Thursday, March 6, 2014

Powerocks Super MagicStick Review Part Two

I've had the Super MagicStick since November and it has served me well.

From recharging my Iphone on a snow hike to recharging my Iphone on my nightstand, it is a great tool and I recommend it.

Small and portable, I can throw it in my backpack, or put in in a pocket.  I like the various colors they come in and the price is decent.

It charges my phone pretty fast and stores two full charges.  

If you are in the market for a charger for your phone--it has a USB and Micro USB plug--so it is can be used on many phone models.  

The price range is from 22.00 to about 30.00 depending on where you purchase the product.






Product Features

  • Has a one-amp charge rate (same as home chargers)

  • Depending on your phone's battery, you can get one-two full charges from one Magicstick charge

  • Large capacity 2600mAh portable battery keeps your cell phone or smartphone powered while on the go

  • Small and convenient for traveling

  • Compatible with cell phones, smartphones, and media players

  • Has one USB port with 5V / 1A output for rapid charging

  • Recharge via the included Micro-USB charging cable

  • Features a charge-level indicator

  • Powers iPhone, Android phones, other smartphones, and many other devices

  • Environmentally friendly (ROHS compliant)

  • CE, UL, FCC approved



Check out Powerocks Super MagicStick!

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Ten D2L Retention Strategies


Ten D2L Retention Strategies
By Max Macias 2/2014




  1. Email the class their assignments for the week via D2L email every Monday to make sure everyone is kept abreast of where they are supposed to be and the time frames for the class.

  1. Create a Google Calendar and share it with the class.  Either embedd it, or send it to your students via email.  Have all the class assignments on entered on the calendar and the due dates clearly stated.  

  1. Embed your Google Class Calendar in your news feed with the D2L embed tool.  Tell your students they can click on events in the calendar and directly copy them to their own personal calendars.

  1. Give clear feedback that lets the student know what they are doing well, and what they need to work on to get the outcomes for the class.   

  1. Make comments on the student’s documents with the “insert comment” tool.  

  1. Contact Students via Dropbox list, when dropbox assignments are late.  Simply check off the boxes next to the student names who have not turned in the assignment, then click “email” and you can BCC these students with the message that that particular assignment is late.

  1. Listen to the students and work with them when it comes to due dates and turning in missing assignments.  We want the students to learn, not just to turn assignments in on time.  While a schedule is vital, so is human understanding and family life.  

  1. Use your student evaluation feedback to help you improve retention.  Students will tell us much of what they need, either different time frames for assignments, or suggestions in content change can be helpful in retaining students.  

  1. Use CPN* notification system to notify students who are falling behind, or who are doing well in the class.  This is an official notification and carries more weight than an email “reminder” from the instructor.

  1. Use the CPN system repeatedly, giving both affirmations and reminders that work is due and that the student can still pass the class.

     *Course Progress Notification system

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Pathways to Progress: Issues and Advances in Latino Librarianship Review by Max Macias



Pathways to Progress: Issues and Advances in Latino Librarianship Review
by Max Macias


Last fall I had the honor of being asked to review the much anticipated Pathways to Progress: Issues and Advances in Latino Librarianship; edited by John L. Ayala and Salvador Güereña.  This book is a collection of essays by Latino Librarian/Advocates on Latino Librarianship.  It is part of a series called Latinos and Libraries Series, published by Libraries Unlimited.  I do not have time to write about every essay in the book--there are 12 chapters and 17 pieces written by some of the leaders of the Latino Library Movement.  



Chapter one is by Dr. Sergio Chaparro and is entitled: Common Denominators in the Development of Latino Library Leadership.  This chapter was far too short and underdeveloped.  It was surfacy and generally vague without references to the diversity within the “Latino” label.  It was supposed to outline and discuss some ideas and methods to create and empower a new group of managers and library directors who can advocate for Latinos and Hispanics in librarianship and in LIS programs.  Dr. Chapparo is correct in his observations that more Latinos should be in library management/administration.  He is also correct that there must be more research on Latinos in libraries and Latinos in general. 

