If you're not making noise, moving and shaking things up, your program is stagnant! Here are some great ideas to get you started or to enhance what you already have:
Check out this Power Point presentation from LEND 2017 for area and Texas and New Mexico libraries;
Make Some Noise
Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social media. Show all posts
Friday, June 9, 2017
Thursday, November 3, 2016
Hot Tech Tools for the Classroom and Beyond
Hot Tech Tools for Classroom and
Beyond
Some for
testing, some for studying, some just for fun!
List by Pamela Thompson, LMS
http://www.flubaroo.com/ Use with Google docs; self-grading tests,
send reports, and best of all, email students their grades. Save time grading.
Flubaroo does it for you!
https://edshelf.com/ Get a free account; extensive collection of
apps, web links, lessons that teachers can use and add content of their own. A
great place for ideas!
https://infogr.am/ Create charts and infograms for free.
http://www.cdc.gov/bam/gameroom.html games for kids from the CDC; interactive
learning
https://www.geoguessr.com/ Students can play in single or challenge
mode; guess their location using blank world map and photo. Great fun!
http://bighugelabs.com/ Free site to make your photos into amazing
things! Movie posters, puzzles, mosaics, special filters.
http://www.fotobabble.com/ create talking photos and slideshows. Add a
message to photos.
http://www.flashcardmachine.com/ create flashcards to study for your next
exam; share them with students, friends or study groups.
http://www.funbrain.com/ games to hone math and reading skills; fun!
http://www.imagechef.com/ Choose a photo/image and add your own words;
share to Twitter or Facebook.
Thursday, January 14, 2016
Humorous Pick: Kill the Boy Band
Kill the Boy Band
by Goldy Moldavsky
Point
2016
320 pages
ISBN: 9780545867474
Available February 23, 2016
I have a huge fan girl crush, and it's for the new YA book Kill the Boy Band which is everything hilarious about fandom, fan fic, and fan girls! Straight off the pages of a teen rag or a fan girl's Twitter feed, this book amazes. Spot on dialog with popping snark and "me first" just because I deserve it attitude, Kill the Boy Band is so funny it nearly aches.
Four fan girl BFFs (two go to the same school, the other two are online "friends" who know each other only from Twitter, text and DM's--don't hate--I met some of my BFF librarian friends online first and then in person, lol) agree to meet in NYC and rent a room at the hotel where their beloved boy band, the Ruperts (all the boys in the band have the real first name of Rupert--go figure), will stay while in New York. Fooling all their parents is easy since the adults seem clueless; with the help of Apple's family maid, who checks the girls into the hotel, their plan of meeting their idols is finalized. Now to find out which room the "boys" are in. Isobel wants to post inside scoop for her blog, and readers will soon find out that Erin has much darker ideas for the boys.
After an unexpected coup at the ice machine, Apple returns with an unconscious Rupert P. The girls tie him up so he won't run off. It goes from bad to worse when Apple wants to keep him as her very own pet and Isobel snaps photos to post. At first the girls question their options, but finally talk themselves into full blown kidnapping. Rupert P. is having none of it; he argues and tries to escape. The girls have to gag him. Then they have the problem of Rupert K.'s fake girlfriend who keeps trying to find him. She's becoming a real pest.
The kidnapping and felony charges/prison time does not sit well with our narrator (who never tells us her own name). She escapes to the hotel bar where an older bartender--she calls him Civil War Bartender--berates all fan girls in general for their foolish and foppish attempts to see/touch/hear/kiss/scream at/possess their idols. He tells her that someday in the future she'll be at a college party and someone will mention the Ruperts and say what a loser band they were. She does not believe Civil War Bartender at the time.
An unexpected but blissful encounter on the roof with her real crush, Rupert K., has our narrator in the throes of romantic tizzy, but it all comes crashing down (literally). When bestie Erin informs the others of her real plans for the boy band, the narrator nearly loses it.
All this mayhem is just the beginning; the story gets trippier and messier but, oh, so fun! Goldy Moldavsky has a great time satirizing boy bands, fandom, and pop culture. The media frenzy and pop culture hype created by social media makes this a believable read. #fangirllove, #KTBBrocks, #foreverRuperts! Shout out and heads up: Texas librarians, Goldy is coming to TLA in Houston this year! Score!
