I've been promising myself a blog since 2008. Really. I had a super-nice WordPress awhile back with one superb post about growing writers. And that was it.
At GaETC this year, IN NOVEMBER (sigh), I heard the talented Nick Provenzano talk about the value of blogging for teachers and students. I tweeted my intentions. And now it's June.
Andy Plemmons of Barrow Elementary unknowingly serves as one of my mentors, and his blog informs so much of my librarianship. It's time for me to push forward. I named this blog The Impossible Possible based on Jennifer Holm's Fourteenth Goldfish as well as Plemmons' idea that it would be a phenomenal slogan for a library (if it weren't for the genius of Flora and Ulysses and the idea of Expecting the Miraculous). The library is a place of possibilities, and although some might seem unlikely, nothing is impossible.
At GaETC this year, IN NOVEMBER (sigh), I heard the talented Nick Provenzano talk about the value of blogging for teachers and students. I tweeted my intentions. And now it's June.
Andy Plemmons of Barrow Elementary unknowingly serves as one of my mentors, and his blog informs so much of my librarianship. It's time for me to push forward. I named this blog The Impossible Possible based on Jennifer Holm's Fourteenth Goldfish as well as Plemmons' idea that it would be a phenomenal slogan for a library (if it weren't for the genius of Flora and Ulysses and the idea of Expecting the Miraculous). The library is a place of possibilities, and although some might seem unlikely, nothing is impossible.