Collection Development: an Overview for the Spanish Speaking by Sara Martinez is the 2nd chapter.  This chapter is wonderful and akin to a mini-handbook on Spanish Language Collection Processes.  She even has tips on distribution contacts and how to outreach to the Spanish Speaking Community in general.  This is a solid chapter and is invaluable to anyone who is collecting or is about to begin to collect, or is even thinking about collecting Spanish Language Materials for their library. 

Public Library Services and Latino Children: Getting it right in the 21st Century by Oralia Garza de Cortés is the 3rd chapter in this wonderful book.  She begins the chapter with a history of Latino Librarianship in children’s services.  Oralia goes then analyzes and criticizes the Every Child Ready to Read @ Your Library program.  She then talks about first languages in the home and how they relate to literacy.  Oralia next describes REFORMA’s place in the struggle to serve Latino Children in Spanish by describing various programs that REFORMA has developed by itself and in partnership with aspect of ALA. 
Oralia goes on to describe the explosive growth of the Latino population in the US and then gives us the wonderful gift of “Ten Principles for Providing Comprehensive Library Services to Latino Children and Families.”   Every principle she gives is powerful and would/will truly impact services in this vital area.  This is one of the stronger chapters in the anthology. 

Chapter 4:  Academic Libraries: Pathways to Transforming Teaching, Learning and Relationships in Chicano and Latino Studies by Luévano, etal. covers the “...best methods used to integrate information fluency skills into ethnic studies department curricula?”  One conclusion is that “Academic Librarians must become more involved in faculty and curriculum development.”  Librarians must spend more time creating learning materials for class and the library. This chapter is okay, but is more on the theoretical/academic side.  

Chapter 5:  Special Libraries and Collections:  Invisible as Night, Implacable as Wind” California and Multicultural Archives (CEMA): The First 20 Years by Erica Bennett is an excellent history of this organization.  Ms. Bennett surveys the history, demographic developments in the US, the importance of Latino/Hispanic archives in general and specifically CEMA.  She goes on to describe the place of CEMA in the 21st century and ends with an excellent chronology of CEMA. 

Chapter 6:  Special Collections: The Cuban Heritage Collection at the University of Miami Libraries by Mariá R. Estorino is a nice description of the collection, it’s importance and future as a major resource for Latino/Hispanic research.  Chapter 7 is a beautiful piece by the late and great tatiana de la tierra entitled Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Lesbian, Queer: Being there: Queer Latin@ Representation in the Library discusses the problems, and possible solutions of the lack of representation in libraries of Latino Queer Librarians, and the lack of representation in library collections as a result of the lack of Latino Queer Librarians and allies. 

Chapter 8 is Recruiting and Mentoring: Proactive Mentoring: Attracting Hispanic American Students into Information Studies by Alma C. Ortega and Marisol Ramos tries to answer the question of why efforts to recruit Hispanic students into Library Science has so far failed and what might be done about this with solid mentoring and recruitment.  This essay was almost the first time I had heard anyone else, besides myself, talk about the importance of recruiting non-Spanish Speaking Hispanic students into LIS.  Proactive recruiting and mentoring are major focuses of this chapter.  It ends with some illustrative case studies. 
Chapter 9 is Leadership in Libraries: Latino Leadership in Libraries by Luis Herrera discusses the history, present and future of Latino leadership in libraries in the US.  While this chapter offers some insight into the history of this topic, it offers little in practical and effective leadership implementation for Latinos in libraries.  I found this article trite, and full of “7 Habits of Highly Effective Leaders” types of advice.  While it offers some insight into how current Latino Library leaders see leadership--it doesn’t address the lack of change and current Latino librarian lack of impact in making libraries more welcoming to Latinos in the US. 

Chapter 10 is Digital Resource: Developing Chicano/a Latino/a Digital Resources by Alexander Hauschild addresses the dilemma of making digital resources that relate to Chicano/a or Latino/a history available widely.  This chapter mainly focuses on how to get the resources that exist linked up to one another and to outside sources for more availability. 

