09 March 2011

Read Aloud Day!

From: LitWorld


Celebrate the Power of Words and Stories and Take Action for Global Literacy


Nearly 1 billion people entered the 21st century unable to read a book or sign their name. What would you miss most if you could not read or write? Imagine your world without words.

World Read Aloud Day is about taking action to show the world that the right to read and write belongs to all people. World Read Aloud Day motivates children, teens, and adults worldwide to celebrate the power of words, especially those words that are shared from one person to another, and creates a community of readers advocating for every child’s right to a safe education and access to books and technology. By raising our voices together on this day we show the world’s children that we support their future: that they have the right to read, to write, and to share their words to change the world.

Across the globe nearly 171 million children could be lifted out of poverty if they left school with basic reading and writing skills. Quality literacy education is the difference between life and death, prosperity and despair. This is literacy for survival.

It’s time to join the global literacy movement.


"I know the day is coming when global literacy isn’t fiction. I don’t know how long it will take, but I know that day will come."
- 10 year-old World Read Aloud Day Participant from Connecticut, USA

14 February 2011

What made me stay in the LIS profession and why…

(This is my Valentine post for this year as I was once again invited by Ms Zarah Gagatiga as a guest blogger. This talks about my love affair with my profession as a librarian.)

Becoming a librarian never entered my mind when I started my college education. While filling up UPCAT application form, I chose the following courses: Chemical Engineering and Journalism, very far from librarianship! I forgot the courses I chose for another campus though. Luckily, I passed and even got in at the College of Engineering! Two years after, I don’t want to stay at the college anymore but where to go?

I only submitted applications to two other colleges, or rather school as I tried to shift direction in my future career path. Guess the two schools? One was the School of Social Work and Community Development and second, the School of Library and Information Science, then Institute of Library and Information Science.  That was the time that I discovered the course! So, to make it short, I made it at the SLIS and right now, I work as a school librarian. Phew! What a way to discover my career back then. I’d say I am an accidental librarian, but I don’t regret it. During those times, many engineering students are shifting out from Engineering and trying their luck in ILIS. So, thanks to ILIS for accepting me as a shiftee student and for giving me the chance of becoming one of the librarians today. While I was a LIS student, I discovered simultaneously what a paradise the library is and what a joy reading is! Well, that happened maybe because I was deprived of books in public schools that I have attended before. Still, it was never too late to catch up on reading! One can say that I read a lot because of my profession. But the thing is, even if I’m not in this profession I will still read for leisure.

Miss Muffet with Clifford
Why I love the profession and still practicing it until now? For one, I really enjoy being a librarian. I like helping children in the library, assisting them if they need a particular book, suggesting books and acquiring books suited for their level. Doing storytelling sometimes is also one of the jobs that I like to do. It is always a joy to interact with kids and discuss some books. I even moderate a book club. In the library, whenever the kids learn that I also read the book that they borrow, they really got amazed! So I can say now that my relationship with books gets deeper and wider the more that I stay in this profession. And I know that I will never get tired of doing my job like selecting books, reading them and sharing them with the patrons. With the emergence of technology, I also take the challenge of encouraging children to read and imparting with them the importance of reading and books. Not only as a profession, but personally I also advocates spreading the love for reading and developing life-long readers. For as long as books exist and there are readers that use the library, I will stay in this profession!

In the future, I would like to blog about books and other interesting stuffs about libraries and librarians. I also believe that there are things I can contribute for the betterment of librarianship.
More power to all Filipino Librarians! J

08 February 2011

Training at the capital of Europe

At the Atomium in Brussels

As previously mentioned, I was lucky to be selected as one of the participants in the long running training for librarians which happens to be in Brussels, capital of Europe. They call it capital of the Europe because Belgium is a host country to European Union, the economic and political union of 27 member states located in Europe.

STIMULATE 10 or Scientific and Technological Information Management in Universities and Libraries: an Active Training Environment (the last one in the series) is a three-month training for librarians and information specialists about information management in a lecture and hands-on training given by the professors who are expert in that field. Classes are conducted mostly at Vrije Universiteit Brussel Campus Etterbeek and a little on Campus Jette. The funding of the program came from VLIR-OUS.

The contents of the training are as follows: Management in Libraries and Information Centers, ICT for Libraries and Information Centers, Information Retrieval, Information Architecture and Digital Libraries, and Library Visits. Most of the library visits are limited to the area of Flanders, a region in Belgium where Brussels is located and where most people speak Dutch.

More to follow...:) 

24 November 2010

My Once-in-a-Lifetime Chance

VUB Campus Etterbeek
I've been wanting to share this but along the way, I did not have the time to write. Uhm, why is that? I also wonder. Anyways, I really have to start writing now and keep this blog updated just like my very good chum, the Demigod Librarian Darrel Marco :)

Well, at the start of this year, I applied for a scholarship in Belgium for librarians. The training will last for three months and its about Information Management. I tried applying because there is no harm in trying. Who knows, I might get lucky. And lucky indeed, because last April I received the notification that I was selected. Yipee! The first thing I did was to run to the Demigod Darrel, jumped for joy and hugged him. Well, he knew about it as he also helped me in the preparation of documents.

