Wednesday, May 29, 2013

District Library Newsletter - Free Professional Development, Smarter Balance Test, Encyclopedia Britannica, and Summer Reads


Menasha Joint School District Library News
June 2013
 If you have suggestions please for future newsletters feel free to email me!


FREE technology training on your own time - Summer Professional Development
Want to learn how to use Google applications while sitting at your pajamas this summer?  Well look no father than our Atomic Learning.  It's free for Menasha school district staff to use, and is available 24/7.  You can even take some classes for credit ($125 per credit).  Atomic Learning can be found on our district website.  Go to Staff Links, click on Training Resources, and then Atomic Learning Resources.


Example of some trainings offered


Example of some workshops offered (can take for one credit)

Smarter Balance Practice Tests

Curious about the Smarter Balance tests?  Well you can you see practice/pilot tests here: http://sbac.portal.airast.org/Practice_Test/default.html


Encyclopedia Britannica K-12 Resources

                                 

Summer Reading!
Here are some summer reading ideas for grown-ups.  It's time to kick back and enjoy a book just for yourself!



Fiction Reads

Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald
By Therese Anne Fowler


When beautiful, reckless Southern belle Zelda Sayre meets F. Scott Fitzgerald at a country club dance in 1918, she is seventeen years old and he is a young army lieutenant stationed in Alabama. Before long, the “ungettable” Zelda has fallen for him despite his unsuitability: Scott isn’t wealthy or prominent or even a Southerner, and keeps insisting, absurdly, that his writing will bring him both fortune and fame. Her father is deeply unimpressed. But after Scott sells his first novel, This Side of Paradise, to Scribner’s, Zelda optimistically boards a train north, to marry him in the vestry of St. Patrick’s Cathedral and take the rest as it comes.


Everything seems new and possible. Troubles, at first, seem to fade like morning mist. But not even Jay Gatsby’s parties go on forever. Who is Zelda, other than the wife of a famous—sometimes infamous—husband? How can she forge her own identity while fighting her demons and Scott’s, too? With brilliant insight and imagination, Therese Anne Fowler brings us Zelda’s irresistible story as she herself might have told it.
 
Whistling Past the Graveyard (avail July 2)
By Susan Crandall
This is a young adult title, but I highly recommend it!
In the summer of 1963, nine-year-old spitfire Starla Claudelle runs away from her strict grandmother’s Mississippi home. Starla hasn’t seen her momma since she was three—that’s when Lulu left for Nashville to become a famous singer. Starla’s daddy works on an oil rig in the Gulf, so Mamie, with her tsk-tsk sounds and her bitter refrain of “Lord, give me strength,” is the nearest thing to family Starla has. After being put on restriction yet again for her sassy mouth, Starla is caught sneaking out for the Fourth of July parade. She fears Mamie will make good on her threat to send Starla to reform school, so Starla walks to the outskirts of town, and just keeps walking. . . . If she can get to Nashville and find her momma, then all that she promised will come true: Lulu will be a star. Daddy will come to live in Nashville, too. And her family will be whole and perfect. Walking a lonely country road, Starla accepts a ride from Eula, a black woman traveling alone with a white baby. The trio embarks on a road trip that will change Starla’s life forever. She sees for the first time life as it really is—as she reaches for a dream of how it could one day be.
Inferno
By Dan Brown


In the heart of Italy, Harvard professor of symbology, Robert Langdon, is drawn into a harrowing world centered on one of history’s most enduring and mysterious literary masterpieces . . . Dante’s Inferno.


Against this backdrop, Langdon battles a chilling adversary and grapples with an ingenious riddle that pulls him into a landscape of classic art, secret passageways, and futuristic science. Drawing from Dante’s dark epic poem, Langdon races to find answers and decide whom to trust . . . before the world is irrevocably altered.
  
Visitation Street (avail July 9)
By Ivy Pochoda


It’s summertime in Red Hook, Brooklyn, a blue-collar dockside neighborhood. June and Val, two fifteen-year-olds, take a raft out onto the bay at night to see what they can see.
And then they disappear. Only Val will survive, washed ashore; semi-conscious in the weeds.
This shocking event will echo through the lives of a diverse cast of Red Hook residents. Fadi, the Lebanese bodega owner, hopes that his shop will be the place to share neighborhood news and troll for information about June’s disappearance. Cree, just beginning to pull it together after his father’s murder, unwittingly makes himself the chief suspect, but an enigmatic and elusive guardian is determined to keep him safe.
Val contends with the shadow of her missing friend and a truth she buries deep inside. Her teacher Jonathan, a Julliard School dropout and barfly, wrestles with dashed dreams and a past riddled with tragic sins.
The Repeat Year
by Andrea Lochen
Everyone has days, weeks, even months they wish they could do over — but what about an entire year? After living through the worst twelve months of her life, intensive care nurse Olive Watson is given a second chance to relive her past and attempt to discover where she went wrong… After a year of hardships, including a messy breakup with her longtime boyfriend, Phil, the prospect of her mother’s remarriage, and heartbreaking patient losses at the hospital, Olive is ready to start fresh. But when she wakes up in her ex-boyfriend’s bed on New Year’s Day 2011 — a day she has already lived — Olive’s world is turned upside down. Takes place in Madison, WI.
Claw Back
by Mike Cooper


