Skip to main content

TCEA17 - The Power of You

I originally published this piece February 15, 2017 on Deepstacks - DragonLibrary's blog.



Standing on the MetroRail platform in the midwinter gloom, I greet a group of colleagues and giddily ask “Did you go yesterday, or is today your first day? Did you go to any good sessions?”

A half hour later, I extract myself from the sardinian quarters of the train, now much too intimately acquainted with my fellow educators gathered from the suburbs, the edge city, and midtown as we make our annual pilgrimage to the convention center. Next week, the daily commuters will happily reclaim their usual personal space and breathe more freely. Reveling in my freedom of movement, I scoot off the platform to encounter the bold banner above the glass doors, reading TCEA2017 Convention & Exposition: The Power of You.

The power of me, eh? Mighty as I am on a daily basis, like any heroine, I can still appreciate a quality power-up. Ms Pac-Man bow firmly affixed, I gobbled down sessions one after the next, hitting the occasional power pellet that inspired me to chase down the ghosties. These are the sessions that empowered me most:
Using Badges in Google Sheets, Alice Keeler Keeler employs basic principles of gamification to increase student interest and engagement in the classroom. With digital badges, students can level up and take ownership of their own learning. Teachers can use badges to bring more fun to the classroom, allow students to “beat the boss” to prove mastery, and challenge students through enrichment activities that are unlockable achievements and not more grinding. As attendees, we received practical instruction as well as practical advice for creating and managing our own system of badges. Moreover, access to templates and instructions for getting started are available via the presenter’s website. The Best of Tech You Thought You Knew, Steve Dembo When I attend conferences, I often find myself wearied by the intense emphasis on current trends—the harried dance that waltzes me into a stupor in pursuit of the latest and greatest chimera. Thus, I intentionally shunned the myriad sessions touting the same five buzzwords, instead choosing a session that promised to delve deeper into tools I already use. Introducing attendees to the Poll Everywhere’s Chrome Extension for Slides, Symbaloo’s lesson plans, WeVideo’s green screen & collaborative features, Padlet’s commenting and transferring features, and much more, Dembo’s session was an elixir that restored much-needed hearts to my health bar. His online resources are available via his TCEA17 website. Gadgets, Leslie Fisher Being a curmudgeonly gadget head, I am frequently of two minds at conferences—reviling the bandwagon of trendiness, yet enthralled by the the siren call of bright, shiny new tech. Ultimately, I found myself stranded on the shores of technolust writhing among the other waylaid sailors waiting for my heart to be rent by the harpie of high prices as we listened to the dulcet sounds of Leslie Fisher’s descriptions of new and novel apparatuses that do everything from translating sign language into speech to introducing music via coding. Although Fisher looked nothing like Gene Wilder as the infamous chocolatier, she, too, seemed to encourage us to follow her into a world of pure imagination where what we’d see would, indeed, defy explanation. A complete listing of the new chocolate factory wonders is available via the presenter’s web site at LeslieFisher.com.
The northbound MetroRail isn’t so crowded, and emits a useful complimentary wifi. These conveniences allowed me to continue enjoying the unprogrammed lifeblood of any good conference: the casual, Twitter-mediated networking that pervades the time between sessions and the lulls during them. The chance to relieve a bit of esprit d’escalier with presenters I saw, check out presenters I missed, and connect with other attendees who had the good questions & connections is an easy way to lock in the experience of a satisfying conference that has plenty of replay value.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Decloaking Wakanda: Creating Space for BIPOC Nerds

On February 9, 2023, at the fourth Joint Conference of Librarians of Color (JCLC), I had the exhilarating experience of guiding a discussion that focused on the need to connect with nerd culture and create a welcoming environment for the BIPOC fandom. The soul of this session had been several years in the making and built on countless heart-to-heart moments. So, I couldn’t imagine a better venue for seeing it actualized than my first JCLC. Furthermore, for this session, I had the honor of being in conversation with fellow nerds and comics librarians Jean Darnell and Deimosa Webber-Bey . To my eternal amazement, our talk was met with a standing room only reception, and afterward we were repeatedly regaled with tales of being turned away at the door. In hopes of capturing a small portion of that day's magic, this post grew out of that discussion. *** For the past 30 years, BIPOC nerds have existed in the cringe-worthy shadow of Urkel. What if, instead, they’d had portrayals such as ...

BIMM, DIMM, and PIT - Oh My!

Sara Pavone and Christina Taylor, the RRHS librarians, used a combination of different technologies to introduce the logistics of digital copyright protection to students in BIMM, DIMM, and PIT. This lesson marked the maiden voyage of the iPads that the library received as part of the Next Generation Digital Classroom (NGDC) initiative. Mrs. Pavone and Mrs. Taylor combined the tablets with Blendspace , Google Drive , and WeVideo to provide a lesson that not only engaged the students but also allowed teachers to differentiate the instruction to meet students’ needs. Finally, because the entire lesson was platform agnostic, using online tools, students were able to work at their own pace...beyond the confines of the physical classroom...from anywhere they had Internet access. Many students commented that they enjoyed the lesson and thought it was a lot better than last year’s, which was not nearly as interactive nor heavy in technology. **This post was originally published on the  R...

Where the Sidewalk Ends

Although published in crisp black and white, former  Playboy  correspondent Silverstein’s classic collection of poems and drawings  Where the Sidewalk Ends  fairly explodes with colorful language of the kid-friendly sort. Taken by themselves, the poems range in length from a handful of lines up to three pages, and in breadth from a single amusing thought to a narrative arc or a song’s worth of lyrics. Common childhood themes of disobedience to parental and educational authority, trouble with siblings, chores and fanciful play are addressed in a characteristically irreverent manner, with frequent digressions into pure fantasy and fun. Never crossing over into the excessively precious or maudlin, Silverstein prefers to stick to a more self-conscious and unsentimental tone, gleefully exploring the macabre and outright disgusting topics frequented by children. On nearly every last opening, the text of the verses shares space with Silverstein’s expressive and loos...