Chapter 11 is a collection of conference presentation the topics range from “A Personal Commitment to the Committee to Recruit Mexican American Librarians” by John L. Ayala to LGBT Archives by Yolanda Retter Vargas.  Chapter 12 discusses the role of library associations in relation to Latino librarianship--it ends with an historical overview of REFORMA. 
            In general, I would say that this book is well worth the price:  52.25.  This book has solid information and background for understanding the issues Latino Librarianship in the US face, the history of Latinos in LIS and potential paths to the future for Latinos and those who would serve this population in US libraries.  Kudos to John Ayala and Salvador Güereña for creating this practical and informative collection of essays!  My main criticism is the lack of radical ideas, or any real strength when it comes to confronting the racism and prejudice we (Latinos/Hispanics/Indigenous) face in US libraries.  We need an analysis of the impact of the Colonial Educational System on our knowledge--particularly when it comes to identity, culture and our heritage.  While all these essays gave practical steps to help Latinos in the current milieu, we need to have alternative futures that change or operate outside the current system--which is fundamentally, White supremacist, Patriarchal, Heterosexual, Classist and Misogynistic.  I look forward to seeing this change in analysis as a result of the practical advice given by the authors in this fine work.


  • Series: Latinos and Libraries Series
  • Paperback: 243 pages
  • Publisher: Libraries Unlimited (November 18, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1591586445
  • ISBN-13: 978-1591586449
  • Product Dimensions: 0.6 x 7 x 10.2 inches


Max Macias
Silverton, Oregon
January, 2014

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Powerocks Super MagicStick Review Part One

I received an email asking if I would review this product recently.  Many friends have shown me their portable charging systems and I have been thinking about getting one--the timing was perfect!

I received my charger within a couple of days and was stoked on how simple and small it is.  



I comes with a USB to mini USB which hooks up the charging unit to your PC, or whatever USB power source you will be using to charge the unit.  


And here it is hooked up to a laptop.


The red light indicates charging.  



Three easy steps:

1) Charge the unit.


2) Connect to your device.


Enjoy your extended battery use.


This device unit also comes with a handy carrying bag.



I will let you know how well it works after I get a chance to charge some devices with it.

Expect my opinion/s soon.













Monday, April 8, 2013

Instagram

Instagramatic!




I love Instagram and am in a state of constant inspiration from those I follow.  Advertising, nor those stupid PR people have not ruined it yet for me.

I am an insta-junkie at the moment. 

Have you found any interesting library related uses for Instagram?

Saturday, April 7, 2012

OPEN LETTER TO SUPERINTENDENT OF THE TUCSON UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT, DR. JOHN J PEDICONE (COLLABORATION WITH YAGO CURA)


Superintendent John J. Pedicone, Ph.D.
Tucson Unified School District
1010 E. Tenth St.
Tucson, AZ 85719
(520) 225-6000


Hinchas de Poesía
c/o
Yago S. Cura, Publisher
Max Macias, Librarian
11928 Venice Blvd.
L.A., CA 90066


Dear Dr. Pedicone:

            We have never met, and my son and/or daughter is not matriculated in the school district you oversee. I am writing today in my capacity as the publisher of Hinchas de Poesía (www.hinchasdepoesia.com), a fledgling online literary journal, and in collaboration with Max Macias, a Chicano librarian living near Portland, Oregon. We are both members of REFORMA, although the contents of this letter and the opinions expressed herein solely belong to us (Yago S. Cura and Max Macias).
We are writing to express our intense gratitude for your continuing, yet albeit wholly indirect, support of Ethnic Studies in the United States of America. Put simply, if it were not for you upholding Arizona state law ARS 15-112, which prohibits the use of educational materials that, "promote the overthrow of the United States government; promote resentment toward a race or class of people; are designed primarily for pupils of a particular ethnic group; advocate ethnic solidarity instead of the treatment of pupils as individuals," then Ethnic Studies in the United States might still be relegated to a tangential artery of U.S. literature.  In one fell swoop of pencil-pushing preemptiveness, you have guaranteed the ascent of Ethnic Studies in this country for at least another 10 years. My humble journal doesn’t sell advertisements, so this will at least ensure that we remain relevant (and salient--since I cover all overhead) for at least another five to seven years.
Your harsh, undercover promotion of Ethnic Studies has certainly caught the attention of a generation of disaffected youth of color, who might not have ever heard of Ethnic Studies, nor read the books the school district chose to ban. Whereas before these students were slightly motivated to learn historical perspectives not routinely offered to them, now they are up-in-arms and agitated to learn their history.  In other words, you have inadvertently created convenient reading lists of forbidden books for young people. You have given them reason to utilize their nearest public library, seeking these books.