After a stint in the Middle East, black ops vet Silas Cade becomes an "accountant"-the go-to for financiers who need things done quickly, quietly, and by any means necessary. Silas is hired by a major player to pay a visit to a hedge fund manager to demand clawback: the mandatory return of compensation paid on a deal that goes bad. But before Cade can tell his client that he got his ten million back, the guy turns up dead.
And he's not the first. Someone's killing investment bankers whose funds have gone south. Silas's scrubbed identity, and his insider's perspective, makes him the ideal shadow man to track down whoever's murdering some of the most hated managers on Wall Street. With the aid of a beautiful financial blogger looking to break her first big story, Silas tracks a violent security crew who may be the key to the executions. But as paranoia and panic spread, he begins to wonder: is the threat coming from inside the game-or out?
The First Rule of Swimming
By Courtney Angela Brkic


Magdalena does not panic when she learns that her younger sister has disappeared. A free-spirit, Jadranka has always been prone to mysterious absences. But when weeks pass with no word, Magdalena leaves the isolated Croatian island where their family has always lived and sets off to New York to find her sister. Her search begins to unspool the dark history of their family, reaching back three generations to a country torn by war.
Fly Away
By Kristin Hannah
Sequel to Firefly Lane


Sixteen-year-old Marah Ryan is devastated by her mother’s death. Her father, Johnny, strives to hold the family together, but even with his best efforts, Marah becomes unreachable in her grief. Nothing and no one seems to matter to her . . . until she falls in love with a young man who makes her smile again and leads her into his dangerous, shadowy world.
Dorothy Hart---the woman who once called herself Cloud---is at the center of Tully’s tragic past. She repeatedly abandoned her daughter, Tully, as a child, but now she comes back, drawn to her daughter’s side at a time when Tully is most alone. At long last, Dorothy must face her darkest fear: Only by revealing the ugly secrets of her past can she hope to become the mother her daughter needs.
A single, tragic choice and a middle-of-the-night phone call will bring these women together and set them on a poignant, powerful journey of redemption. Each has lost her way, and they will need each one another---and maybe a miracle---to transform their lives.
An emotionally complex, heart-wrenching novel about love, motherhood, loss, and new beginnings, Fly Away reminds us that where there is life, there is hope, and where there is love, there is forgiveness. Told with her trademark powerful storytelling and illuminating prose, Kristin Hannah reveals why she is one of the most beloved writers of our day.

 
And the Mountains Echoed
By Khaled Hossein
Author of the Kite Runner


In this tale revolving around not just parents and children but brothers and sisters, cousins and caretakers, Hosseini explores the many ways in which families nurture, wound, betray, honor, and sacrifice for one another; and how often we are surprised by the actions of those closest to us, at the times that matter most. Following its characters and the ramifications of their lives and choices and loves around the globe—from Kabul to Paris to San Francisco to the Greek island of Tinos—the story expands gradually outward, becoming more emotionally complex and powerful with each turning page.
The Hit
By David Baldacci


Check out this novel from one of America's bestselling authors (David Baldacci) of all time. The government needs chief assassin Will Robie to bring fellow assassin Jessica Reel in from the cold or else. A fast-paced, thriller, this book ensures you won't have much time to take a dip in the pool this summer. Hollywood might cast actors Scarlett Johansson or Kristen Bell in the Jessica Reel role and actors Ryan Gosling or Jeremy Renner as Will Robie. In any event, it's sure to be a "hit" movie, for sure!
Non-Fiction Reads

  
Bunker Hill: A City, A Siege, A Revolution
By Nathaniel Philbrick


In the years leading up to the American Revolution, Boston served as a hub for the exchanging of ideas, threats, and eventually, bullets. This title chronicles the period from December 1773 to June 1775, and illuminates the tumultuous state of the city that threatened to boil over into all-out conflict. Philbrick does a fantastic job of outlining the colonies' grievances with Britain, explaining why tensions became so high and profiling the key players that guided the nation toward war and independence. The tale culminates with the 1775 Battle of Bunker Hill, which marked the onset of the Revolutionary War and confirmed the determination of the colonies to form their own nation.
The Art of Intelligence: Lessons from a Life in the CIA’s Clandestine Service
by Henry A. Crumpton


Revelatory and groundbreaking, The Art of Intelligence will change the way people view the CIA, American intelligence, and international terrorism. Henry A. “Hank” Crumpton, a twenty-four-year veteran of the CIA’s Clandestine Service, offers a thrilling account that delivers profound lessons about what it means to serve as an honorable spy. From CIA recruiting missions in Africa to pioneering new programs like the UAV Predator, from running post–9/11 missions in Afghanistan to heading up all clandestine CIA operations in the United States, Crumpton chronicles his role—in the battlefield and in the Oval Office—in transforming the way America wages war.
  
Midnight in Peking
by Paul French


While the Japanese army is closing in on Peking in 1937, a young British girl is murdered and a British detective and a Chinese detective team up to solve the mysterious case before the city becomes occupied. Their search takes them into the Peking underworld of unsavory potential suspects as they try to unravel the victim's last days. Includes black-and-white and also color photographs.
Naples Declared
by Benjamin Taylor


An invaluable addition to the art of literary travel writing, Naples Declared presents an informative and compulsively readable account of three thousand years of Naples history. From the catacombs of San Gennaro to the luminous paintings of Caravaggio to the ruins of Pompeii in nearby Campania, renowned author Benjamin Taylor takes readers on a stroll around the city Italians lovingly call Il Cratere. Gracefully written and full of good humor, wisdom, and amusing anecdotes, Naples Declared is a wholly original work that will be welcomed by anyone seeking to know more about the art, culture, and history of this fabled place.

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