Highly, highly recommended and addictive grade 9-up. Profanity, sexual innuendo, mature themes, bad fan girl behavior, bad boy band behavior, sex, sexting.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received the ARC from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
by Goldy Moldavsky
Point
2016
320 pages
ISBN: 9780545867474
Available February 23, 2016
I have a huge fan girl crush, and it's for the new YA book Kill the Boy Band which is everything hilarious about fandom, fan fic, and fan girls! Straight off the pages of a teen rag or a fan girl's Twitter feed, this book amazes. Spot on dialog with popping snark and "me first" just because I deserve it attitude, Kill the Boy Band is so funny it nearly aches.
Four fan girl BFFs (two go to the same school, the other two are online "friends" who know each other only from Twitter, text and DM's--don't hate--I met some of my BFF librarian friends online first and then in person, lol) agree to meet in NYC and rent a room at the hotel where their beloved boy band, the Ruperts (all the boys in the band have the real first name of Rupert--go figure), will stay while in New York. Fooling all their parents is easy since the adults seem clueless; with the help of Apple's family maid, who checks the girls into the hotel, their plan of meeting their idols is finalized. Now to find out which room the "boys" are in. Isobel wants to post inside scoop for her blog, and readers will soon find out that Erin has much darker ideas for the boys.
After an unexpected coup at the ice machine, Apple returns with an unconscious Rupert P. The girls tie him up so he won't run off. It goes from bad to worse when Apple wants to keep him as her very own pet and Isobel snaps photos to post. At first the girls question their options, but finally talk themselves into full blown kidnapping. Rupert P. is having none of it; he argues and tries to escape. The girls have to gag him. Then they have the problem of Rupert K.'s fake girlfriend who keeps trying to find him. She's becoming a real pest.
The kidnapping and felony charges/prison time does not sit well with our narrator (who never tells us her own name). She escapes to the hotel bar where an older bartender--she calls him Civil War Bartender--berates all fan girls in general for their foolish and foppish attempts to see/touch/hear/kiss/scream at/possess their idols. He tells her that someday in the future she'll be at a college party and someone will mention the Ruperts and say what a loser band they were. She does not believe Civil War Bartender at the time.
An unexpected but blissful encounter on the roof with her real crush, Rupert K., has our narrator in the throes of romantic tizzy, but it all comes crashing down (literally). When bestie Erin informs the others of her real plans for the boy band, the narrator nearly loses it.
All this mayhem is just the beginning; the story gets trippier and messier but, oh, so fun! Goldy Moldavsky has a great time satirizing boy bands, fandom, and pop culture. The media frenzy and pop culture hype created by social media makes this a believable read. #fangirllove, #KTBBrocks, #foreverRuperts! Shout out and heads up: Texas librarians, Goldy is coming to TLA in Houston this year! Score!
Highly, highly recommended and addictive grade 9-up. Profanity, sexual innuendo, mature themes, bad fan girl behavior, bad boy band behavior, sex, sexting.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received the ARC from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
Labels:
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YA
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Cover Reveal, Book Giveaway and Jeff Strand's FIVE Best Zombie Movies
You can follow the reveal @JeffStrand and @SourcebooksFire #GreatestZombieMovieEver
From Sourcebooks Fire:
THE
GREATEST ZOMBIE MOVIE EVER Cover Reveal and Sneak Peek
The Greatest Zombie Movie Ever
Author: Jeff Strand
Release Date: March
1, 2016
Publisher:
Sourcebooks Fire
Jeff Strand gives
readers a sneak peek at his latest novel The Greatest Zombie Movie Ever, and shares his five
favorite zombie movies:
Jeff Strand’s Five Favorite Zombie Movies:
My
five favorite zombie movies are very similar to many other people’s five
favorite zombie movies. I could’ve gone the condescending click-bait route and
written about “The Five Best Zombie Movies You’ve Never Seen!” but, no, I’m going with my five real
favorites….
#5:
DAWN OF THE DEAD (2004 version). I was one of the many people bellowing, “You
can’t remake DAWN OF THE DEAD! This is blasphemy! Blasphemy!!!” But somehow this remake to a sequel (but not
a sequel to the remake) turned out to be awesome. Not quite as good as the
original (SPOILER ALERT: That’s #3 on this list) but one of my all-time
favorites.
#4:
RE-ANIMATOR. I’ve now seen plenty of movies that are more over-the-top insane
than RE-ANIMATOR, but this was the first movie where I simply couldn’t believe
what I was watching. It was hard to believe that a movie so dark and gruesome
could be so funny.
#3:
DAWN OF THE DEAD (1978 version). Shameful confession: When I first saw this in
high school I thought it was stupid and boring. Fortunately, I matured and
accepted that it’s one of the high points of zombie cinema. It’s the reason I
know to duck before walking toward spinning helicopter blades.
