Showing posts with label IASL Regional Conference. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IASL Regional Conference. Show all posts

Monday, April 22, 2019

The 41st IASL PASLI Conference 2019

The Philippine Association of School Librarians, Inc. (PASLI) partnered with the International Association of School Librarianship (IASL) to stage a regional workshop and national conference in Manila on April 24-26, 2019. The venue of the conference is at the Century Park Hotel, Malate, Manila.

I will be presenting a professional paper on Bibliotherapy, a passion project I have been working on since 2009. I have curated in the blog the presentations, interviews and research I have been involved in over the years about Bibliotherapy

So, it has been ten years! Imagine that!

I am excited to meet friends from PASLI and IASL especially the ones who come from the South East Asia. My last participation in an IASL Workshop was through a recorded video presentation in Indonesia in 2017. This year, as I am in better health and the venue is in Manila, I will be joining the two organizations for professional linkages and exchange.

Friday, July 6, 2018

PASLI Meet Up with Dr. Diljit Singh

Last month, I was invited by PASLI President, Cris Laracas to a meet up with Dr. Diljit Singh. Our Malaysian friend was in town for lectures in the University of the Philippines. I said yes to the invitation, of course. I have not seen friends in PASLU in a while and I had the time for some catching up. Besides, I had work to do for NCBD and visiting the Diliman area is an idea I always welcome. Jude Gorospe and Mavic dela Cruz, officers of PASLI, came to the meeting as well. 

L-R Mavic dela Cruz, Cris Laracas, ZarahG, Dr. Diljit Singh and Jude Gorospe
The agenda on the table was the 2019 Regional Conference of School Librarians in Manila. Dr. Singh is creating linkages for South East Asian school librarians, researchers and practitioners to make this a possibility. The conference is a big leap for PASLI to spearhead, but with help from colleagues in the IASL Regional board, I am confident this professional event will push through.

This is a long time coming. I remember back in 2013, when Jude Gorospe and I were in Bali for our attendance to the IASL Conference there, talk of a Regional Conference in Manila floated around. Previous to this, there was the 2012 IASL Regional Conference in Bacolod organised by Hon. Lourdes T. David who was then the director of the Rizal Library. Fast forward to 2014 (or was it 2015?), Dr. Singh and I had dinner with PASLI Officers in Makati to reconnect. PASLI was then being led by Gemma Murillo-Cuna. 

After successful conferences in Bangkok (2015), Indonesia (2016) and Myanmar (2017) by Regional IASL Officers, Dr. Singh has his sights on Manila. With the newly elected IASL representative in Asia, Dr. Shy-mee Tan who I met in Bangkok during the School Librarians Workshop there, a collaborative approach to organising a Regional Conference here is not far fetched. PASLI is taking up the challenge and they are being brave. 

These days, we need to take courage and we need to be kind. What an opportune time to be organising a Regional Conference for school librarians!

Friday, May 4, 2012

Tandem Telling: Juan Tamad and The Rice Pot

The Regional Conference on School Librarianship: Directions for the Future of School Libraries in Bacolod was, indeed, a memorable conference. I had a great time with friends, old and new, from the profession. Presenting a paper and a workshop was a good breather for me now that I keep a full time job.
When school librarians go out of their schools to see the bigger learning community, horizons are broadened and linkages are fortified. This help in establishing professional learning
network (PLN) that is essential for continuing professional education. In an industry that changes so fast, thanks to technology, a support system via PLN is a compass for the school librarian who navigates a library in a sea of constant influx. PLNs also offer collaborative opportunities to further strengthen programs and services.

The thing with collaboration is that, it can be done in many ways from the simplest to the most complex of tasks. Take for example the storytelling workshop I had in the conference.

In my storytelling workshop, I took the opportunity to tandem tell with another librarian who hails from Bacolod. Mr. Melquiades "Milky" Alipo-on graciously said yes and together we told the story of Juan Tamad and the Rice Pot. This folk tale is from Batangas and is found in the collection Tales From the 7,000 Isles (de Las Casas and Gagatiga, 2011). Batangas is a province in the Southern Tagalog Region of the Philippines. The tandem telling was impromptu. Milky Alipo-on translated into Hiligaynon the Tagalog version I told. And he was awesome! He even sang a lullaby in his mother tongue, the Dandansoy, to add in the story a Negrense flavor. A link of a video clip can be viewed here.

In light of this experience, I could not help but think about the issue on developing resources and materials on the mother tongue. Language is learned orally. To listen and to speak the language leads one into acquiring and learning from it and about it. I will make it a point to always include a tandem telling using the mother tongue in all my workshops.
Now I have to thank Margaret Read McDonald, Dr. Wagupta Tosaa of Thailand for demonstrating this technique way back in 2002  at the Singapore Storytelling Carnival; and to EthnoTec for performing in tandem at the 1st Manila International Storytelling Festival. It was inspirational to watch you all, fantastic storytellers! My gratitude goes out as well to Dean Dina Ocampo of the UP Diliman, College of Education for giving me the opportunity to run a storytelling workshop during the Mother Tongue Instruction Institute in 2009 where in I asked participants to do tandem telling of their favorite folk tale in Filipino and their mother tongue. Such experiences would not have led me to continue on experimenting ways to use tandem telling.

