Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label technology. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 4, 2025

7th - 8th March Global Day of Unplugging

Are you ready to step away from the digital world and connect with what truly matters?

Every year over the past decade, this day has taken place on the first Saturday of March, kicking off at sundown the night before. It is a 24 hour period – running from sundown to sundown which starts on March 7. 

We are increasingly connected to the world around us. Smartphones, tablets, WiFi access and the Internet have enabled us to be connected to the entire world 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, every single day of the year. That is why we need a day like this to make us reflect upon what that means. We need to take this day to carve out precious time to unplug, relax, reflect, be active, visit the outdoors, and connect with loved ones.

When I first did a display in our library, mainly to show parents how much time we spend on devices and what the alternatives might be, it was the students who borrowed books and came to tell me the 'person in this book is like my mum or dad', always on the phone! This week, the display UNPLUG LOG OFF GO OUTSIDE had a different effect. The students borrowed books that featured devices and technology and the parents borrowed books about being outside.

When I walk with friends, we are always amazed to see parents pushing prams where the child is on an iPad or a phone and the scenery be it lake, beach, park, anywhere outside has much to offer in the way of observation. We need to encourage everyone to take in their natural environment and to be mindful.

There are so many books you could display, but I'd start with these:

Unplug


Blackout  by John Rocco

A young boy in this book also discovers the simple joys of spending time with loved ones when the city goes dark and there’s no TV.



Chloe  by Peter McCarty

When a large television takes over family fun time, Chloe must convince her parents and ten brothers and sisters what everybody  knows: the packaging—bubble wrap and cardboard box—is much more fun that the gift: the TV!


Unplugged  by Steve Antony

Meet Blip. Blip loves being plugged into her computer. When a blackout occurs, Blip trips over her wire and tumbles outside. Suddenly, Blip’s gray world is filled with color and excitement. She plays with her new friends and has adventures all day long. When Blip finally returns home, she realises that the world can be even brighter once you unplug.



Couch Potato by Jory John

Feeling fried? Peel yourself on the couch and meet your new pal-tato! The Couch Potato has everything within reach and doesn’t have to move from the sunken couch cushion. But when the electricity goes out, Couch Potato is forced to peel away from the comforts of the living room and venture outside. Could fresh air and sunshine possibly be better than the views on screen? 



Log Off

Hello! Hello! by Matthew Cordell

Lydia says hello to everyone, but her family members are absorbed in their gadgets. Feeling restless, she ventures outside where there are so many things to say hello to—rocks, leaves, flowers and more.


• Sidewalk Flowers

In this wordless picture book, a little girl collects wildflowers while her father who is distracted by his phone pays her little attention. Each flower becomes a gift, and whether the gift is noticed or ignored, both giver and recipient are transformed by their encounter.



• Mum For Sale
by Zanni Louise

Errol’s mum won’t get off the phone. So there’s only one thing for Errol to do ... Find out what happens when cheeky Errol puts his mum up for sale!My students love this book.



Go Outside

• Go Outside  by Ben Lerwill

The great outdoors are waiting, ready to be filled with excitement and imagination. Explore the fun that can be had outdoors in all weathers and count how many children have gone outside to play in this joyful celebration of imaginative play and the simple pleasure of spending time outside everyday.



• On a Magical Do-Nothing Day
 by Beatrice Alemanga

All I want to do on a rainy day like today is play my game. My mom says it’s a waste of time, but without my game, nothing is fun! On the other hand, maybe I’m wrong about that...



Today by 
Gabby Snyder

Today may seem long before leaving for a summer vacation or short during the time away. The moments that make up the day are filled with surprises, joy, fun, and memories. This book guides young readers to keep their eyes and ears open so the day doesn’t slip by.



For more titles and ideas look here.

Friday, April 26, 2013

28th April Screen Free Day



Screen Free Day (Week) - what a good idea! This is a day (or week) when you choose to turn off all screens that are part of your everyday life...your mobile, your computer, your iPad, your television, your game console etc.

Sometimes I wish I could manage the library without a computer and then we have a blackout or some problem and I have to write all the loans down and enter them manually later and it is such a chore so I know I don't really want to. However it would be nice not to read email or do research on a computer just for a day, to turn off when you leave work, so here's our chance. Turn off and read a book, or go outside, explore in the dirt, run, stroll on the beach...dream. All of the books above and those here will inspire you to

  If you don't know the Library Dragon books by Carmen Agra Deedy search out the second one Return of the Library Dragon. Every librarian needs this book! Miss Lotty, the book-reading librarian is retiring and she is to be replaced by Mike Krochip and computers. All the books are gone. There are some beautiful one-liners on why the books should be returned and the endpapers have the best 'book' quotes. It  ends with "but our kids need a library where they can UNPLUG, for the love of books." My library hasn't any computers for the children to use except the one used as an inquiry terminal, so when the children are in the library they are unplugged and choose to READ.

“What information consumes is rather obvious: it consumes the attention of its recipients. Hence, a wealth of information creates a poverty of attention and a need to allocate that attention efficiently among the overabundance of information sources that might consume it.” — HERBERT SIMON, recipient of Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics.

“Children need to experience the real world, not just media world. Make this week the beginning of that experience.” Dr Mike Brody