#2:
RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD. Fast zombies long before 28 DAYS LATER! The first
time zombies ate brains! It doesn’t often get the credit it deserves, but this
is one of the most influential zombie movies ever.
#1:
SHAUN OF THE DEAD. The greatest zombie comedy ever. The greatest zombie movie ever. The greatest MOVIE ever.
About THE
GREATEST ZOMBIE MOVIE EVER:
After producing three horror movies that went mostly ignored on
YouTube, Justin and his filmmaking buddies decide it’s time they create
something noteworthy, something epic. They’re going to film the Greatest Zombie
Movie Ever. They may not have money or a script, but they have passion. And,
after a rash text message, they also have the beautiful Alicia Howtz—Justin’s crush—as the lead.
With only one month to complete their movie, a script that can’t
possibly get worse, and the hopes and dreams of Alicia on the line, Justin is
feeling the pressure. Add to that a cast of uncooperative extras and
incompetent production assistants, and Justin must face the sad, sad truth. He
may actually be producing The Worst Zombie Movie Ever…
About
Jeff Strand:
Jeff Strand has written more than twenty books, and is a four-time
nominee (and four-time non-winner) of the Bram Stoker Award. Two of his young
adult novels, A Bad Day For Voodoo and I Have A Bad Feeling About This, were Junior Library Guild picks. Publishers Weekly called his work
“wickedly funny.” He lives in Tampa, Florida.
Excerpt
from The Greatest Zombie Movie
Ever:
The vampire, whose
fangs were too big for his mouth, turned to the camera and hissed.
"Don't look at
the camera," said Justin Hollow, the director.
"I keep poking
my lip on these things," said Harold, spitting the plastic fangs out onto
the ground. He hadn't been a very frightening example of the undead before, and
he was even less scary with no fangs and a thick line of drool running down his
chin.
"Cut!"
shouted Justin, loud enough to be sure
that the command was heard by his production crew of two. "C'mon, Harold. Stay in character. We're
three hours behind schedule."
"I don't care.
I hate this. You promised that I'd get all the girls I wanted. So where are all
of the girls I want?"
Justin let out his
thirty-ninth exasperated sigh of the night. "The movie has to come out
first."
"It's not even
a real movie."
Justin bristled. It
was a full body bristle, head to toe, which he hadn't even realized was
physically possible. Bobby, who handled sound recording, and Gabe, who handled
everything else, both stepped back a couple of feet. Neither of them truly
believed that they were about to witness a murder, but they wanted to get out
of the splash zone, just in case.
Had this been one of
Justin's movies, he would have very slowly lowered his camera, stared directly
into Harold's eyes with a steel gaze, and then after an extremely dramatic
pause asked "What...did...you...just...say?"
His actual response,
delivered in a squeakier voice than he would have allowed from his actors, was:
"Huh?"
"I said it's
not a real movie." Harold started to wipe the fake blood off his mouth. It
didn't come off, and probably wouldn't for several days. Justin had planned to
feel guilty about this later, but now he wouldn't bother. "Nobody's ever
going to see it. You probably won't even finish it."
"I finished my
last three movies!" Justin insisted. "I got hundreds of hits on
YouTube!"
That statement was
technically accurate, though it was the lowest possible number of hits you could get and
still use "hundred" in its plural form. The only comment anybody
posted about his latest film had been "This twelve year-old filmmaker sort
of shows promise," which really frustrated Justin since he was fifteen.
Harold shrugged.
"This is a waste of time. I've got better things to do on a Friday night."
"Nobody ever
said this was going to be easy," said Justin, who had indeed said that it
was going to be easy when luring Harold into the role. "You can quit now,
but what are you going to think about your decision ten years from now?"
"I'm going to
think, wow, it sure is nice to be such a well-paid dentist."
Harold walked off
the set. It wasn't an actual set, but rather a small park near Justin's home,
where they were filming without a permit. Justin knew he should shout something
after his ex-actor. Something vicious. Something devastating. He thought about shouting
"You'll never work in this town again!" but, no, it had to be
something that Harold would consider a bad thing.
"Fine!" Justin shouted.
"But when we record the audio commentary track for the Blu-Ray, I'm going
to talk about how you abandoned us, and how much happier everybody was with the
new actor who took your role, and how we all agreed that he should have been
cast in the first place, and how he had so many girlfriends that he couldn't
even keep track of them, and how they all found out about each other and had a
great big awesome catfight in his front yard! And I'll pronounce your name
wrong!"