If we all work together and collaborate, surely, we are effectively using our time and putting our talents into good use.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Live Blogging: Diljit Singh, IASL President Gives a Closing Keynote

Diljit Singh, IASL President gives a closing keynote speech at the IASL Regional Conference. Some of the talking points I picked up from his speech --

* What is the future like?

* Go beyond the 3Rs. There's the 4Cs: Creativity. Collaboration. Communication. Critical Thinking.

* Move beyond Information Literacy.

* We need to be aware how we inculcate lifelong learning in children, teens and adults.

* As a school librarian, you can provide services that technological devices could not. What services does your library provide for students to learn better?

* Believe in yourself. Set a vision. Reach your goal.

Live Blogging: Day 2 of the IASL Regional Conference

Day 2 of the IASL Regional Conference started early.

First up was Karryl Sagun of the Rizal Library. She presented a case study on the jargon and terms librarians use in the work place which she called LIBRARIANISH. The words librarians use to communicate with clients may hamper understanding and appreciation on the benefits of library services. What I found interesting in her study was the use of social media to get feedback and information on how library users at the Ateneo de Manila University respond to the library in general.

Darrel Marco of De La Salle Zobel gave an entertaining and insightful presentation on their school library's book mobile project. Many public school children enjoyed the books and the activities they provide. That's information and access for all in action!

Right now, Joseph Marmol-Yap of De La Salle Taft, discuss ways and means to creatively stretch the library budget. He provides creative ways to recycle and reuse collection, both print and online resources.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Live Blogging: Day 1 of the IASL Regional Conference

 Day 1 of the IASL Regional Conference commences.

Opening ceremonies ended with welcome addresses of organizers: Dir. Lou David of the Rizal Library; Pastor Ezekiel Guanzon of the PRISAAP, Bacolod City; Jude Gorospe of PASLI; and Dr. Diljit Singh of the University of Malaya and the IASL.

Enoy Ferriol of Scholastic gave a short spiel as sponsor and shared with the participants the many freebies and perks available for participants.

There are sixteen speakers and presenters in all, majority are Filipino librarians from Manila and the regions. Topics are grouped according the following topics for Day 1: Reading and the School Library; Storytelling workshop; Library Space and Planning and Teacher Librarian Partnerships.

Book exhibits are displayed outside the conference hall. At the Scholastic booth, copies of Tales of the 7,000 Isles: Filipino Folk Stories are displayed.

In my workshop after lunch, I will be doing two storytelling demos from the anthology. My co-author, Dianne de Las Casas may not be here, but I keep her presence by adopting and adapting storytelling strategies learned from her.

I miss you, Dianne!

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Live Blogging: IASL Regional Conference Flight to Bacolod

Joseph Marmol-Yap & Grace Bansig

I'm here now at PAL Terminal 2, waiting for boarding  to my flight to Bacolod. With me are other resource speakers of the conference: Eric Ramos and Joseph Marmol-Yap of DLSU Taft; DLS Zobel librarians, Grace Bansig, Darrel Marco and Rodora Espiritu, Venus Ibarra from St. Louis University and Joy Nera of Assumption College, SanLo.

It's going to be an exciting trip likewise, an interesting conference to be! We're catching up and each other's lives. It's a small industry, you see. Every body knows everybody and at this point, we're just having fun!

More live blogging post in the next three days.


Regional Conference on School Librarianship, Bacolod City

The Regional Conference on School Librarianship by the IASL, Rizal Library, PASLI and PRISAAP will commence tomorrow, 26 April 2012 in Bacolod City, Negros Occidental. As I have posted in the blog, I am part of the roster of resource speakers who will present and do a workshop. I will be presenting a web 2.0 technology application in library services and will do a storytelling workshop in the afternoon.

Looking at the program, the conference promises to be an interesting avenue for professional networking and improvement of competencies in librarianship. Below is a copy of the full program.



Thank you to Ms. Karryl Sagun for sharing this document. I will be blogging the conference on site as I have done in previous conferences before.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Webquest and Pathfinder: The Teenagers Guide to Meaningful Research

I'll be presenting a paper at the International Association of School Libraries (IASL) Regional Conference in Bacolod City on 26-27 April 2012. Here is the abstract
.

Abstract: School libraries play an important role in the development and facilitation of research skills. High school students who undergo research paper writing need to have companions and mentors as they complete the journey of accomplishing their first academic paper. While teacher experts and research advisers are automatic mentors for research, the school librarian is likewise, a reading and research companion of the teenager traversing for the first time the exciting road of scholarly research.

This paper explains the impetus and the creative process with which the school librarian has undergone in the design and preparation of an Information Literacy (Eisenberg & Berkowitz, 2000) Webquest for grade 11 students and a school library Pathfinder for grade 10 students of Beacon Academy, a Filipino high school offering the Middle Years Program (MYP) and the Diploma Program (DP) of the International Baccalaureate (IB). Using Wikispaces.org as platform for the webquest and the pathfinder, both are aimed at providing structure and meaning for grade 11 students preparing to write the Extend Essay and grade 10 students working on the Personal Project. Relevant to the webquest and pathfinder are factors that contribute to its implementation: administrative support, available technology and resources, web 2.0 know-how of the school librarian, use of the guided inquiry model (Kuhlthau, 1997) and, collaboration with teacher experts and mentors. The school librarian has identified evaluation tools like process journal of students, library work logs and reflection notes, and a rubric on the effectiveness of the webquest and pathfinder for students to answer or use.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

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