without a lot of fanfare this year, we acknowledged teen read week at the big house library.

all i did was i laid out  pieces of poster paper on tables and asked students to write the titles of books they've read and loved on them.

i also begged/bullied a bunch of random students who were studying into saying "happy teen read week" on camera (see video above). :)

what surprised me was how excited students were to write the title of their favorite book and tell anyone standing nearby why it they loved it.

i was also surprised to see them reading books they're not getting from our library and loving books they read in their english classes.

i'm glad we did something for teen read week, even if it wasn't anything much. :)

 
 
 
Every year in Petaluma, the superintendent of our school district comes to each campus to honor employees for their years of service.

Pins are given for 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35 and so on years of experience.

This video celebrates those educators being honored this year.

Congratulations to all 12 wonderful recipients and thank you for your 295 years of service! :)
 
 
 
During Banned Books Week in the United States, libraries across the country commemorate our freedom to read.

The U.S. Constitution guarantees Americans intellectual freedom.

You can read whatever you want whenever you want, and basically, libraries aren't allowed to rat you out.

Here at the Big House Library, we support your right to read.

So, act out, read a banned book today. :)

P.S. Thanks to Paul Yakovlev, Casa's Video Production Club, Miss Helen, and our library's awesome TAs for their help making this totally wonderful video.
 
 
 
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Dear Graduates,

I know I was hard on your senior project works cited pages and I was sometimes testy with how talkative you were during tutorial, but have I told you lately that I love you, I'm proud of you, and I'll miss you? 

Always,
Ms. Anna Koval :)

links:
senior thank yous podcast :)
casa orchestra national anthem video :)
 
 
 
 
 
Yesterday, I presented to Casa's ELAC (or English Learner Advisory Council).

Administrators, teachers, parents, and students came together in the library to review the school's resources available for families online.

Parents logged on to the new computers in the computer lab and toured CasaGrandeHighSchool.org and BigHouseLibrary.com.

The best part, though, was when I taught parents how to use Google Translate! :)

Casa has made it a goal to do more, better outreach to the families of our English learners. And the library is proud to now be a part of that effort.

Thank you to my 5th period TAs who made this awesome YouTube welcome video for our Spanish-speaking families.

Thank you to our beloved ELD (English Language Development) program coordinator Ms. Judi DeChesere, our outstanding ELD/SDAIE teachers, our dedicated bilingual assistants, and our school administrators for inviting me to be a part of ELAC.

Thank you to Jose Luis for translating for me. My Spanish leaves much to be desired!

Thank you to the handful of Casa students who hung out to help me troubleshoot computer problems.

And thank you to the many wonderful parents who spent their evening with me in the library. I am so happy to know you and I look forward to working together more. :)
 
 
 



in case you missed the tweet
the big house library now has a youtube channel! :)
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unfortunately, the website is blocked at school, 
but off campus you can tune in to youtube.com/bighouselibrary! :)



 
 

 
the new moon movie opens in theaters this week!
and we're ready for it at the big house library!
 

 
we've got new twilight themed books! :)
 

 
and we've got life-size cardboard cutouts of
edward cullen and jacob black! :)
 
(sorry not the shirtless one!)
 

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here's some pics of the new moon mania at the library!
 

 
 
 
I presented this Animoto on Tuesday, November 3, 2009 at the Petaluma City Schools District Office to our library-loving Superintendent Greta Vigue and her Advisory Council -- made up of one teacher representative from each school in the district.

Petaluma High School's teacher-librarian, Connie Williams, and I toured the committee members through our library websites and collaborative teacher projects. We talked about the Governor's initiative to move toward electronic textbooks -- something I strongly support and coincidentally just mentioned to my principal Linda Scheele and tech committee chair Tom Kinney today. And we asked about the possibility of unblocking social networking site Facebook in schools -- something I'm not so sure about yet (as you know, I am not a social networker). (The Superintendent said that she is working on a plan for that with Eileen Rohan, Director of Educational Services, and Mike Cole, Director of Business Technology.)

Connie and I offered to lead a professional development session for district teachers about the Big 6 information literacy model and/or a workshop for adult education students and parents a la the Classroom Learning 2.0 program. Though school librarians already do so much, these days there's more than ever to do, and we are happy to do whatever we can.  :)

One of the teacher reps lamented the fact that Petaluma's elementary schools no longer have any credentialed teacher-librarians at all. But we pointed out how lucky Petaluma is to have what we do have:
  • 4 secondary school libraries that are open full-time
  • 4 credentialed teacher-librarians who work full-time in just 1 school each 
  • 2 full-time library assistants, 1 at each high school (I love you, Miss Helen!)  :)
  • an inter-library loan program that give students access to materials at 4 schools instead of from just their own
  • a voter-backed parcel tax that supports school libraries  with a very healthy budget every year from now  until perpetuity (I love you, Measure C!)  :)
Though Petaluma's school libraries are well loved and well supported, who knows what the future holds. Our neighbors to the north in Santa Rosa are basically eliminating their school library programs because of budget cuts (read that story here and read Connie Williams' response to it here).

Hopefully the adoption of State School Library Standards by California's Superintendent of Schools Jack O'Connell (read that story here) will keep some districts from shutting their school library doors for good. But should it come to that, maybe Petaluma parents will fight for us the way Orange County families protested on behalf of their school libraries and the way Oregon moms got almost militant about saving their school librarians.  :)

Petaluma understands the importance of strong school libraries.  Research shows that strong school libraries have a positive, observable, measurable impact on students' academic achievement (just look at all the data from the California Department of Education and the data from 16 other states!).

Strong school libraries DO make a difference -- especially here in Petaluma.  :)
 
 
 
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It's Banned Books Week, and we're spreading the word about why banning books is bad. Visit our Banned Books Week page for more information.

This year for Banned Books Week, the Big House Library has enlisted the help of its mighty TA army to promote our freedom to read. They're busy making buttons and movies about why banning books is bad. Check back later this week to see pix and flix of their hard work. :)

Click here to watch our this movie online since the blog post only plays a minute of it.