Your concerted attacks might have actually even increased the circulation of these forbidden tomes in inner-city libraries and under-resourced school system libraries.  We anticipate “Latino” literature will germinate a new corps of writers from the vigilant, patriotic headlocks you have exerted on some of these titles, such as Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the U.S., Sherman Alexie’s The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven (a book I had the pleasure of forcing my students in the Bronx to read), and Luis Rodriguez’s Always Running: La Vida Loca—Gang Days in L.A.
Max and I are both survivors of Reaganomics, and we have oodles of respect for Hip-Hop. Interestingly enough, there are many music critics who believe that without the social squeeze put on people of color by Reaganomics, there would have been no Hip-Hop culture. Could you imagine a world without Afrika Bambattaa, Public Enemy, or KRS-One, just to name a few? As a small online publisher, I probably would have had increasingly less and less to publish if you would have just left Mexican American Studies alone. The important, but immaterial ideas disseminated in Ethnic Studies classes have to compete with the more lucrative disciplines like Business and Biological Sciences. Now, however, we predict, there will be a renaissance of new Ethnic Studies presses that develop to publish new studies, articles, fiction, poetry and editorials from the myriad aspects and perspectives that these values bring to light.  These new presses will present avenues for new ideas and great historical works to be published and spread throughout our great nation and the world.  Videos, podcasts, and other new forms of media will be produced and made available to the masses.  We simply cannot thank you enough.
There is a deep distrust of your actions felt by people in our communities; it is our hope that this letter will help them see your actions in a new light.  Hegel’s Cunning of Reason is alive and well in the United States--particularly in Arizona! Let's be honest-- without your sage and cosmopolitan bigotry, many of the writers whose books you rightfully banned might have been relegated to the status of literary conference speakers and community college hacks--destined solely to the erosion of illiteracy at the "hood" level.  Now, there will be an unprecedented call for these authors to make appearances, and book orders will grow. More importantly, you and your peers have (as Sherman Alexie has already pronounced) made these texts “sacred”; by making them politically illicit, you have polarized their attractiveness.  Seizing them off of the shelves of schools in your state you have provisioned the liberal opposition with a facile foray of direct opposition. At the very least, you have made them eminently attractive to minority students and disenfranchised American youth. You have forced editors out of their editing chairs and deputized them (informally, of course) to become book smugglers, or librotraficantes.
Tony Diaz, the editor of Nuestra Palabra: Latino Writers Having Their Say, could have just been another minority writer, editor, translator, teacher; you have made him aspire to justice and smuggle into your district relatively popular texts which now smolder with the mesmerizing possibilities of something forbidden. You have empowered our texts at a time when less and less people are reading books, and less and less people of color are publishing and writing them.
We believe we can agree on one irrefutable fact.  The T.U.S.D. is doing something right:  they are increasing an interest in education. You are giving educated Ethnic Studies professors a lectern from which to speak; this will only increase education and the desire to be educated in the Latino community.  As you’re aware, education is the best weapon against oppression and indoctrination. Placing Paolo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed on your banned books list highlights his emphasis on these ideas; Freire’s study is something all readers can directly relate to, explaining why unjust social conditions are allowed to propagate. Our people are interested in what everyone is interested in--bettering their lives and creating opportunities for their children.
Again, we want to thank you in advance for your efforts toward propagating, promulgating, and publicizing excellent works by our most celebrated Latino writers, historians, and intellectuals.

Gracias!


Yago S. Cura
Publisher, Hinchas de Poesía

Max Macias
American Librarian