Harold continued
walking, apparently not heartbroken.
Pre-Order
The
Greatest Zombie Movie Ever:
Enter to
Win an Advance Copy of The Greatest Zombie Movie Ever:
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Thursday, June 11, 2015
YA and Technology Trends: A Student from Australia Interviews Me!
Australian student Stella C. asked me my thoughts on a project she is working towards. She is (in her own words): "... a 12 year student in Sydney, Australia, working towards my HSC major work for society and culture." Her area of study is this topic:
"What will be the impact on YA literature with the increasing reliance on technology and how must authors change to accommodate to new diverse margins of society."
She asked me questions and I answered her as thoughtfully as I could. With her permission, I am publishing this interview. I think her questions are well thought out and insightful and help us to understand what teens are thinking about YA literature and social media not only here in the U.S. but in Australia as well. Stella, thank you for asking me these important and timely questions and allowing me to publish them here.
Interview:
Hollywood takes a book and brings it to life with film magic. A real reader does that for herself or himself. A reader imagines the "scenes" in the book and sees the action. Films make it possible for those who don't read to enjoy the stories. I think Hollywood does justice to YA novels for the most part.
"What will be the impact on YA literature with the increasing reliance on technology and how must authors change to accommodate to new diverse margins of society."
She asked me questions and I answered her as thoughtfully as I could. With her permission, I am publishing this interview. I think her questions are well thought out and insightful and help us to understand what teens are thinking about YA literature and social media not only here in the U.S. but in Australia as well. Stella, thank you for asking me these important and timely questions and allowing me to publish them here.
Interview:
1.
What are your thoughts on young adult fiction as
a popular culture?
YA fiction has become a part of pop culture as it moves from
books and content on the Internet into movies and mainstream Hollywood. Actors
who star in YA movies, think "Twilight" and "Divergent" go
on to act in feature films; for example, Jennifer Lawrence gained the teen
audience in "The Hunger Games"
yet went on to win an Oscar for her performance in "Silver Linings Playbooks"
and was nominated for "American Hustle." She has become one of the
highest paid actors in Hollywood.
2.
What do you think young adult fiction targets
for their audience?
If it is a great book the target is to entertain, to say
something necessary, to bring to life characters who are amazing in some way
yet seriously flawed in others, to set up events that impact the main
character, to have the character face obstacles and overcome them in some way,
and to have the character somehow changed by his/her journey. The reader should
come away from the book feeling satisfied. Even if a main character dies, the
reader should still feel good about reading the book. A great book impacts the
reader; the reader will think about that book for a great long while, think To
Kill a Mockingbird.
3. Do you
think this genre of novels is growing? And if so, why is there a dramatic
change?
It has been taking over the publishing market since Harry Potter. It
will continue to grow as fan fiction is growing online. Many twelve year old
readers are becoming writers as we speak. The next decade looks promising for
publishing and fiction.
4. Do you think that
literature and novels will be a short-lived life?
Literature will never be
short lived. That's like asking if music will be short lived. Notes never go
away. Words never go away. A new musician or writer will think of a new way of
using them.
5. Do you think easy
access to movies and fan fiction ultimately persuades you to avoid written
work?
Absolutely not! I attend the Texas Teen Book Festival each year in
Austin, Texas, which has grown to include over 150 authors per year. Thousands
of readers flock to see the books and authors. I am happy to say that readers
were buying tons of books in print. This is not to say that Ebooks and digital
reading are not accessible. Many readers find that they like the heft and feel
of the printed book. It totes well. You don't have to worry about wires or
connectivity or getting it wet. You can read in almost any light source.
6. What are your personal thoughts on eBooks, kindles and
other source of technology which enhances the reading experience?
I'm not sure
this technology "enhances" the reading experience. It makes it
possible to read in a variety of ways. It may help some people to learn to
read. The technology makes it possible for all sorts of learners to be able to
enjoy a book.
7. Why is there such a stigma attached to adults who read
young adult fiction?
Is there a stigma? Really? The Hunger Games, Twilight and
even The Diary of a Wimpy Kid did not get to the New York Times bestseller list
by teens who read them. Certainly hundreds of thousands if not millions of
adults read them. Fans of dystopian fiction read both YA dystopian fiction and
adult dystopian fiction. In fact, there is no line in the sand between the two.
I think this "stigma" is imagined--I have not seen anyone in the U.S.
say that adults should not read YA. In fact, it's just the opposite. You should
read what you want.
8.
How does social media and technology help
promote young adult fiction?