And now, I am here in Brussels attending the training at the
Vrije Universiteit Brussel with the other two Filipinos and other classmates from various countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The notification at the beginning was really exciting but the experience of actually being in Brussels is way more exhilirating.Europe is a dream destination for most of us and by going there, all free is really such a blessing! I can't thank God enough for this wonderful opportunity and a once-in-a-lifetime chance! I am also thankful to all the people who helped me with the recommendation letters (Ms Natalie Dela Torre and Ms Dinah Franco) with special thanks to Mr Darrel Marco :)

I never knew that there are grants for librarians before till I tried it as suggested by other colleagues. And never did I dream of being selected as a participants. Wel, for all those who want to try this scholarship you may check this website:VLIR-UOS
And for the complete information on my scholarship,
you may check it here:STIMULATE 10

I will blog more about the program in the next posts. I hope some readers will be inspired to try scholarships in Europe because there are a lot of opportunites out there. We only have to search for it and have the courage to send application. In the end, we'll never really know we might get lucky. As I continue to participate in the training, I promise to share all the knowledge learned here once I get back home.

Mabuhay ang mga Filipino Librarians!

28 October 2010

Books I read when I was a teen

This is the list of books I submitted to Ms Zarah Gagatiga, who was so nice to invite me as guest blogger (my second actually) for the Teen Read Week celebration. Thanks for another exposure :))

I am a late bloomer reader. But I will just share books that I enjoyed most during the first two years in college and a little during high school. When I discovered the richness of the Main Library, I started borrowing books that are not so related with the academics but gave joyful and great experiences for me as a reader. So here goes my list:


1. Roald Dahl’s books – I really enjoyed the wit and extraordinary humor of this guy. Even though his books are a bit eccentric and psychotic most of the times, I will still recommend his books. In a research I read for my master’s degree, I’ve found out why his books are a bit controversial in terms of the circumstances happened to the characters he created. According to him, bad guys should be punished! Read his books and you’ll see! =)

2. Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew series – I think most us read if not the complete series, then some of the books which stars these famous young detectives back in college or earlier. What I love about Joe and Frank is that they are really good in reading the clues, same with Nancy. I even read the book where both the Hardy boys and Nancy Drew worked together in solving mysteries. They are very youthful, romantic sometimes and wholesome in content, no doubt about it! Through time, the versions of their book evolved too as they are now in famous graphic novels.


3. Da Vinci Code – I read this book long before it became so famous! I remembered that it kept me awake one night to finish it because there is a long queue for this by word of mouth from a friend who read it before me. I never regretted the hours I spent just to finish this!


4. Bridge to Terabithia – I’d say this one is sad at the end but the friendship it showed is one of a kind. This book made me shed tears because of the ending. It has a movie adaptation too and I’m happy to say that I was not too disappointed with the film version.


5. Star girl – This is book is about a girl named Susan Caraway, but she uses “Star girl” as a name. Star girl is full of eccentricities and is a non-conformist. She does things that are way beyond the norms. She sings “Happy birthday” to every kid in school even if she does not know them personally. She attends funeral of other people. She cheers the enemy of the school in basketball and leaves coins in the street. What good about this book, is that it tells us to be true to ourselves. We don’t have to be anything that we are not for fear of rejection.
6. Harry potter series – I met Harry Potter in college through a friend that reads a lot.  She lent me the book one weekend, and starting that time, I became a Hogwarts’ student wannabe. JK Rowling surely knew how to win a reader because until now Harry Potter holds a place in my heart. Though the film versions are a disappointment, I still watch it with my friends because it became a “Harry Potter tradition”.



7. Gone with the wind – Wow, I have a classic on my list! I love this book though a bit thick and long! I persevered to finish it because I want to know the ending of Scarlett O’Hara. Set during the Revolution, women can surely learn something from the wicked ways of lovely Madam O’Hara as she did her best to survive war, famine and love.

8. B1 Gang Series – I don’t know if others were familiar with this series. I think this is the Philippine version of Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew mysteries. The gang is composed of four high school teenagers namely: Gino, Kiko, Boging and Jo. They solve mysteries and myths as they travel around the country. I remembered we used them for some book reports. I do hope that they continue publishing these books because they promote Filipino values, heritage and friendship. Plus they can also compete with the influx of foreign books. If we can patronize foreign books, we can also do so with Philippine materials. =)

I would also like to recommend titles that I have read during my (post) teen age :)
1. Spiderwick Chronicles
2. Percy Jackson series
3. Hunger games trilogy
4. Princess Diaries series
5. The secrets of the immortal Nicholas Flamel
6. Books by Eva Ibbotson
7. Inkheart series
8. Series of unfortunate events – good for building vocabulary words 
9. Newbery Award winning books
10. Filipiniana books published by Adarna, Tahanan and Lampara
Happy reading!

10 August 2010

Catching Up


It's been a long time ago since my first blog. So many things happened and time flies so fast. Anyway, I hope to write as often as I could and hope also that my reader (if ever there is one) will find this sort of useful.

Well, though it's a bit late to welcome this school year 2010-2011, I believe there are still a lot of things to write about.

First, I am now assigned in Upper Grades Library (Grades 4-7). I missed the kids from the Lower Grades (Prep-Grade 3), but it is always a joy to be with children. Consolation is that I am still working with kids but abit older than the previous ones.

Second, I am continuing my Master's Degree, so it also eats a lot of time and energy. What with all the requirements and course works that I need to do. But my studying right now gives me a whole new perspective specially on Children's Literature which help a lot in my work and to me personally.

Lastly, I will really do my hardest, no matter how busy I become to write about books, authors and illustrators, awards,some book reviews and book talks; update in librarianship, library, librarians, travel, library activities, events and of course on reading and literacy.

For now, this will be all. Till my next blog!

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