT) - This webinar is focused on customizing the display of eBook titles for your library [Opposing Viewpoints In Context icon image sized 125px]Opposing Viewpoints in Context More than just pro/con source, this dynamic online library includes topic overviews, statistics, legislative data and more. March 22, 10:00 am - 11:00 am (PT) [Gale Usage Website] [Gale Admin Tool] Gale Usage and Administrative Tools Learn how to use these tools to manage your Gale account and gather helpful statistics. Gale Admin Tool March 2, 11:00 am - 12:00 pm (PT) March 22, 8:00 am - 9:00 am (PT) Gale Usage Portal March 10, 9:00 am - 10:00 am (PT) [cid:image010.jpg at 01D172C9.86581ED0] LearningExpress Library is an online-learning platform that provides practice tests, tutorials, and ebooks to help school age and adult learners with basic skills mastery, GED, college preparation, occupational certification tests, and computer basics and popular software video tutorials March 8, 9:00 am - 9:45 am (PT) March 24, 11:00 am - 11:45 am (PT) [Job & Career Accelerator] Job & Career Accelerator can help your patrons effectively navigate through the modern day job search, from exploring occupations and up-to-the-minute job postings, to creating the tools necessary to get hired using resume and cover letter builders. March 17, 9:00 am-9:45 am (PT) Don't forget, tutorials are also available, 24 hours a day! Gale's On Demand Tutorials LearningExpress Library Video Guides Job and Career Accelerator Video Guides Arlene Weible Electronic Services Consultant Oregon Federal Regional Depository Coordinator Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library 250 Winter St NE Salem OR, 97301 503-378-5020 arlene.weible at state.or.us http://oregon.gov/osl/ld/ FOLLOW US: [facebookSmall.png] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 7811 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image002.png Type: image/png Size: 10244 bytes Desc: image002.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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Name: image010.jpg Type: image/jpeg Size: 2586 bytes Desc: image010.jpg URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image011.png Type: image/png Size: 13143 bytes Desc: image011.png URL: From katie.anderson at state.or.us Mon Feb 29 10:14:11 2016 From: katie.anderson at state.or.us (Katie Anderson) Date: Mon, 29 Feb 2016 18:14:11 +0000 Subject: [OYAN] 2016 Summer Opportunities Funding Resource Guide In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <640435851FD7CB4AB3C4BE0D1963BA246483CCAD@OSLEXCHANGE.osl.state.or.us.local> Hi! The following email about possible funding opportunities for summer learning providers was sent out on ALA's Association for Library Service to Children listserv and I thought many of you may be interested.-Katie ________________________________ From: alsc-l-request at lists.ala.org [mailto:alsc-l-request at lists.ala.org] On Behalf Of Angela Hubbard Sent: Monday, February 29, 2016 9:52 AM To: alsc-l at lists.ala.org Subject: [alsc-l] 2016 Summer Opportunities Funding Resource Guide In the words of the National Summer Learning Association, " Never stop thinking about the next funding opportunity," for your summer learning and reading programs. NSLA, along with the White House, Civic Nation and the U.S. Department of Education, has released a 2016 Summer Opportunities Funding Resource Guide to point you in the right direction. The guide includes descriptions of over 30 potential federal opportunities and multiple stories of how organizations and agencies have collaborated to access state and local funding to support summer learning programs. For more information and to download an accompanying Action Toolkit, visit www.summerlearning.org. ________________________________ Katie Anderson, Youth Services Consultant Library Support and Development Services Oregon State Library, 250 Winter St. NE, Salem, OR 97301 katie.anderson at state.or.us, 503-378-2528 [cid:image004.png at 01D0358C.4523C4D0] [http://www.thewwwblog.com/images/blogger-logo.jpg] [http://www.aethlonmedical.com/assets/001/5130.png] [Picture] -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: image001.png Type: image/png Size: 923 bytes Desc: image001.png URL: -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... 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