You are asking a blogger! The epitome of what I do
is promote new and exciting titles in YA fiction. Technology makes that
possible.
9.
How does the film industry present young adult
adaptation? Why isn’t the film not targeted to a specific age group? How do you
think they break the age barrier?
Hollywood takes a book and brings it to life with film magic. A real reader does that for herself or himself. A reader imagines the "scenes" in the book and sees the action. Films make it possible for those who don't read to enjoy the stories. I think Hollywood does justice to YA novels for the most part.
10. Do you
think the film acknowledged the author’s true ambitions of the novels’ themes?
It depends if the author is involved with the screen writing or not. In the
case of several YA novels into films, the authors have had a say in screenplay
and on the set. If the author has no say, the writers, directors and producers
have a free for all if they want.
11. What do
you think will be the next step for these authors and young adult fiction for
the upcoming generations?
To continue to offer the best stories with the most compelling characters. I have heard several authors comment that writing for the YA crowd is a lot harder than writing for adults. Kids will catch all your mistakes and call you on them. Kids are less forgiving than the adult reader. And kids will call you out on social media.
To continue to offer the best stories with the most compelling characters. I have heard several authors comment that writing for the YA crowd is a lot harder than writing for adults. Kids will catch all your mistakes and call you on them. Kids are less forgiving than the adult reader. And kids will call you out on social media.
Is there
any other thoughts/opinions on young adult fiction and technology’s impact on
this popular culture?
I think Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, and other social
media are a great tool for authors to embrace. They have up to the minute
details on how their novel/work is perceived. A smart author will be a tech
savvy guru.
My closing thoughts: Authors, you are going to have to up your game to keep up with today's YA readers. Good luck! Pamela
Monday, March 31, 2014
YA Pick: #16thingsIthoughtweretrue
#16thingsithoughtweretrue
by Janet Gurtler
Sourcebooks Fire
2014
304 pages
ISSBN: 9781402277979
Sensitive and engrossing, #16thingsithoughtweretrue portrays a girl caught up in the Twitterverse who chooses to have online friends and live life with her Internet buddies. When co-workers and soon to be friends Adam and Amy point out that they are real and present and the people online are not present and do not "know" Morgan, she disagrees. She would rather bask in the glory of 5,000 followers than work at a relationship with real people.
When her mom drops a family secret bombshell at the hospital, Morgan realizes that she has a chance to meet the father she never knew. She gets his address in Canada and plans to travel to his house and confront him. Amy offers to drive and Adam offers to come along for the road trip. The three set off on a road trip where they find out that they share some wishes and dreams.
Morgan meets her father who is dumbstruck that he ever had a daughter; he didn't even know she existed as Morgan's mom never told him that she was pregnant eighteen years ago. She never wrote him or called him to tell him that he had a daughter. Now Morgan directs her anger back to her mother. All these years, she thought her dad had abandoned her, but now she finds out, he never knew about her.
Amy shares a troubling secret and Adam and Morgan get closer. Be ready for a tear-jerker ending. Have your box of tissues ready.
Recommended grade 9-up. Mature subject matter.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
by Janet Gurtler
Sourcebooks Fire
2014
304 pages
ISSBN: 9781402277979
Sensitive and engrossing, #16thingsithoughtweretrue portrays a girl caught up in the Twitterverse who chooses to have online friends and live life with her Internet buddies. When co-workers and soon to be friends Adam and Amy point out that they are real and present and the people online are not present and do not "know" Morgan, she disagrees. She would rather bask in the glory of 5,000 followers than work at a relationship with real people.
When her mom drops a family secret bombshell at the hospital, Morgan realizes that she has a chance to meet the father she never knew. She gets his address in Canada and plans to travel to his house and confront him. Amy offers to drive and Adam offers to come along for the road trip. The three set off on a road trip where they find out that they share some wishes and dreams.
Morgan meets her father who is dumbstruck that he ever had a daughter; he didn't even know she existed as Morgan's mom never told him that she was pregnant eighteen years ago. She never wrote him or called him to tell him that he had a daughter. Now Morgan directs her anger back to her mother. All these years, she thought her dad had abandoned her, but now she finds out, he never knew about her.
Amy shares a troubling secret and Adam and Morgan get closer. Be ready for a tear-jerker ending. Have your box of tissues ready.
Recommended grade 9-up. Mature subject matter.
FTC Required Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher. I did not receive monetary compensation for this review.
This review has been posted in compliance with the FTC
requirements set forth in the Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and
Testimonials in Advertising (available at ftc.gov/os/2009/10/091005revisedendorsementguides.pdf)
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