Monday, October 17, 2016

We Just Clicked

Have you ever met someone and it felt like you've known each other for ages, as kindred spirits?

I was corresponding pretty frequently last week with two of my favourite people, Melanie Mulcaster @the_mulc and Jennifer Brown @JennMacBrown, about some big projects and ideas when this realization hit me like a ton of bricks - I've only known them this calendar year (2016). In fact, I've only met Melanie face to face twice - at Treasure Mountain Canada and at Maker Ed Toronto. I've only met Jennifer once in person, at that same Maker Ed Toronto event in July.

Despite this brief period of time together, I have to admire and thank Melanie and Jennifer for pushing my thinking, supporting my experiments, and providing feedback in thoughtful, caring, engaged ways.

You can tell by my Twitter feed how important these two have become. This is a copy-and-paste of my notifications.

  1. After a day in bed with a wicked flu what could be better than an impromptu with & ? A win maybe?
  2. Not sure - wondered too - perhaps the Google tech held some teachers back from promoting it - learning curve maybe?
  3. I also laugh at myself say "we are doing..." - should say we are trying for the first time! LOL
  4. Oct 14
     liked some Tweets you were mentioned in
    Oct 14
    our approach as well, am also collaborating w Ts in their classes
  5. I don't have any scheduled book exchange so it offers me more flexibility with small group & whole class visits
  6. our approach as well, am also collaborating w Ts in their classes
  7. Oct 14
     liked your Tweets
    Oct 14
    . Great idea! My Jr Div kids have lobbied 4 & got MakerSpace time during Lib periods after book exchange if time

  1. we are doing the intro workshops during instructional day then "open" maker times after school
  2. I had grades 1,4,5,7,8 sign up. So 3 sessions grade 4 with another teacher, grade 1 on their own, grade 5,7,8 together
  3. same most activities will be grade 4 and up
  4. I am very new to being a Google believer but wow - I am totally hooked now! Still lots to learn!
  5. Oct 14
     liked some Tweets you were mentioned in
    Oct 14
    to not tu lol
  6. to not tu lol
  7. I sent the link to staff & they facilitated it. I want to get tu the point I just send it the kids' Google accounts.
  8. How did you do the Google forms? Kids did it in class? or when they came to the LLC?
  9. Oct 14
     liked a Tweet you were mentioned in
    Oct 14
    I used google forms for sign up & the google spreadsheet tool has saved my brain tonight for the scheduling!
  10. I used google forms for sign up & the google spreadsheet tool has saved my brain tonight for the scheduling!
  11. I don't know what I would do without you 2 when I need advice about all of this!!!! ❤️
  12. Oct 14
     liked some Tweets you were mentioned in
    Oct 14
    I plan on doing the Safety Skeletons first as per my last tweet. We can compare successes/next steps :)
  13. Have I told you that I love that you're my friends? <3
  14. I plan on doing the Safety Skeletons first as per my last tweet. We can compare successes/next steps :)
  1. Organize into groups prim/ jnr/int/. Int 1st - use as mentors and instructors 4 prim/jnr. Do over several days
  2. thoughts about the ideal way to schedule everyone?
And all of this transpired over the course of just a single day!

Jennifer has saved my bacon more than she's realized. I am the school library editorial board representative on Open Shelf, the official online publication of the Ontario Library Association. I've had trouble trying to solicit articles from school library professionals because these are typically very busy people with not a lot of time to spare to write, and we have another publication (The Teaching Librarian, OSLA's magazine) to fill with content as well. Not only has Jennifer written an article for Open Shelf, she's agreed to be a regular columnist! Look for her "It's Elementary: Adventures in School Libraries" articles to appear in late 2016. (I should also mention that her writing is impressive - it's the right mix of emotion and information, personal and professional. Open Shelf's readers are going to love it.)

Melanie is an inspiration. She created and ran a course on the TVO site Teach Ontario called "MakerSpaces on the Spot and on a Dime". I've been asked to do something similar about graphic novels. I didn't think I could do it. Melanie set the bar too high! Melanie's course is absolutely incredible, a pedagogical gold mine. She (and the fabulous Alanna King, who runs the very-popular book clubs on Teach Ontario) answered my numerous email questions patiently and reassuringly.

Both these teacher-librarians have also been incredibly helpful and supportive with my finger knitting endeavours. Melanie told me about a fabulous place to buy yarn inexpensively. Jennifer has offered to host finger knitting socials at her house. When I post photos of my work in progress, they often like, retweet or reply to them.

I feel blessed and fortunate to have met this pair of human dynamos. I'm sad that, since we are in different school boards (Peel vs Toronto), we don't have the opportunity to meet as often as I'd like. However, thanks to social media and the immediacy of texts and emails, their advice and words of encouragement are close by. I can hardly wait until the OLA Superconference when we'll be there simultaneously (with thousands of other library folks, but we'll find each other among the crowds).

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