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8 ways to prepare for a readathon

8WaystoPrepare

If you look back at some of my posts like Fin or #RiotGrams Challenge Complete and even the recent Sandwiches!,  I like the feeling of setting a goal and completing it.

Enter the readathon.

This 24-hour readathon site and initiative was established in 2007. Why I’ve only heard about this in 2018, I’m not sure, but I’m penciled in for the foreseeable future.

And since I was going all in, I set a stopwatch to track how much time I was actively reading. I knew I’d need to stop, but it wasn’t going to be for sleep if I could help it. In total, I read for 17 hours and 30 minutes, stopping for one 45 minute nap at 2am (quickly followed by tea to wake me back up) and another 20 minute nap at 2pm. The rest of stoppage time was for social media check-ins and family needs.

Here’s a list of how to prepare for your first (or fiftieth):

  1. Buy something special like a set of pajamas to make the occasion special (I did!) and either stay in them for 24 hours, but if that’s impossible at least rock a bookish tshirt. Or, maybe it’s your favorite snack, a new throw, the most recent book by your favorite author.
  2. Organize your book pile (or sync up your audio and e-books) with a variety of options to suit your mood and the time of day. There’s something to be said for mixing it up and keeping it interesting throughout the time.
  3. Pick your poison. Like your book pile, what will sustain you? Regular meals, themed snacks, what are you going to drink? I bought my favorite candy for a late night snacks, drank a few pots of tea, but then ate meals with my family, celebrating with a bowl of ice cream in the last half an hour.
  4. Make it a team effort or a group sport. The cheering section was loud on social media through the readathon outlets, but I also included my family. My two boys read with me for the first hour, randomly throughout the day, and the last half hour it was a full family affair. Meanwhile, the dog spent most of his time trying to figure out what I was doing, but he was the most faithful cheerleader.
  5. Change your scenery. 24-hours is a long time and the sun sets and rises again, so mix up where you’re reading. I read outside, inside, on the couch, in the tub.
  6. Cheer on others! This was my favorite part of checking in. I even created a public Instagram a few days prior so that I could share throughout the readathon and use it for new challenges and some amateur bookstagramming.
  7. Set a realistic goal. I wanted to make my first one epic, so I knew I was going to try to read as much as possible and sleep as little as possible. But for some that’s improbable because of work, home, or life in between. So know your limits and have fun in between with whatever you contribute.
  8. Read! Isn’t that the whole point? Of all of the books I read during that time, I was immersed in Holly Black’s faerie world in The Cruel Prince. Then there were some duds too, but that’s all in a 24-hour day’s work.

And as the readathon came to a close and thank yous were messaged and final page counts tallied, they announced the next one. October 20th. Who’s in?

 
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Posted by on July 29, 2018 in Cover Love, Events, Miscellaneous, Style

 

Unforgettable!

As part of the #edublogclub year-long challenge to blog on education, this week’s topic focuses on professional learning and conferences.

Things just came together so nicely for this week’s #edublogsclub prompt about professional learning and conferences because I knew I would be away at one. Now that I’ve returned, I’m ready to impart a few pieces of wisdom, though I know more information will seep into future posts as I had an amazing time at my first American Library Association annual conference (in Chicago!)

Now that I’ve settled back for a day, here are a few suggestions when attending a conference like ALA:

  1. LegsUptheWallDefinitely bring the comfortable shoes, though I know the temptation for those like me, were to also be a bit fashion-forward. So even if you wore the *almost* comfortable shoes to match the dress, do this stretch when you get back to your room each night since you’ll be on your feet all day.
  2. 2017-06-24 10.33.54Dress the part. By nature, I’m a dress-loving, dress-wearing kind of gal. That’s not to say you can’t be comfortable, so wear what works for you, as long as it doesn’t look like you’re going to run three miles when you leave the conference hall. Dressing the part may mean being photo ready when you meet your idol (see picture) or to use as a conversation-starter when swimming in a sea of colleagues from across the country who you don’t know, but want to get to know!
  3. Know your limits. Maybe you don’t want to stand in that line or you desperately need a mental break so you skip a session, it’s okay. Part of enjoying any conference is also enjoying the break it provides from the routine. I spent time walking back and forth between sessions enjoying the weather rather than taking the shuttles. It provided the space to go into the next session ready to learn.
  4. Remember when I said you’d be swimming in a sea of colleagues that you don’t know? Get to know them! Ask questions and listen. Promote yourself and what you do. Trade tips. Some people you’ll want to exchange cards with and others were just a fun way to pass the time and restore that good ol’ fashioned energy you get from face-to-face conversation. It’s invigorating.
  5. 2017-06-26 14.31.19Indulge in local food and try to do at least one touristy thing. I was in Chicago, so that did mean that I would have to stop for some deep dish pizza. I also took at a picture at The Bean and walked along the water in that picturesque city.

Of course, the list can go on of both personal and professional suggestions related to attending conferences, but the listicle above provides a good start. You can tell I enjoyed myself, so be sure to head to any conference with a sense of adventure.

 
 

Folders, folders everywhere

2016-07-20-11-48-00As part of the #edublogclub year-long challenge to blog on education, this week’s topic focuses on discussing my classroom or place of work.

My life is pretty organized, whether it’s baskets around the house and bathrooms, color-coding spines for my personal bookshelf at home, my career as a librarian where it’s foundation is built from a system of organizing, and of course, my work space. While the office itself is a shared office with my colleague and the larger area is shared with the high school’s resident “tech guy”, my desk is generally a series of folders stacked and labeled. There’s my every day notebook. My agenda. And close to all this, Post-its too.

Every endeavor I undertake is given a folder and when that one wears out another one takes its place. Along the top and side I write the “what” of the endeavor and in goes the material. For many years, this has been my main organizational tool and the notebooks are a necessity. Each conversation that spawns an idea, every question that needs an answer, and every request needing an action is written down and then every handful of pages you’ll see my lists. These are the to-do items that get scratched off or if not completed, moved to the next list a handful of pages after that.

As with my every day tasks, presentations I do start in much the same way. There’s a mental organization and some research then it’s a series of drafts moving toward an outline. And by the fifteenth iteration and the final set of slides, I know the content so well that my notes could be viewed as excessive.

But that’s just me… and Martha Stewart.

So what’s the a lady to do if she’s a list maker? Provide a short list of organizational tips2017-01-13-18-29-10

  • Pen and paper, always
  • Make to-do lists action-oriented
  • Refine and revise your lists as needed. It’s okay to remove something from the list if it keeps re-appearing but not getting done- likely it wasn’t that important to start with
  • Set aside time to delete email, pins, documents, and more. Keeping these “spaces” clear keeps you more focused
 
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Posted by on January 14, 2017 in edublogsclub, Miscellaneous, Style

 

Making it

file-nov-30-9-36-12-pmThere’s nothing more lovely than a meaningful gift– especially if you’re a book nerd and you get bookish things. So imagine my excitement when I unwrapped this beauty this past November. Lovely and photogenic.

Now, I’m not much of a scarf person. Maybe it’s the bobbed haircut that always seems to be mushrooming out from the top of the scarf or my body shape that makes them seem like they don’t quite sit right, yet either way I’ll sport this whenever appropriate (every day?)

 

 
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Posted by on January 6, 2017 in Style