[aisle] Blended Learning in school library setting

Douglas Orlyk orlykd at wego33.org
Sat Apr 2 09:53:32 CDT 2022


Of course! Flipped learning! Sorry, I’m old. Hahaha. I’m also on spring break, as is my brain. 

Sent from my iPhone

> On Apr 2, 2022, at 9:01 AM, Rebecca Dougherty via AISLE <aisle at list.railslibraries.info> wrote:
> 
> 
> Douglas, I think what you are describing is more flipped classroom where students do some work and learn outside the classroom, coming to class prepared with prior knowledge. In other words, they do not do the reading, or the research, or the assignment or whatever during class time. Class time moves away from a lecture, maybe asking students to watch a lecture video in advance of class, and then class time is used for active learning.
> 
> Thank you,
> Rebecca Dougherty, MLS
> Librarian
> she, her, hers
> 
> 
>> On Fri, Apr 1, 2022 at 8:51 PM Douglas Orlyk <orlykd at wego33.org> wrote:
>> I learned about blended learning years ago. My understanding is that students do activities as homework that are online or at least digital. It might be a video, or a game of some kind. Students learn at home and then practice in the classroom, where the teacher is available to guide the practice portion of the lesson. 
>> 
>> You could have students watch a video of you doing a read-aloud at home, then respond to questions or discussion about what was read the next day in class with you. 
>> 
>> Or students could learn about a Dewey area via a video at home, then explore further the next day while actually in the library. 
>> 
>> Sent from my iPhone
>> 
>>>> On Apr 1, 2022, at 4:05 PM, Rebecca Dougherty via AISLE <aisle at list.railslibraries.info> wrote:
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> I would define/describe blended learning in a school library setting the same I would do so in a classroom. Essentially it combines online and in-person learning. Some examples I have used are choice boards, Kahoot, recording book talks on FlipGrid, posting materials in Google Classroom, and authors/illustrators reading their own books on TeachingBooks.net or other online resources.
>>> 
>>> 
>>>  7thChoiceBoard083121rd.docx
>>> 
>>> Thank you,
>>> Rebecca Dougherty, MLS
>>> Librarian
>>> she, her, hers
>>> 
>>> 
>>>> On Fri, Apr 1, 2022 at 3:23 PM wendy stiglic via AISLE <aisle at list.railslibraries.info> wrote:
>>>> Hi all. 
>>>> 
>>>> How would you define / describe “blended learning” in a school library setting? Thanks for any ideas! 
>>>> 
>>>> Wendy 
>>>> 
>>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>> MAILMAN_MIMEDEFANG
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