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Perhaps of interest!

Rebecca Hopman
MLS Candidate, Archives & Records Management
University of Maryland, College Park
[log in to unmask]



[image: Speakers from a range of settings and library backgrounds have been
confirmed to participate in the ALA’s Digital Literacy Task Force program
“Creating a Culture of Learning: How Librarians Keep up with Digital Media
and Technology” Google Hangout session moderated by ALA Office for
Information Technology Policy (OITP) Fellow Renee Hobbs. This virtual
national conversation will take place Thursday, November 14, at 7 p.m. EST.
Confirmed speakers for the November 14 session are: Caroline Haebig, is
the instructional technology coordinator, Adlai E. Stevenson High School.
Haebig collaborates with teachers and administrators to improve student and
teacher engagement using technology.  She is an active member of the
International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE) Young Educator
Network and was named as the ISTE Outstanding Young Educator 2012. Jamie
Hollier is a technology, project management, and library consultant. She
has worked at the Colorado State Library, as a rural library manager, and
as a corporate librarian. Hollier was the project coordinator for the
Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) grant at the state
library. Through that project, they conducted trainings across the state
and developed a range of training tools available at
http://www.coloradovirtuallibrary.org/techtraining/. Gwyneth Jones, aka The
Daring Librarian, is a middle-school teacher librarian at Murray Hill
Middle School in Laurel, Maryland. She is a member of the ISTE Board of
Directors, and was named an Innovator and one of Library Journal’s Movers
& Shakers 2011. The Daring Librarian blog delivers “Ed-Tech Talk with
Sweet Snarky Freshness.” Bobbi Newman, aka Librarian by Day, is currently
enrolled at Iowa State University pursuing her second master’s degree.
 While working at a Missouri public library, Newman was among the first to
replicate Charlotte-Mecklenburg Public Library’s “23 Things” model, and she
has written and spoken frequently on how the library adapted and made the
program work. Newman also co-founded the award-winning Libraries and
Transliteracy Project. Dr. Anu Vedantham directs the Weigle Information
Commons at the University of Pennsylvania Libraries. Vedantham writes and
speaks extensively about the integration of technology into teaching and
learning. Her research has explored gender-related aspects of the creation
of videos by today’s college students. She has held leadership positions in
K-12 administration, the federal government and non-profit organizations.
This series of conversations is intended to create a forum for discussing
key issues and developing a vision for continued library leadership in the
digital literacy sphere. “Assessing Digital Literacy: Outcomes and Impact”
will take place December 11 at 7 p.m. EST. Join the conversation by
watching a live-stream of the panelists on YouTube and chatting with other
viewers and tweeting with the hash tag #digilit12. Questions and comments
will be submitted to panelists throughout the program. The URL for the
YouTube broadcast will be tweeted and posted to the District Dispatch by
6:30 p.m. EST, at the latest. Please RSVP for one or both conversations at
[log in to unmask] We also welcome comments or questions prior to each
conversation. Please use “Digital Literacy” as the subject
line.]<http://www.districtdispatch.org/2012/11/oitp-confirms-speakers-for-culture-of-learning-in-online-digital-literacy-forum-november-14/>

Speakers from a range of settings and library backgrounds have been
confirmed<http://www.districtdispatch.org/2012/11/oitp-confirms-speakers-for-culture-of-learning-in-online-digital-literacy-forum-november-14/>
to
participate in the ALA’s Digital Literacy Task Force program “*Creating a
Culture of Learning: How Librarians Keep up with Digital Media and
Technology”*Google Hangout session moderated by ALA Office for Information
Technology Policy (OITP) Fellow Renee
Hobbs<http://www.districtdispatch.org/2012/01/renee-hobbs-named-as-fellow-at-ala-office-for-information-technology-policy/>.
This virtual national conversation will take place*Thursday, November 14,
at 7 p.m. EST.*

Confirmed speakers for the November 14 session are:

   - Caroline Haebig, is the instructional technology coordinator, Adlai E.
   Stevenson High School. Haebig collaborates with teachers and administrators
   to improve student and teacher engagement using technology.  She is an
   active member of the International Society for Technology in Education
   (ISTE) Young Educator Network and was named as the ISTE Outstanding
   Young Educator
2012<http://www.iste.org/membership/awards-recognition/list-of-awards/outstanding-young-educator-award>
   .


   - Jamie Hollier is a technology, project management, and library
   consultant. She has worked at the Colorado State Library, as a rural
   library manager, and as a corporate librarian. Hollier was the project
   coordinator for the Broadband Technology Opportunities Program (BTOP) grant
   at the state library. Through that project, they conducted trainings across
   the state and developed a range of training tools available
at<http://www.coloradovirtuallibrary.org/techtraining/>
   http://www.coloradovirtuallibrary.org/techtraining/.


   - Gwyneth Jones, aka The Daring
Librarian<http://www.thedaringlibrarian.com/>,
   is a middle-school teacher librarian at Murray Hill Middle School in
   Laurel, Maryland. She is a member of the ISTE Board of Directors, and was
   named an Innovator and one of Library Journal’s Movers & Shakers 2011. The
   Daring Librarian blog delivers “Ed-Tech Talk with Sweet Snarky Freshness.”


   - Bobbi Newman, aka Librarian by Day <http://librarianbyday.net/>, is
   currently enrolled at Iowa State University pursuing her second master’s
   degree.  While working at a Missouri public library, Newman was among the
   first to replicate Charlotte-Mecklenburg Public Library’s “23 Things”
   model, and she has written and spoken frequently on how the library adapted
   and made the program work. Newman also co-founded the award-winning
Libraries
   and Transliteracy Project<http://librariesandtransliteracy.wordpress.com/>
   .


   - Dr. Anu Vedantham directs the Weigle Information
Commons<http://wic.library.upenn.edu/> at
   the University of Pennsylvania Libraries. Vedantham writes and speaks
   extensively about the integration of technology into teaching and learning.
   Her research has explored gender-related aspects of the creation of videos
   by today’s college students. She has held leadership positions in K-12
   administration, the federal government and non-profit organizations.

This series of conversations is intended to create a forum for discussing
key issues and developing a vision for continued library leadership in the
digital literacy sphere. “*Assessing Digital Literacy: Outcomes and
Impact”* will
take place December 11 at 7 p.m. EST.

Join the conversation by watching a live-stream of the panelists on YouTube
and chatting with other viewers and tweeting with the hash tag
#digilit12<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23digilit12&src=hash>.
Questions and comments will be submitted to panelists throughout the
program. The URL for the YouTube broadcast will be tweeted and posted to
the District Dispatch by 6:30 p.m. EST, at the latest.

Please RSVP for one or both conversations [log in to unmask] We also
welcome comments or questions prior to each conversation. Please use
“Digital Literacy” as the subject line.